OK dude. Wow.
Life is the foundation for everything in existence, good or bad. Living creatures are responsible for all pleasure and all plain on the planet, with the exception of natural
disasters.
Agreed.
Life therefore deserves respect.
Does not follow. By your first statement life creates bad as well as good. That does not lay a foundation for respect. But, I am going to continue because I don't think it is critical to the argument since I agree with the basic point.
Human life has far more potential than the life of other animals, as can be seen with the progression of man kind.
Agreed
Human life therefore therefore deserves the most respect.
Now respect is based on potential? Do we give natural disasters more respect then humans, they after all have as much or more potential. But once again, I pass this over because the basic point is solid, even if your reasoning behind it is not.
Something that can become human life deserves more respect than other inanimate objects.
Not supported, see natural disaster arguement. But once again, the point is valid.
sperm and egg both have the potential to become human life, but that being said not on their own they need an action to spark the production of new cells, sex.
Okay.
After sex human life will begin to grown in a woman's womb, at this point, with no intervention from any external source (external to the embryo) human life will begin to take shape, it is at this point where an inanimate object has the greatest potential to become human life, it is greater than that of a sperm or egg as it can do it when left alone.
Both had the same potential before they met. Potential didn't change, only circumstance. Also, both the sperm and egg are animate, they are not sentient, and neither is the zygote.
Life will not start to take shape with no external source. Put that zygote in a jar and nothing will happen. Let the woman carrying it not produce the correct hormones and nothing will happen. Have the woman be undernurished and nothing will happen. There is a shitload of outside influences required for that zygote to become a blastocyst, it does not do it on it's own, it needs the mothers body to send it the right signals. Blocking some of those is how some types of birth control work.
Yes the woman needs to be kept alive, as the woman would do anyway but aside from that those cluster of cells will begin to grow, using the material it has available to it in the woman's body.
This refutes your last point. The zygote either needs no intervention or it does, it can't be both. At this is point your argument isn't even internally consistent.
Given that this point has the greatest potential (though not absolute) to become a human being it deserves the most respect, below the respect given to complete human life.
No, there are many more stages in which, if it makes it to those stages, it gets even more potential.
That respect is paramount, that respect gives the cells rights to some degree, though they do not outweigh the right to the woman's life they do have rights none-the less.
Why? There is nothing in your argument supporting that this is the point it becomes paramount. There are many other stages that it goes though before it becomes anything even remotely human. The law has choosen one of those stages to consider it to have rights, your argument needs to show why it should be an earlier one, this one does not.
Killing those cells, denying them their rights, is wrong, based on the system of respect for life I am arguing for.
Once again, no. Your argument creates a purely arbitrary cut-off point for when you consider something important. It is not based on science or reason, this exact same argument could be made by just adding stages in which it gains even more 'respect' and is even more human until the child graduates primary school. (okay, maybe a slight exaggeration, but certainly until birth.)