Originally posted by: biostud666
Life begin at conception, life in legal understandement begins after 3rd month.
Originally posted by: GoPackGo
Lets try not to troll
Originally posted by: IHateMyJob2004
To be serious. I voted for 3-6 months.
My wife is at 7 months right now. OK, WE are at 7 monhts.
Right now my baby can smell and hear. That's why when he is born, he will recognize mommy. Oh boy. I'm gonna cry.
Anyways, to say after birth is simply saying I've never had a kid and never read about hte subject.
As for abortion, I'm for it as long as it's in the first trimester. Truth be told, I think that's not soon enough. I'd rather see it be illegal after the first two months.
I'd say 2 months because a woman would notice by then. Whther it's her monthly cycle not occuring or throwing up being the telling factor. But some women have wierd cycles and don't alwatys throw up. So it's a very touchy concept.
To make it flat out illegal though, that's just plain scary.
Originally posted by: GTaudiophile
What about this option: IT NEVER ENDS SO HOW CAN IT BEGIN!
Last time I heard, sperm and ova are not dead!
Now consciousness is a different issue.
Originally posted by: GoPackGo
Topic Title: POLL - When does life begin
Topic Summary: AKA - the abortion issue
Originally posted by: TravisT
the only answer I see to this is at conception. I believe God looks at that as a miracle at that time, and continues to be a miracle throughout the 9 months and into the delivery room. I don't think God looks at the baby any differently if it was just concepted 1 day ago, or 9 months ago.
Therefore, I have to believe that conception is when life begins.
Originally posted by: TravisT
the only answer I see to this is at conception. I believe God looks at that as a miracle at that time, and continues to be a miracle throughout the 9 months and into the delivery room. I don't think God looks at the baby any differently if it was just concepted 1 day ago, or 9 months ago.
Therefore, I have to believe that conception is when life begins.
Originally posted by: chess9
I have reached the conclusion that we MUST define life as beginning at conception because we have reached the point where almost any zygote could be brought to full term and birth with modern medical technology.
Agreed.I see abortion as an ethical problem, not a religious problem.
We can tolerate if the benefits outweight the costs. You have to weigh the costs and benefits. Yes, the fetus has a certain degree of life. But society ends life. I think if the process is all right, ending life in itself isn't wrong. We wage wars, we put people to death. We don't like doing it but sometimes it's necessary (yes many people would argue execution is not necessary). Here, with abortion, there is a counterbalancing ethical consideration: the woman's right to control her body; the risk that a child would have a troubled life or be a burden; the right to plan reproduction as it fits the parents. That's where I come down on it. Abortion is not pretty but neither are a lot other decisions. Personally, I think the 3rd trimester or maybe 2nd trimester is a nice practical way to cut off this balancing. At a certain point the fetus takes on so many characteristics of a human life that the costs outweight the benefits of ending its life.If we wouldn't tolerate the same kid killing her newborn, why should we tolerate her killing a baby en ventra sa mere?
Originally posted by: Infohawk
Originally posted by: chess9
I have reached the conclusion that we MUST define life as beginning at conception because we have reached the point where almost any zygote could be brought to full term and birth with modern medical technology.
But then isn't every woman's ovary a life? Surely they could all be brought to light if we wanted to. There's plenty of sperm in the world. If we define viability as what's potentially possible with human intervention, then isn't the ovary viable with potential human intervention and isn't the ovary life?
Agreed.I see abortion as an ethical problem, not a religious problem.
We can tolerate if the benefits outweight the costs. You have to weigh the costs and benefits. Yes, the fetus has a certain degree of life. But society ends life. I think if the process is all right, ending life in itself isn't wrong. We wage wars, we put people to death. We don't like doing it but sometimes it's necessary (yes many people would argue execution is not necessary). Here, with abortion, there is a counterbalancing ethical consideration: the woman's right to control her body; the risk that a child would have a troubled life or be a burden; the right to plan reproduction as it fits the parents. That's where I come down on it. Abortion is not pretty but neither are a lot other decisions. Personally, I think the 3rd trimester or maybe 2nd trimester is a nice practical way to cut off this balancing. At a certain point the fetus takes on so many characteristics of a human life that the costs outweight the benefits of ending its life.If we wouldn't tolerate the same kid killing her newborn, why should we tolerate her killing a baby en ventra sa mere?
I still think "life" is not a well defined enough term to know when it's starts. It's like consciousness. Was there really a point when you were conscious. I don't think so. I think it's a slow build up.
I recommend people read about definitions of death. It's very hard to do because we can't agree what makes someone dead.
Originally posted by: jhu
good points. except about the death part. death occurs when the brain dies. one way to test is doppler studies of the carotid arteries and their bifurcations. dead brains don't reveal any flow to the brain.
Originally posted by: Aimster
Delivery Room.
Originally posted by: Infohawk
Originally posted by: jhu
good points. except about the death part. death occurs when the brain dies. one way to test is doppler studies of the carotid arteries and their bifurcations. dead brains don't reveal any flow to the brain.
That may be the established medical definition right now but there's a lot of discussion surrounding it from what I've heard. Also, I didn't think brain dead people were considered "dead." Again, medicine may agree that someone with a dead brain is dead but I think a lot of people would still consider someone with a beating heart alive.
