the truth about abortion

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CycloWizard

Lifer
Sep 10, 2001
12,348
1
81
Originally posted by: totalcommand
If you take such a dim view of God, then abortion, if you define it as the killing of innocent life, does not matter at all since these fetuses will go to heaven anyways, and the mother can do whatever she want.
That's not really true though. I can walk up and decapitate someone walking out of the confessional and they'll probably go to heaven, but I doubt any God would look favorably upon such action.
 

totalcommand

Platinum Member
Apr 21, 2004
2,487
0
0
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: totalcommand
It's simply logic. Something that has potential to be A cannot be actually A at the same time. For example, you right now you have the potential to be "the person you will be nine months from now" but, right now, you cannot actually be "the person you will be nine months from now". A simpler example is a piece of firewood. Right now it may have the potential to burn, but it cannot actually be burning at the same time. Actuality and Potentiality are mutually exclusive in other words.
I agree. However, the development of any human (or even any animal) is a continuum, not a discrete set of points. Such demarcations are set up (zygote, blastocyst, embryo, fetus, etc...) as a matter of convenience for reference, not because these are truly different organisms. At some point, every person you know was or will be a zygote, then a blastocyst, then an embryo, then a fetus, then an infant, toddler, child, teenager, adult, middle-aged, elderly, old, very old, and ancient (assuming they live that long :p). Thus, I could argue (though I'll admit that I haven't thought this through very carefully) that a zygote is just as much a person as an infant, adult, or anyone else. The discretizations that are set up are fabrications based on stages of physical development, not any real change in the being itself. Think of it in these terms. Everything is comprised of two parts: accidentals (physical nature) and substance (whatever it really is). The substance of a zygote is no different from an adult as far as we can discern (though one might argue that substance changes with time, again I'm not real sure since I'm winging it), though the accidentals are much different.

My thinking was that at any given point, an object, a person, anything really, has a certain state (whether that state is defineable is another question). If that state is potentiality to become human being, it cannot be actually be a human being at the same time. While we may observe a continuum, objects/people still have states.

The problem is defining what the substance ("substantial form") of the zygote is. Does it include "human being-ness", or is that just a privation (one of the range of possibilities that the zygote might have in the future). Applying these terms to this issue simply adds another layer of words and argument, so I think this isn't the way to go.

Personally, I think all of Aquinas's/Greek thinkers ideas of substance and accidentals are outdated, since they do not bring us any closer to understanding what a thing really is. And the application of them here highlights that.

The idea that "human being-ness" is part of its essence is related to the mind/body connection, as the mind would have to be separate. I think you would have to start with the mind body issue in order to arrive at showing human being-ness as part of its essence.
 

totalcommand

Platinum Member
Apr 21, 2004
2,487
0
0
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: totalcommand
If you take such a dim view of God, then abortion, if you define it as the killing of innocent life, does not matter at all since these fetuses will go to heaven anyways, and the mother can do whatever she want.
That's not really true though. I can walk up and decapitate someone walking out of the confessional and they'll probably go to heaven, but I doubt any God would look favorably upon such action.

Indeed, which is why I think God would look very unfavorably upon a woman killing her embryo because it can't implant in her uterus. I don't think he would have women inherently sinning in their natural functions, since he is benevolent. I wrote that to prove the point to musgrat
 

themusgrat

Golden Member
Nov 2, 2005
1,408
0
0
Originally posted by: totalcommand
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: totalcommand
If you take such a dim view of God, then abortion, if you define it as the killing of innocent life, does not matter at all since these fetuses will go to heaven anyways, and the mother can do whatever she want.
That's not really true though. I can walk up and decapitate someone walking out of the confessional and they'll probably go to heaven, but I doubt any God would look favorably upon such action.

Indeed, which is why I think God would look very unfavorably upon a woman killing her embryo because it can't implant in her uterus. I don't think he would have women inherently sinning in their natural functions, since he is benevolent. I wrote that to prove the point to musgrat

No, the woman is not killing anything. Actually, I think that the moment where fetuses should be protected starts after the embryo implants itself on the uterus wall. Again, just because something happens does not mean that God agrees with it. And even if the embryo dies after that, it is still not the woman's fault- it is, if you will, an act of nature. Just like a bear mauling you is. God never said that all death is bad and is someone's fault, He just said not to kill. The woman does not kill her embryo or fetus unless she aborts it. Or I heard from a friend last night of someone who fell down the stairs and had a miscarraige. It is not really her fault, but then, it would not have happened if she hadn't fallen.

EDIT: To quote myself, I still would like an answer to this.
"Since we are having all this talk of, "just because something will be something doesn't make it that something now." We have laws against people planning to kill someone. So we are in effect protecting who they will be, not who they are now. How are fetuses different?"
 

totalcommand

Platinum Member
Apr 21, 2004
2,487
0
0
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: totalcommand
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: totalcommand
If you take such a dim view of God, then abortion, if you define it as the killing of innocent life, does not matter at all since these fetuses will go to heaven anyways, and the mother can do whatever she want.
That's not really true though. I can walk up and decapitate someone walking out of the confessional and they'll probably go to heaven, but I doubt any God would look favorably upon such action.

Indeed, which is why I think God would look very unfavorably upon a woman killing her embryo because it can't implant in her uterus. I don't think he would have women inherently sinning in their natural functions, since he is benevolent. I wrote that to prove the point to musgrat

No, the woman is not killing anything. Actually, I think that the moment where fetuses should be protected starts after the embryo implants itself on the uterus wall. Again, just because something happens does not mean that God agrees with it. And even if the embryo dies after that, it is still not the woman's fault- it is, if you will, an act of nature. Just like a bear mauling you is. God never said that all death is bad and is someone's fault, He just said not to kill. The woman does not kill her embryo or fetus unless she aborts it. Or I heard from a friend last night of someone who fell down the stairs and had a miscarraige. It is not really her fault, but then, it would not have happened if she hadn't fallen.

The woman is responsible for the fertile environment in her uterus. Regardless, I don't think God would have this loss of life. He wouldn't just create life and then have it go away 2 seconds later. This is loss of life on a massive scale, and no benevolent God would have that.

EDIT: To quote myself, I still would like an answer to this.
"Since we are having all this talk of, "just because something will be something doesn't make it that something now." We have laws against people planning to kill someone. So we are in effect protecting who they will be, not who they are now. How are fetuses different?"

Because having a plan to kill someone is wrong in and of itself. The actual killing is a separate issue. Regardless, it doesn't matter what our laws are, since they are applied by fallible human beings. It is a simple universal law of logic that potentiality is mutually exclusive from actuality. The law you describe is an artificial law of society, and the law i describe is a law of nature.
 

Doboji

Diamond Member
May 18, 2001
7,912
0
76
Originally posted by: Agman
http://www.abort73.com/HTML/I-case.html
*WARNING: THIS LINK CONTAINS HARSH AND GRUESOME IMAGES, DISCRETION IS ADVISED*

Can you honestly look at this video and defend abortion? All religious matters aside, its the law that we can't murder other human beings. And quite frankly those babies are human beigns, not "parasites" as some people like to call them. This video is very shocking and gruesome but its the reality that ALL americans must face.

Don't think that I'm saying ALL abortions are wrong, since I do know that sometimes medical conditions demand an abortion and I have to no problem with that since the mother is in danger of death. But these types of abortions are only 1% out of all of them! The rest are for other reasons like rape, or just because the woman does not want to have a child.

Seriously, if a woman does not want the child at all; why kill the child? Adoption is what they should do. They have no right to take the life of that child just because they feel like it

That being said, I think this link provides all the proof to defend the argument that abortion is wrong. 41 MILLION LIVES!! And the abortion industry keeps growing and growing and making more and more money. While women say "I have a choice!", how can people be so selfish? They are not the only human being involved in the situation. They have a HUMAN BEING inside of them!


I could just as easily show pictures of open heart surgery, and advocate against heart surgery.

Gory pictures are not relevant and have no validity within the argument.

-Max
 

fjord

Senior member
Feb 18, 2004
667
0
0
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: totalcommand
'human' is easily defined. anything 'human' has human DNA.

why is what is human not a person, or in my words, a human being?

because human DNA is a necessary but not sufficient part of the equation. human DNA in any form - genomic DNA, combination of mother and father DNA, etc. - is not sufficient to create to life. we can combine motherly and fatherly haploid DNA in a test tube, stick it in a skin cell, but it doesn't make a human being.

meuge seems to have made my argument before. i can't understand how a benevolent God - the Christian, Jewish, Muslim God - would allow countless "human beings" to die. we all know that less than half of fertilized eggs implant themselves in the uterus, and of the ones that do, about 50 percent spontaneously abort. if each of these fertilized eggs was a human life, more human beings would be dying every day than from abortion itself. and i can't imagine God would have that. it seems more likely that God would create human life at some reasonable point during pregnancy, not at fertilization itself.
Then I'll ask the question again. At what point between conception and birth can we logically conclude that the *insert name of gestating thing here* is a person?

edit: And why is it that the only people who bring religion into this argument are those arguing for abortion? No one opposing abortion has used a religious argument to this point, yet it repeatedly gets tossed around.

Well I certainly agree with CycloWizard here. God has no place in a debate on abortion or most anything else. God does not exist, there is no objective evidence to support that claim. Any argument based, in part or in whole, on God or any claim of devine inspiration or knowledge is fundamentaly irrational.

Rational thought, rational discussion, rational argument cannot be engaged or sustained if God is invoked.

What we are left with are constitutional rights for living people. Certainly we know any pregnant woman has constitutional rights. The question remains at what point do dividing cells have constitutional rights--and to what degree.


I support the right of a pregnant woman to decide what happens to her body.
 

Tab

Lifer
Sep 15, 2002
12,145
0
76
Originally posted by: fjord
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: totalcommand
'human' is easily defined. anything 'human' has human DNA.

why is what is human not a person, or in my words, a human being?

because human DNA is a necessary but not sufficient part of the equation. human DNA in any form - genomic DNA, combination of mother and father DNA, etc. - is not sufficient to create to life. we can combine motherly and fatherly haploid DNA in a test tube, stick it in a skin cell, but it doesn't make a human being.

meuge seems to have made my argument before. i can't understand how a benevolent God - the Christian, Jewish, Muslim God - would allow countless "human beings" to die. we all know that less than half of fertilized eggs implant themselves in the uterus, and of the ones that do, about 50 percent spontaneously abort. if each of these fertilized eggs was a human life, more human beings would be dying every day than from abortion itself. and i can't imagine God would have that. it seems more likely that God would create human life at some reasonable point during pregnancy, not at fertilization itself.
Then I'll ask the question again. At what point between conception and birth can we logically conclude that the *insert name of gestating thing here* is a person?

edit: And why is it that the only people who bring religion into this argument are those arguing for abortion? No one opposing abortion has used a religious argument to this point, yet it repeatedly gets tossed around.

Well I certainly agree with CycloWizard here. God has no place in a debate on abortion or most anything else. God does not exist, there is no objective evidence to support that claim. Any argument based, in part or in whole, on God or any claim of devine inspiration or knowledge is fundamentaly irrational.

Rational thought, rational discussion, rational argument cannot be engaged or sustained if God is invoked.

What we are left with are constitutional rights for living people. Certainly we know any pregnant woman has constitutional rights. The question remains at what point do dividing cells have constitutional rights--and to what degree.


I support the right of a pregnant woman to decide what happens to her body.


Can you prove God doesn't exsist? ;)

God, Gods, Mystical Forces and other "concepts" that aren't shown with emperical evidence have no place in a rational debate. I would hope everyone would keep "religion" out of the debate as I would like to see it continue in a civil fashion as it's rather entertaining. :)
 

fjord

Senior member
Feb 18, 2004
667
0
0
Originally posted by: Tab
Originally posted by: fjord
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: totalcommand
'human' is easily defined. anything 'human' has human DNA.

why is what is human not a person, or in my words, a human being?

because human DNA is a necessary but not sufficient part of the equation. human DNA in any form - genomic DNA, combination of mother and father DNA, etc. - is not sufficient to create to life. we can combine motherly and fatherly haploid DNA in a test tube, stick it in a skin cell, but it doesn't make a human being.

meuge seems to have made my argument before. i can't understand how a benevolent God - the Christian, Jewish, Muslim God - would allow countless "human beings" to die. we all know that less than half of fertilized eggs implant themselves in the uterus, and of the ones that do, about 50 percent spontaneously abort. if each of these fertilized eggs was a human life, more human beings would be dying every day than from abortion itself. and i can't imagine God would have that. it seems more likely that God would create human life at some reasonable point during pregnancy, not at fertilization itself.
Then I'll ask the question again. At what point between conception and birth can we logically conclude that the *insert name of gestating thing here* is a person?

edit: And why is it that the only people who bring religion into this argument are those arguing for abortion? No one opposing abortion has used a religious argument to this point, yet it repeatedly gets tossed around.

Well I certainly agree with CycloWizard here. God has no place in a debate on abortion or most anything else. God does not exist, there is no objective evidence to support that claim. Any argument based, in part or in whole, on God or any claim of devine inspiration or knowledge is fundamentaly irrational.

Rational thought, rational discussion, rational argument cannot be engaged or sustained if God is invoked.

What we are left with are constitutional rights for living people. Certainly we know any pregnant woman has constitutional rights. The question remains at what point do dividing cells have constitutional rights--and to what degree.


I support the right of a pregnant woman to decide what happens to her body.


Can you prove God doesn't exsist? ;)

God, Gods, Mystical Forces and other "concepts" that aren't shown with emperical evidence have no place in a rational debate. I would hope everyone would keep "religion" out of the debate as I would like to see it continue in a civil fashion as it's rather entertaining. :)
Invariably that's the reply de rigor.
:)

I don't claim perfection or comprehensive omniscence. It is those that invoke a devine entity that indulge in those claims. Let them bring objective evidence towards those claims.

I simply point out the irrational nature of any argument based on 100% say-so.

 

rchiu

Diamond Member
Jun 8, 2002
3,846
0
0
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: Horus

Before that, I believe it should be up to the woman carrying the child whether or not to carry it to term. Her choice, and hers ALONE.

This is the question. WHY do you think that?

Her womb? Her body? her choice?

Yeah, next time a women dumps her new born baby in a trash can, I hope the argument it's her time, her money and her life so it's her choice fly in the court.
 

Acanthus

Lifer
Aug 28, 2001
19,915
2
76
ostif.org
The problem with both sides of the arguments is, one side thinks with their hearts, the other thinks with their head, and there is no right answer.

One extreme is its murder, the other extreme is youre rectifying a mistake, or protecting that future person from a life of poverty.

THERE IS NO RIGHT ANSWER

Calling out other technicalities and using circular thinking cant justify either side, yet both try to use it.

Im personally pro-abortion, i strongly believe that with a mutual decision of both parents that a fetus can be aborted, because it can:

1. ruin the lives of the parents
2. put the child through a life of poverty because the parents werent prepared to provide for it (especially teen parents)

I also believe in the adoption system, i think its a great path for parents that cannot provide for their children but dont believe in abortion.

Not to mention the downside of back alley clinics if you make it illegal.
 

themusgrat

Golden Member
Nov 2, 2005
1,408
0
0
Originally posted by: fjord

Well I certainly agree with CycloWizard here. God has no place in a debate on abortion or most anything else. God does not exist, there is no objective evidence to support that claim. Any argument based, in part or in whole, on God or any claim of devine inspiration or knowledge is fundamentaly irrational.

Rational thought, rational discussion, rational argument cannot be engaged or sustained if God is invoked.

What we are left with are constitutional rights for living people. Certainly we know any pregnant woman has constitutional rights. The question remains at what point do dividing cells have constitutional rights--and to what degree.


I support the right of a pregnant woman to decide what happens to her body.

The fetus is not a part of the woman's body. Read the thread. And God is a bit above you and me, but He has reasons for everything that He does. You can logically explain most of what God does, and if you can't, you simply aren't smart enough, and don't know enough. But to answer you, I also agree that all people have rights to their bodies.
 

themusgrat

Golden Member
Nov 2, 2005
1,408
0
0
Originally posted by: Acanthus
The problem with both sides of the arguments is, one side thinks with their hearts, the other thinks with their head, and there is no right answer.

One extreme is its murder, the other extreme is youre rectifying a mistake, or protecting that future person from a life of poverty.

THERE IS NO RIGHT ANSWER

Calling out other technicalities and using circular thinking cant justify either side, yet both try to use it.

Im personally pro-abortion, i strongly believe that with a mutual decision of both parents that a fetus can be aborted, because it can:

1. ruin the lives of the parents
2. put the child through a life of poverty because the parents werent prepared to provide for it (especially teen parents)

I also believe in the adoption system, i think its a great path for parents that cannot provide for their children but dont believe in abortion.

Not to mention the downside of back alley clinics if you make it illegal.

Ignoring the fact that there is an answer does nothing. Your argument is not that great because it appeals to emotion, morality, and opinions of civil ethics. By your admission, 2 of those have no place in this argument. But to answer, if a fetus was human, we are pretending now, do you protect the social lives of 2 irresponsible, in most cases, parents, and make sure that a kid is not raised in poverty (which you are wrongly assuming), and therefore kill it, or let social lives go to the bad place, let people be poor, and let someone live? Do social status and money outweigh life? So your argument is dependant upon the argument for or against a fetus's humanity.
 

Acanthus

Lifer
Aug 28, 2001
19,915
2
76
ostif.org
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: Acanthus
The problem with both sides of the arguments is, one side thinks with their hearts, the other thinks with their head, and there is no right answer.

One extreme is its murder, the other extreme is youre rectifying a mistake, or protecting that future person from a life of poverty.

THERE IS NO RIGHT ANSWER

Calling out other technicalities and using circular thinking cant justify either side, yet both try to use it.

Im personally pro-abortion, i strongly believe that with a mutual decision of both parents that a fetus can be aborted, because it can:

1. ruin the lives of the parents
2. put the child through a life of poverty because the parents werent prepared to provide for it (especially teen parents)

I also believe in the adoption system, i think its a great path for parents that cannot provide for their children but dont believe in abortion.

Not to mention the downside of back alley clinics if you make it illegal.

Ignoring the fact that there is an answer does nothing. Your argument is not that great because it appeals to emotion, morality, and opinions of civil ethics. By your admission, 2 of those have no place in this argument. But to answer, if a fetus was human, we are pretending now, do you protect the social lives of 2 irresponsible, in most cases, parents, and make sure that a kid is not raised in poverty (which you are wrongly assuming), and therefore kill it, or let social lives go to the bad place, let people be poor, and let someone live? Do social status and money outweigh life? So your argument is dependant upon the argument for or against a fetus's humanity.

I dont care if its human or not, im using my damn head and not appealing to emotion.
 

Acanthus

Lifer
Aug 28, 2001
19,915
2
76
ostif.org
Originally posted by: rchiu
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: Horus

Before that, I believe it should be up to the woman carrying the child whether or not to carry it to term. Her choice, and hers ALONE.

This is the question. WHY do you think that?

Her womb? Her body? her choice?

Yeah, next time a women dumps her new born baby in a trash can, I hope the argument it's her time, her money and her life so it's her choice fly in the court.

That just stupidity at work and wrecklessness.

If she didnt want or couldn't support the baby for whatever reasons, it couldve been aborted long ago, or it couldve been put up for adoption on birth.

Edit: typo
 

railer

Golden Member
Apr 15, 2000
1,552
69
91
we sentance people to die all the time, what's the big deal about abortion? who cares, other than the religious nut cases? How many dead in iraq so far, both "innocent" us soldiers and iraqi civlians? Why don't the jesus freaks care about those people?
There's too many people in the world anyway. I could use the elbow room.
There's about a million other things that are MUCH more significant than abortion to most thinking people. Can't you jesus kooks do something a little more productive with your lives than complain about abortion? Go volunteer in iraq maybe...? do something useful anyway....
 

themusgrat

Golden Member
Nov 2, 2005
1,408
0
0
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: Acanthus


1. ruin the lives of the parents
2. put the child through a life of poverty because the parents werent prepared to provide for it (especially teen parents)

Ignoring the fact that there is an answer does nothing. Your argument is not that great because it appeals to emotion, morality, and opinions of civil ethics. By your admission, 2 of those have no place in this argument. But to answer, if a fetus was human, we are pretending now, do you protect the social lives of 2 irresponsible, in most cases, parents, and make sure that a kid is not raised in poverty (which you are wrongly assuming), and therefore kill it, or let social lives go to the bad place, let people be poor, and let someone live? Do social status and money outweigh life? So your argument is dependant upon the argument for or against a fetus's humanity.

I dont care if its human or not, im using my damn head and not appealing to emotion.

And this is???...
 

railer

Golden Member
Apr 15, 2000
1,552
69
91
Well I certainly agree with CycloWizard here. God has no place in a debate on abortion or most anything else. God does not exist, there is no objective evidence to support that claim. Any argument based, in part or in whole, on God or any claim of devine inspiration or knowledge is fundamentaly irrational.

This is well thought out enough to deserve a qoute.

God is a lot like the tooth fairy.....it shouldn't be seriously discussed among adults.
 

themusgrat

Golden Member
Nov 2, 2005
1,408
0
0
Originally posted by: railer
we sentance people to die all the time, what's the big deal about abortion? who cares, other than the religious nut cases? How many dead in iraq so far, both "innocent" us soldiers and iraqi civlians? Why don't the jesus freaks care about those people?
There's too many people in the world anyway. I could use the elbow room.
There's about a million other things that are MUCH more significant than abortion to most thinking people. Can't you jesus kooks do something a little more productive with your lives than complain about abortion? Go volunteer in iraq maybe...? do something useful anyway....

I care. If there are a million other things more important than abortion, there are still 40 million more victims of abortion that might think otherwise. Some of us see millions of lives as reason to start a thread. You saw a couple thousand people dying reason enough to post, and they were serving their country. Fetuses are helpless, and the gov. isn't doing a good job of protecting them. So... you accomplished nothing. Think of a way to add to the argument.
 

themusgrat

Golden Member
Nov 2, 2005
1,408
0
0
Originally posted by: railer
Well I certainly agree with CycloWizard here. God has no place in a debate on abortion or most anything else. God does not exist, there is no objective evidence to support that claim. Any argument based, in part or in whole, on God or any claim of devine inspiration or knowledge is fundamentaly irrational.

This is well thought out enough to deserve a qoute.

God is a lot like the tooth fairy.....it shouldn't be seriously discussed among adults.

Or maybe you simply don't want to talk about it. The last time I checked, the USA is more Christian than anything else, and some of those are adults much smarter than you. Of course saying, "God said so" is not any good reason, unless you are in a church service. But no one is doing that.
 

Tab

Lifer
Sep 15, 2002
12,145
0
76
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: fjord

Well I certainly agree with CycloWizard here. God has no place in a debate on abortion or most anything else. God does not exist, there is no objective evidence to support that claim. Any argument based, in part or in whole, on God or any claim of devine inspiration or knowledge is fundamentaly irrational.

Rational thought, rational discussion, rational argument cannot be engaged or sustained if God is invoked.

What we are left with are constitutional rights for living people. Certainly we know any pregnant woman has constitutional rights. The question remains at what point do dividing cells have constitutional rights--and to what degree.


I support the right of a pregnant woman to decide what happens to her body.

The fetus is not a part of the woman's body. Read the thread. And God is a bit above you and me, but He has reasons for everything that He does. You can logically explain most of what God does, and if you can't, you simply aren't smart enough, and don't know enough. But to answer you, I also agree that all people have rights to their bodies.

Please rephrase why you beileve a fetus is not a part of a women's body, so I may expound upon your idea.

I'll also ask that we not bring "religion" or "god" into this arguement as it is not required to show if abortion is wrong or right - we do this on logic alone.
 

Acanthus

Lifer
Aug 28, 2001
19,915
2
76
ostif.org
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: Acanthus


1. ruin the lives of the parents
2. put the child through a life of poverty because the parents werent prepared to provide for it (especially teen parents)

Ignoring the fact that there is an answer does nothing. Your argument is not that great because it appeals to emotion, morality, and opinions of civil ethics. By your admission, 2 of those have no place in this argument. But to answer, if a fetus was human, we are pretending now, do you protect the social lives of 2 irresponsible, in most cases, parents, and make sure that a kid is not raised in poverty (which you are wrongly assuming), and therefore kill it, or let social lives go to the bad place, let people be poor, and let someone live? Do social status and money outweigh life? So your argument is dependant upon the argument for or against a fetus's humanity.

I dont care if its human or not, im using my damn head and not appealing to emotion.

And this is???...

And this is what? If you have something to say, then say it. If its a person or not is a stupid little technicality that can be argued until the end of time. So what if it is?
 

eits

Lifer
Jun 4, 2005
25,015
3
81
www.integratedssr.com
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: railer
Well I certainly agree with CycloWizard here. God has no place in a debate on abortion or most anything else. God does not exist, there is no objective evidence to support that claim. Any argument based, in part or in whole, on God or any claim of devine inspiration or knowledge is fundamentaly irrational.

This is well thought out enough to deserve a qoute.

God is a lot like the tooth fairy.....it shouldn't be seriously discussed among adults.

Or maybe you simply don't want to talk about it. The last time I checked, the USA is more Christian than anything else, and some of those are adults much smarter than you. Of course saying, "God said so" is not any good reason, unless you are in a church service. But no one is doing that.

actually, he's right. i'm a christian and i even know that you don't introduce supreme beings into discussion among adults when it comes to science and different faiths.
 

themusgrat

Golden Member
Nov 2, 2005
1,408
0
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See the above posts for why I haven't said anything about religion unless others have tried to use it to their advantage.

A fetus is not a part of a woman's body because it is separated, does not share the mother's DNA or any other genetic information, has its own bloodstream, mainly accepts nutrients, and grows on its own, as much as you or I do. Previously, others have made the argument that it is a part of the mother like my arm is of me, and that is wrong. It is attached to the mother, but is completely genetically separate.
 

themusgrat

Golden Member
Nov 2, 2005
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Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: Acanthus


1. ruin the lives of the parents
2. put the child through a life of poverty because the parents werent prepared to provide for it (especially teen parents)

Ignoring the fact that there is an answer does nothing. Your argument is not that great because it appeals to emotion, morality, and opinions of civil ethics. By your admission, 2 of those have no place in this argument. But to answer, if a fetus was human, we are pretending now, do you protect the social lives of 2 irresponsible, in most cases, parents, and make sure that a kid is not raised in poverty (which you are wrongly assuming), and therefore kill it, or let social lives go to the bad place, let people be poor, and let someone live? Do social status and money outweigh life? So your argument is dependant upon the argument for or against a fetus's humanity.

I dont care if its human or not, im using my damn head and not appealing to emotion.

And this is???...

And this is what? If you have something to say, then say it. If its a person or not is a stupid little technicality that can be argued until the end of time. So what if it is?

It seems like saying that a fetus should be killed rather than living a sad, poor life, and ruining its parents' lives, is appealing to emotion. It is not rational, or logical.

EDIT: To eits, I have not said anything about religion unless someone else tried to use it to their advantage. Don't think that I started it at all. Sorry to repeat myself, but I was writing this as you were posting.