Originally posted by obiwan18
One can be alive and not necessarily a person, or even a human. One can possess human DNA, yet not be a person. I'm trying to account for both sides at the same time.
One can be alive and not necessarily a person, or even a human. One can possess human DNA, yet not be a person. I'm trying to account for both sides at the same time.
You'll need to give a reasonable definition of personhood before this can continue. "Human and alive" is insufficient, for the reasons I stated in my last post -- the standard definition of "alive" would count a brain-dead patient as a person, and your modified definition is circular.
We're going to have to work out sentience as a boolean value first.
I don't like anthropocentric, because according to what we know now, your argument is less broad than mine.
Give a concise definition of personhood, and more importantly, give a concise explanation as to why you have defined personhood in this way. If you're operating from a set of unsuspendable presuppositions such that you are incapable of being swayed from your conclusions (e.g. "God says that zygotes are persons, and God can't be wrong") then I want to know this now, because there won't be much point to my continuing in this debate if your position is founded on unassailable presuppositions.
Why is sentience boolean? What justification do you have for this statement?
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