Originally posted by Ben Kenobi
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Genetically the hair clippings at a barber shop are human. It's a pretty bad metric to base allocation of rights off of.
Could I identify a person just from their brain activity?Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
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You are dumb as a sack of bricks and there's no way in hell I'm going to waste my time debating the definition of personhood with youScouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
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Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostI could identify someone just from those hair clippings. I'm not seeing why that metric is the problem. Your clippings are distinct from mine. Same with the mother and the child inside her womb. Different DNA, different persons.
b) identical twins.
Could I identify a person just from their brain activity?
All of that of course misses the point that if you're distributing rights simply based off of DNA, the pile of hair clippings has the same rights as the people it came from. You can't differentiate and say "this pile of clippings is from this human, so doesn't have rights" because you've already said "any cell or grouping of cells with human DNA is a person deserving of rights".
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a) has nothing to do with whether the hair is deserving of rights simply for having human DNA.
This to me indicates that DNA is a marker for something pertaining the common substance of personhood.
b) identical twins.
Theoretically you can. (I'm not sure, but likely we already can.)
All of that of course misses the point that if you're distributing rights simply based off of DNA, the pile of hair clippings has the same rights as the people it came from.
You can't differentiate and say "this pile of clippings is from this human, so doesn't have rights" because you've already said "any cell or grouping of cells with human DNA is a person deserving of rights".Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!
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Ben, if you believe that an embryo is a person because it's got an undetectable ghost inside of it, then just say so and stop with the science.Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
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The problem is that you believe that a zygote is a person ("person", not "human" - a brain dead body is a "human" but not a "person") because of the undetectable ghost in it. That's fine, and I'm not going to argue about the existence or non-existence of undetectable ghosts because that's a matter of faith - it's impossible to prove or disprove their existence. However, this makes you look ridiculous when you assume a false position and attempt to argue that a zygote is a person (again, "person" as opposed to "human") for scientific reasons that you don't really believe in. This extends to how you treat others' beliefs - you have no desire to try to understand them, instead you assume an inept lecturing tone.
I really don't give a **** why you believe in undetectable ghosts, and so you don't see me asking you disingenuous questions about your beliefs on the subject merely in a misguided or malicious attempt to poke holes in or belittle your beliefs that I don't understand and have no wish to understand. Please afford the same level of respect to others.<p style="font-size:1024px">HTML is disabled in signatures</p>
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Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostAgain, I can identify the person to whom the hair belongs via DNA. I can do the same with the DNA of the embryo, I can not only identify the DNA as distinct, but I can also identify the identity of the parents.
This to me indicates that DNA is a marker for something pertaining the common substance of personhood.
Or how about clones? Can you clone yourself and then freely rape the cloned babies because they're your DNA? Or is something else involved about differentiating between people?
Yes, and? You do understand how they form?
Could it distinguish 1 person from say, a million other scans? DNA can already do that. In theory yes. In practice, never.
Not that it matters, because if you had 2 people you couldn't distinguish between in any way ... they'd both still be deserving of rights. And a pile of hair, even though it has human DNA, isn't deserving of rights.
You're arguing that because the embryo is small like hair that the two are similar, but they are not. I can distinguish the embryo from either parent, and there are significant biological differences between the embryo and the hair.
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Originally posted by regexcellent View PostNo, if you believe a fetus is a moral person then it follows deductively that killing it is not okay for the sake of not having to endure the pregnancy. This is in particular true when you consider that the more "alive" the fetus is, the less of the pregnancy there is left to complete anyway.
If you believe a fetus is not a moral person, then absolutely you should not expect the woman to have to endure the pregnancy.
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The problem is that you believe that a zygote is a person ("person", not "human" - a brain dead body is a "human" but not a "person") because of the undetectable ghost in it.
1, we know that conception forms a unique human person and that:
2, there's no break in the development.
Otherwise IVF wouldn't work, and we couldn't show that there is genetic continuity from conception to birth. This has already been proven, Loinburger.
Nothing with faith.
I suggest you start addressing the arguments I am making rather than the arguments you prefer to argue against.
However, this makes you look ridiculous when you assume a false position
Please afford the same level of respect to others.
I've been prolife the entire time, haven't I?Last edited by Ben Kenobi; May 2, 2015, 09:54.Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!
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So if in the future your consciousness is somehow transfered to a non carbon based lifeform
then you aren't deserving of any rights because you don't have DNA?
How would you tell the difference?
Does this mean we can create sentient AI and t hen just torture them for ****s and giggles, and there is nothing wrong with that?
Given that you support dismembering actual human children in their early development, why would you have greater consideration for AI?
Or how about clones? Can you clone yourself and then freely rape the cloned babies because they're your DNA? Or is something else involved about differentiating between people?
In the future it may be possible to do it without this, but right now it isn't.
Are we through with the science fiction questions?
I'm not quite sure what all this has to do with the question that human embryos should be considered persons. If they are persons, then these other things may be persons. If they aren't persons, then it makes no sense to consider these other things persons.
They split from the same fertilized egg
So you can't use DNA to differentiate between them.
Thus by your wonky logic you could incinerate one of them and that's morally equivalent to burning a pile of hair from the other.
If they are persons at birth they are persons at conception.
I'm sure it could.
As you admit, "in theory yes".
The only question is if we want to do it enough to dedicate the resources and time necessary to do it.
(Likely it will be used for authentication at some point in the not too distant future.
Already passwords are just an indirect abstraction of such a form of authentication.)
And a pile of hair, even though it has human DNA, isn't deserving of rights.
I am arguing that your suggestion that rights should be allocated based on DNA
not all cells or groups of cells which contain human DNA
1, that the embryo was your child and that:
2, that the embryo was also not you, in that the DNA is distinct.
DNA is a marker, not the definition - it's an indicator that human life is present. We would use DNA to determine the identity of that person, seeing as no human person lacks human DNA.
The difference from the hair cells is that I could show:
1, that the hair came from you and:
2, that you exist without your hair.
I can prove that the hair is not you because if I take the hair away you are still here, while the hair is not. I cannot do that with the embryo, because if I take the embryo away - the embryo dies and so does the person.
This is the difference, and why the embryo is a distinct human person while your hair is not. And, best of all, DNA will show this.Last edited by Ben Kenobi; May 2, 2015, 09:29.Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!
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