Originally posted by WeatherOp
That still gets to me, just because they can't live on their own, their not considered a living thing.
And when I ment Robot, I was talking about that their like an item, they can be destroyed whenever the mother wants. And it kinda goes back to that other subject,
of people who have AIDS or cancer, wouldn't survive without medical care. I can't remember who said it, but should they be thought of as they can't survive on their own, so their not really a living thing. And it also go's back to when does life start, And I think life starts when the baby first starts forming, if you notice that their is really no jumps, it slowly forms right from conception.
Yes, life forms. But you don't get 1% alive, or 2% alive. There's a barrier after which you become alive, and individual. a living thing
has to live on its own; the difference between the foetus and a terminally ill patient is that the foetus
has not developed that ability. It has never been alive.
The patient has and is; and if you want a valid comparison to a foetus and a human patient, the closest is possibly to imagine a person who is paraplegic, brain damaged or brain dead, partially blind or deaf or dumb, and who is suffering from complete failure in certain organs. The physiological needs of a foetus are not simply equivalent to taking bunch of pills, or even needing weekly dialysis.
That comparison, though, is almost certainly irrelevant to the issue. We are pronounced dead when brain activity ceases. A foetus is still more or less in that same state; the brain has not switched on and became conscious. When it does, the foetus is considered 'alive', i.e. becomes a baby.
But, as I said before (I think to you, maybe Mongoose); our relevant beliefs on when life starts are not the case here. I'm not going to change your mind, you're not going to change mine. The issue here is to have the choice of those beliefs, and prohibiting abortion removes that choice.
And it is, after all, about belief - because medical fact has set the scientific beginning of life and used it to set the limits upon legalised abortion, and our debate here about the validity of it is based upon our belief as to how correct that definition of life is.
EDIT; I'm (going to try to) not going to reply any more on this issue (foetal life), because i think I've made myself pretty clear over the thread. I understand your views (this being the 'you' in general), and I think I've explained pretty comprehensively why I don't share them, and as such I'm not sure I can do anything but repeat myself...
