leroy
Well-Known Member
Ok given the lack of a direct answer I will assume that you don’t claim to be certain that a fetus is not a person, (which would mean that there is room for reasonable doubt)Are you saying there is no conclusive evidence you can present that a blastocyst or foetus is a person? Only you have claimed the opposite, so now you just have a bare opinion, that explains a lot. Or are you now introducing this transparent attempt to falsely label my compelling evidence as some sort of absolute, because you know you've failed to address that evidence, and in order to dishonestly obfuscate, because you know have no answer beyond bare denials of that evidence?
Here again then is the evidence I presented, point by point so you can address each point individually with some intellectual integrity, for the first time:
The developing foetus is not of course a person, as it is not a single individual but part of a woman's body, as has been explained. Since a blastocyst and later a foetus are (1) attached topologically, initially to the placental wall, then by an umbilical, which is composed of foetal and maternal-origin cells, (2) without a clear or defined boundary between the two, and (3) both of which are part of the woman's body and formed in it, (4) it is immunologically tolerated by the woman's body, it (5) gets all its oxygen and nutrition from the woman's blood, (6) they share an immune system, (7) and a metabolism, and of course (8) the foetus or blastocyst is insentient. Jointly these facts pose a very strong case.
So lets see 8 cogent responses from you to that evidence, since I have done you the courtesy of addressing your bare claims point by point.
If you ever correct me and claim that your “evidence” proves beyond reasonable doubt that a fetus is not a person I will correct my previous claim