I would just query this with:But not all philosophical issues are legal issues. That's the point. Courts can only rule on issues that the Constitution grants them authority to rule on, and that certainly is not the power to determine that individual human cells have thoughts, feelings, and experiences.
Absolutely not. That is a question that philosophers, not judges, are equipped to debate. Judges can only decide on whether the law grants an embryo a civil right. The Alabama Supreme Court has now declared that it does, but there are strong questions about whether the federal Constitution grants state legislatures the power to grant a brainless cell or cluster of cells a legal right. The Alabama decision appears to grant them all the civil rights that babies acquire at birth, but not before.
The legal issues may be complicated, but our society has agreed that courts are limited in their power to resolve philosophical debates. They have to have a legal basis to do so. That is actually what the debate is over--whether they have the power to grant an embryo full civil rights.
Well, you certainly take a broad perspective on the nature of life. I wouldn't try to back this claim up in court, if I were you. Would you consider it murder to smash a rock? I would like to see a lawyer defend the injuries suffered by a pile of pebbles.
- Where do rights come from in the first place?
- Who decides we have rights and why?
- What is a right?
etc.
It is still all philosophical at its base. We can pretend politics isn't philosophy but it is. Rights of any kind are a philosophical legal fiction. So debating them is in many ways debating whether Ron or Harry is the better wizard.
I wouldn't defend it. Everyone has to draw a line somewhere; for the same reason vegans eat plants.