comprehend said:
In honor of, and response to, Sunstones thread about rape and murder... and also using the same loaded language for your enjoyment.
Huzzles! *smiles*
comprehend said:
Is it consistant to morally support the execution of sweet INNOCENT unborn or partially born babies (AKA abortion) while simultaneously being opposed to the execution of GUILTY (usually, right Texas??? ) evil, murderous criminals?
It can be; and as a person who holds both such positions on those two issues, and yet sees no logical contradiction between the two, I'll try to briefly explain my understanding of this thorny issue. *nods*
It seems, as others have noted, that the crux of this issue comes down to the definition of what constitutes a
person. This in itself is an important distinction. A living entity or a human is (in my opinion) relatively easy to define, a
person is a little more complex.
Now, there does appear to be a loose, somewhat intuitive rationale within wider society that is collectively interpreted and implemented in some form as regards the definition of what constitutes a person, and thereby what differentiates and distinguishes between various individuals and groups of humans as regards what society judges they are legally and morally entitled to, expected of and responsible for. In other words, there does seem to be a common agreement that while all people are human, not all humans are people.
Examples abound. Many agree that there should be some legal and moral distinction made between, say, a human who suffers from Parkinson's disease and a coma patient, or between an intellectually medial human who accepts and perpetuates their societal norms and values, and a severely mentally handicapped human who does not. The example cited in the OP is simply yet another one.
Onto the interesting (and rather more relevant) part. I believe there now exists two fundamental and interdependent questions that must be answered, and answered well, before we can go any further. Firstly, is such a legal and moral distinction logically consistent, and if so, can it be demonstratably measured, codified and extrapolated from. I feel that I can at least attempt to answer both questions (a good thing too, or this would be a
very long "I don't know" reply
), though perhaps with a little hesitation.
From my observations, and little more, I discern that there exist four primary aspects and two secondary aspects that in all are recognised and required to fully constitute a person. A human being who does not have each and all of these aspects
at one particular point in time can not,
at that particular point in time, be considered a person, and thus their legal and moral entitlements, expectations and responsibilities are amended accordingly.
In short, these six aspects are as follows.
Primarily:
A1 ~
Living existence. This aspect entails that a person must themselves be a living entity.
A2 ~
Genetic compatibility. This aspect entails that a person must be a direct offshoot of the species Homo sapiens
^. In short, they must be human.
A3 ~
Perceptive qualities. This aspect entails that a person must, in some measurable quality and quantity, have the ability to observe, reason, experience, judge and emote inherently and independently of their immediate environment.
A4 ~
Collective consciousness. This aspect entails that a person must, in some measurable quality and quantity, have the ability to act and interact with other entities. In short, to hold some existence within society.
Secondarily:
B1 ~
Potential existence. This aspect entails that a person must, in some measurable quality and quantity, have the ability to continue their existence beyond the current point in time.
B2 ~
Retention and recall of information. This aspect entails that a person must, in some measurable quality and quantity, have the ability to store, retain and recall information that arose before the current point in time.
Important note: None of these aspects are intended to be regarded as absolute constants, and indeed some are rather less constant then others, and should be treated as such. For example, generally an 89-year old person suffering from the beginnings of dementia will, whilst possessing every afore-mentioned aspect, will hold each aspect in differing amounts to, say, a nominally-healthy 19-year old person. 'Tis a scale within a scale. I am, after all,
trying to provide a
brief overview of my thinking.
Now, to try and tie it all back together again. We can observe that in this scenario a convicted felon has, at the point in time they become a convicted felon, measurably each and every aspect that fully constitutes a person, and are thus fully appropriated by society their legal and moral entitlements, expectations and responsibilities. (Rather neatly, if a severely mentally handicapped human commits a crime, as they do not hold each and every aspect required to constitute a person, they are not held fully responsible for their actions by society and cannot thus be a convicted felon)
A foetus simply does not, at one particular point in time whilst it exists as a foetus, hold each and every aspect required to constitute a person either, and so their legal and moral entitlements, expectations and responsibilities within society are (and indeed should be) amended accordingly too. Because of this, any direct comparison between the treatment given and received by the two entities as suggested in the scenario above is inaccurate and incomplete, as it does not take into account the differing natures of the two.
This, from my limited perspective at least, is how I can reconcile my position on both these issues while remaining logically consistent.
*smiles*
Finally, I'd more then welcome any and all feedback and criticism of my current thinking, provided of course such refutations were both logical and consistent. I can personally think of two major problems/contradictions as things stand with my reasoning above, but even together I don't think they can sufficiently kill it off. Fruballs for anyone who can help convince me of my errors, and so help me understand better myself and the world around me, and coins if anyone guesses which problems I'm referring to.
(Unless, of course, that would take this thread off-topic, in which case I'll apologise, delete and perhaps make a new thread about this
)
(That's also assuming anyone actually read this gobble-dee-gook)
^Not being a scientist or an expert in this field, if I've made a mistake I'd gladly appreciate anyone telling me.
*crosses fingers, and hopes*