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When does life begin?

Sargonski

Well-Known Member
OK, not true but you think so.

another post with no argument. what is not true ? ... you don't even have a legitimate premise in this one. I went back through your posts .. post after post .. no argument to be found. Which post of yours contains an argument ? Show that your claim is true ! ..
 

PearlSeeker

Well-Known Member
What does it mean to be human and how is that zygote displaying those traits that define it clearly as human?

Is it only the possession of a particular genome?

It contains all of the genetic information (a complete - diploid human genome) of a new individual (genetically unique) organism. But there is more. From a purely scientific standpoint:

"Both by its genetic information, produced proteins, overall molecular composition, and by its behavior, even at its earliest stages of development, the zygote that is produced after fertilization is both alive and with human genetic material."

See:
 

Quintessence

Consults with Trees
Staff member
Premium Member
"parasite"

I don't much care for that word as a description.

But...we all are basically parasites to earth.
If you believe earth is a superorganism, perhaps. That would make all species of this planet parasites - organisms that live inside another organism, leeching off its life force and metabolism.
 

PearlSeeker

Well-Known Member
There's no singular measurement to definitively determine if a person (or any other creature for that matter) is alive or dead. Heartbeat, breathing or the various definitions of brain death can be considered but none are necessarily definitive or apply equally in all cases.

We obviously work around the uncertainty with various systems, policies and structures where they're necessary (such as in hospitals) but that will often involve an element of (educated) opinion rather than just definitive and measurable facts.
Then it should be written on a tombstone:
Name and surname
(date of birth - ????)
 

Dan From Smithville

The Flying Elvises, Utah Chapter
Staff member
Premium Member
It contains all of the genetic information (a complete - diploid human genome) of a new individual (genetically unique) organism. But there is more. From a purely scientific standpoint:

"Both by its genetic information, produced proteins, overall molecular composition, and by its behavior, even at its earliest stages of development, the zygote that is produced after fertilization is both alive and with human genetic material."

See:
I agree, but is that all it takes to be considered human. I have lost a bunch of cells over my lifetime. All with a diploid human genome. Other than being the cells of a human are they human in the same sense that you or I are?

I'm just curious what people think and claim.
 

McBell

Unbound
And yet, how "individual" is it when it is basically a parasite that is not viable outside of its human host? That is, it is absolutely dependent upon another in a way that even those who deny the interdependence of all existence have a hard time being dismissive of. There are many reasons why RvW was the sensible compromise, but this above all others is the prime.

No viability = no human rights.

It really should be that simple.
Seems to me it depends upon just how asinine one is willing to be in order to push their agenda(s) over having honest discourse.
 

Dan From Smithville

The Flying Elvises, Utah Chapter
Staff member
Premium Member
It contains all of the genetic information (a complete - diploid human genome) of a new individual (genetically unique) organism. But there is more. From a purely scientific standpoint:

"Both by its genetic information, produced proteins, overall molecular composition, and by its behavior, even at its earliest stages of development, the zygote that is produced after fertilization is both alive and with human genetic material."

See:
That's an interesting little paper. It tackles the points I'm interested in and is somewhat truncated version of the basis of my interest in this subject.
 

Audie

Veteran Member
Seems to me it depends upon just how asinine one is willing to be in order to push their agenda(s) over having honest discourse.
Yep, there's no right to medical
care, no rights at all if you will die without it.
Simple.
 

RestlessSoul

Well-Known Member
When you have 2 things that are already alive coming together, how is that the start of life?


It’s the start of a new life which may, if all goes well, someday be independent of the two lives which came together to create it.
 

Quintessence

Consults with Trees
Staff member
Premium Member
Seems to me it depends upon just how asinine one is willing to be in order to push their agenda(s) over having honest discourse.
How do you figure that? It seems to me that folks with various perspectives on this issue are being quite honest in their tellings of them. That is, both the extreme positions of "abortion at any stage or pregnancy" and "abortion at no stage of pregnancy" are present in society. I don't understand what you mean here.
 

McBell

Unbound
How do you figure that? It seems to me that folks with various perspectives on this issue are being quite honest in their tellings of them. That is, both the extreme positions of "abortion at any stage or pregnancy" and "abortion at no stage of pregnancy" are present in society. I don't understand what you mean here.
Fair enough.

It just looks to me that people are going to extreme to conflate a specific individual life and that that specific individual life and everything about it is human.

So this "discussion" always ends up being nothing more than a big semantics mess.
 

anotherneil

Well-Known Member
I was listening to 2 people having a debate on abortion, and one person asked the other "when does life begin" and the other person said when it comes to humans it doesn't begin, you have an alive sperm and an alive egg coming together to make an alive human; at no point is anything dead coming to life, they just go from one form of life to another. I'm no biologist, but this make sense to me, yet I hear people claiming life begins at conception; am I missing something here?
I think the word that's missing or that you're probably looking for is "generation." What happens at conception when sperm and egg finish the process of completely joining together is that a new generation (relative to its parents) of that organism has formed. This is not limited to humans; it also applies to any other organism that reproduces sexually.

In a similar sense, people demonstrate having a misunderstanding about what a fetus is in terms of being a living human being. There are two problems that people seem to have with the word fetus. The first is that there seems to be a belief about what a fetus is as though it's a different species of an organism, distinct from its parents & that's not correct; it's a reference to a stage of development, for the same species as itself and its parents. The second is that some people seem to believe that only gestating human mothers can have a fetus (i.e. all other mammals can also have a fetus as a stage of development). When a human has a fetus, that fetus is a human fetus; when a rabbit has a fetus, that fetus is a rabbit fetus; when a coyote has a fetus, that fetus is a coyote fetus; when a giraffe has a fetus, that fetus is a giraffe fetus; etc. etc.

What might make it easier to understand is to take into consideration when a new generation of life begins with organisms that reproduce asexually (binary fission); in this case, the offspring (the new generation) are alive, and the parent apparently vanishes. With sexual reproduction, the parents of offspring do not vanish.

Hmm, I wonder if that's where the word "apparently" came from; just kidding, I just wanted to say that.

Regarding abortion, there's a distinction to be made with it, as well - there are two different terminations involved with an abortion, not just one. The first is that the pregnancy itself is being brought to an end, and the second is that the life of the unborn offspring is being targeted for slaughter to also bring it to an end.

BTW, I'm curious - why did you post this thread in the "Religious Topics > Religious Debates > General Religious Debates" section of the forum? This is a biological question; what does the issue, of when new generations of life begin, have to do with religion?

If it's about the issue of outlawing abortion, then that would be a political issue & still not a religious issue.

In terms of abortion as a political issue, I don't have a problem with the first type of termination; if a woman wants to stop being pregnant, what business is it of mine to tell her what to do with her body? None - that's what. However, the unborn child is a different story & what I'm saying is let women remove their unborn offspring if they want to stop being pregnant, and omit the extra step of killing it.

It's not the mother herself who's taking (direct) active action to slaughter the unborn offspring, herself; it's the abortionist who makes & takes this additional, extraneous, step of doing that. Simply transfer the unborn offspring to an incubator & if that's not feasible or viable way of preserving its life, then let's do what's needed in order to invent & develop the necessary technology.

The mother doesn't have to keep the child if she doesn't wish to raise it, doesn't think she's ready or fit to be a mother, or doesn't wish to raise a child because of financial hardship or limitations, etc. There's always the possibility that the biological father or another relative would want to raise the child & I don't think I need to patronize anyone by introducing a concept known as adoption as an alternative to the availability of biological parents or relatives.

The reason I bring up this distinction is because in a post Roe v. Wade era here in the US, we now have states imposing bans on abortion. I personally think this makes sense for the sake of protecting the life of the unborn child, but would such a ban include pregnancy termination procedures that preserve the life of the unborn child by transferring it to an incubator (hypothetically speaking), rather than deliberate dismembering to slaughter it?

I don't support that sort of a broad abortion ban, and if there are those who insist on such broad abortion ban for religious reasons that includes terminating the pregnancy even if the unborn child's life is protected and preserved, then that's a trivial matter of being an infringement on the 1st clause of the 1st Amendment, which prohibits the merger of religion ("church") and state.

Regarding so-called "abortion pills", which does generally entail the life of the unborn offspring promptly coming to an end as a result, I have a libertarian position that also makes me oppose an abortion ban that also covers this. My libertarian position - specifically - is that I think people ought to have a right to consume whatever they want, even if it just happens to be something that knowingly or unknowingly induces a miscarriage.

To me, the distinction between a situation like a miscarriage and an (elective) abortion is that with a miscarriage, in effect, the woman's body itself is initiating the termination through its own biological processes, and an (elective) abortion involves a mechanical & manual process of utilizing tools to remove the unborn offspring from the womb, whether in one piece or many pieces.

A ban on a pregnant woman intentionally consuming something that happens to induce a miscarriage, even so-called "abortion pills", to me, seem to only be based on religious grounds.

Well, at this point I guess I have my answer to the question of what the relevance is to religion. LOL
 
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