nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » I am not seeing anyone present a single reason to support it.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » As I said, since it is FROM our consciousness that the notion of rights comes from I think it is also TO that we assign it. If you find another conscious species which holds this concept of rights then by all means let us re-open the discussion and talk of extending the definition to them. I am not aware of any animal which holds a concept of "Right to life" however, are you? In fact we alone seem to be the only species that is aware that it is definitely going to die.
The Corinthian wrote: » You are confusing conciousness with sentience...
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » If two beings are to be considered to have the "right to life“ then if one person is threatening an action on the life of another, I advocate incarceration. I stick to that regardless of whether we are talking about you and me, or a mother and baby.
recedite wrote: » Well no, "absence of evidence" does not equate to "evidence of absence". That is a standard scientific assumption which I am adhering to, and you are not.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Here's a polling station in Dublin 12... I've emailed the Dublin City returning officer, those posters better be gone by Friday morning or the Gardai will be contacted. Entirely inappropriate and illegal. Ridiculous having a polling station in the grounds of a church in the first place though. Walking past statues into a room with a crucifix on the wall ffs.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » It is usually the Theists who come into this area of the forum pretending to completely misunderstand where the burden of proof lies in the arguments around here. But the "You can not prove it lacks it" argument is no more valid from you here than the "You can not prove there is NO god" approach we see from them. A move we never accept from them, so why you think it valid here is beyond me.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » So the rest your post saying my premise is faulty is better directed at the mirror. Because the building still remains empty, regardless. Even "sub-human" is the wrong word and imports premises that are not my own.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » But imagine for a moment I created an Artificial Intelligence that would be every bit as sentient, and conscious as you or I. With equal, or even higher, ability to attain suffering or well being. All that remains is for me to hit the "ON" button. Why do I have a moral onus to press that button rather than, say, taking apart the entire system and using the parts to build toasters for my mates instead?
recedite wrote: » I'm not impressed with your "building blocks" and your brain "suddenly waking up". It is, in fact, pseudo-scientific nonsense.
Pete29 wrote: » What are those qualities which define humanity?
ohnonotgmail wrote: » Really? what are you basing that on? At the 24 weeks the physical building blocks required start to develop. During (natural) birth the brain abruptly wakes up. So while we cannot say what level of sentience a newborn has we definitely cannot say that they have none. We cannot say the same about a 12-week old foetus.
aloyisious wrote: » Here's a link to the voice recognition ability of a new born's brain:https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/12/101215195234.htm BTW, it's from 2010.
Pete29 wrote: » Either does a new born. A new born doesn't show signs of sentience or consciousness until around four or five months after birth. Is it ok to kill them ten minutes after birth?
Pete29 wrote: » Even if a child isn't conscious in the womb, it will be conscious and to rob it off that possibility is wrong.
Pete29 wrote: » Consciousness requires a sophisticated network of highly interconnected components, nerve cells. Its physical substrate, the thalamo-cortical complex that provides consciousness with its highly elaborate content, begins to be in place between the 24th and 28th week of gestation.
Consciousness requires a sophisticated network of highly interconnected components, nerve cells. Its physical substrate, the thalamo-cortical complex that provides consciousness with its highly elaborate content, begins to be in place between the 24th and 28th week of gestation.
antiskeptic wrote: » Forgive hopping into the discussion - and I may be grabbing the wrong end of the stick. How does one suppose one's approach is the correct approach in the first place.
antiskeptic wrote: » Leo will be looking forward to tonight's debate with some trepidation so. First up: Minister, you say abortion on the grounds of disability will be prohibited"
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » We can decide what defines a human person, and then we can use our science to go check if the attributes defined are present and in play.
recedite wrote: » Its a glass "half full or half empty" scenario. You can't prove the foetus lacks personhood/human beingness or whatever you want to call it. I can't prove it fulfills all the requirements 100%.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » The first method for estimating the intelligence of a ruler is to look at the men he has around him
Pete29 wrote: » Yes, I too can use googlehttps://www.scientificamerican.com/article/when-does-consciousness-arise/ Even if a child isn't conscious in the womb, it will be conscious and to rob it off that possibility is wrong.
Pete29 wrote: » ohnonotgmail wrote: » well sentience for a start. a 12 week old foetus doesn't have any. Either does a new born. A new born doesn't show signs of sentience or consciousness until around four or five months after birth. Is it ok to kill them ten minutes after birth?
ohnonotgmail wrote: » well sentience for a start. a 12 week old foetus doesn't have any.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » During (natural) birth the brain abruptly wakes up.
There is no question that the baby is awake. Its eyes are wide open, it wriggles and grimaces, and, most important, it cries. But all that is not the same as being conscious, of experiencing pain, seeing red or smelling Mom’s milk.
Pete29 wrote: » Either does a new born. A new born doesn't show signs of sentience or consciousness until around four or five months after birth
ohnonotgmail wrote: » Not that they are sub-human but that they have not yet obtained those qualities that we use to define humanity.
recedite wrote: » FWIW I'm not ignoring your posts. I know your position and you know mine. We disagree, and there is nothing more to say about it. Its a glass "half full or half empty" scenario. You can't prove the foetus lacks personhood/human beingness or whatever you want to call it. I can't prove it fulfills all the requirements 100%. Nice analogy, but like all your arguments, it is based on the same old false premise from my POV. You've seen and heard "beings" still inside the building, but decided that they were sub-human, and so declared the building to be "empty".
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » The group THIS thread is about has not been shown to be human in any other sense but taxonomy. No other meaningful sense of what it means to be "human" is being linked to the fetus.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » An analogy: If you are about to blow up a building, then it is useful to know that the building has no people in it. If there is, then it really is irrelevant how old they are, how many there are, how they got there, how long they have been there, what they are wearing, or just about everything else. But if they are wholly absent, you can blow up the building at will.
recedite wrote: » Only that in some countries they are routinely aborted, and that has become the new "normal". Its not a cure for DS, its a cull. Whether you agree or disagree with the cull, its still relevant to the overall abortion discussion.
recedite wrote: » If you seek differences you will find them. Confederate slave owners used to say black people did not have the same rights because obvious differences are obvious.
recedite wrote: » Your attitude is based on a similar prejudice. As long as you are in the advantaged group, you are quite happy.
recedite wrote: » Not just the plantation owners, slavery has been a feature of human societies for most of history.
recedite wrote: » First establish that a particular group is sub-human for whatever reason. Find a reason or a difference, its easy enough if you look for one. Then it follows that their human rights can be "repealed".
recedite wrote: » Sentience, intelligence and the capacity to live independently of parents are things that develop very slowly in humans. But when they are fully developed, which is not until many years after birth, they make us the smartest creature on earth, and allow us to dominate every other animal.
recedite wrote: » Neither of us can say when the first drop of magical sentience appears.
recedite wrote: » Is sentience your benchmark for determining humanity, and if so, what level of it turns an animal into a human being?
end of the road wrote: » the view you subscribe to is irrelevant and not credible due to the reality that people of such a belief would have a different attitude if it was a newborn.
end of the road wrote: » nope, human being, right to life.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » So what? Not your womb, not your choice, not your resulting child to raise and not your difficulties to overcome. I support the right of every woman with a prenatal DS diagnosis to abort, whether 1% or 10% or 100% choose to do so is irrelevant.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Utter lies. Public servants took 3 rounds of pay cuts. The cuts to new entrants were unilaterally imposed by FF/Green government and were NOT part of any agreement with unions. Your ignorance is profound.
recedite wrote: » Dude, antiskeptic was using a rhetorical device when he suggested yayheists (ie Yes-voting atheists) were attempting to to cheat evolution, and referred to it as "the very god that created them". That's a god with a small "g". I thought it was a good post, but obviously it went waaay over some peeps heads, like.
recedite wrote: » Only that in some countries they are routinely aborted, and that has become the new "normal".