Elmarnieh wrote:
No as it is not their natural course. Now if human intervention started them on that path then the individual undertaking that actions would be responsible for that life. A stem cell is simply a flexible cell - if given the instructions to begin to transform into another human than it only makes sense to proceed from that direction.
Elmarnieh wrote:
And yet they are not the whole of Hopwin since the vast majority has ceased to exist you again choose to distribute characteristics which are not able to be distributed to the parts.
These are both arbitrary decisions
you have made with regard to relevant information, that don't have any sequitur logical path to the question at hand. And your dismissal of "technology" (which wasn't actually the point -- EEG results, for instance, merely measure the presence of brainwaves. Brainwaves still exist (or fail to exist) regardless of our tech levels) makes the whole "natural course" argument ridiculous. "Natural" is a useless term. Humans naturally murder each other. That doesn't make it something we accept by law. "Natural" simply means "occurring in nature."
Everything that exists or happens occurs in nature. Humans (and everything we make) and human behavior are part of nature.
What this comes down to, is merely "being (innocent) human life" does not make it sacred or wrong to end (it doesn't even make it an actual person). Sure, we can legally assign the same rights to a fertilized zygote as a person has, but in so doing we harm our own society in so many ways; economically, ethically, and developmentally. To do so violates the freedoms and rights of actual people, without any benefit whatsoever.