Elmarnieh wrote:
I've already dealt with your claim above several posts ago. The single zygote was an individual until the act that created two individuals occurred. Just as if I pull a starfish out of the ocean I have a single starfish and when I cut it in half and toss them back I have lost two starfish.
Absurd. It's either a person or its not. If it can suddenly become two people, it was never a person to start with.
Hopwin wrote:
Your question makes no sense. You are asking if it is rationally defensible to take the life of another.
No, he's not. He's asking if it's rationally defensible to take the stand that it is not even a person.
Since it is not rationally defensible to argue that it
is a person, and only religious metaphysical claptrap, such as Elmarnieh's "scientific" stance (much in the same way as "intelligent design" or "young earth creationism" are "scientific"), can argue that it is.
Our law protects "persons," not some generic "human life." Our law grants rights to individual persons that protect their lives. As such, the definition of person is entirely the point. What makes "a person?" That's all that matters.
It's important to remember that in a society that values freedom, there is no universal "right" or "wrong." There are simply the laws we choose to enact to maintain the stability and structure of our society. None of this is unequivocably "wrong" or "right" because such things do not exist. If, as a society, we decided that every third child born to us would be sacrificed to Molech at puberty, then that would be "right." There are no "inherent rights" to speak of. There is simply what we decide to protect. Protecting an unsentient lump of cells has no value to our society -- no ethical, economical, or developmental upside.