Lydiaa wrote:
Again because this is how I see things, the here and now rather than what it could become (in terms of living organisms mostly). This is necessary on my training for what I do, it is also an acquired preferred method when dealing with the body. (e.g. I don’t believe in waiting 3 weeks to see how a spot on my body turns out, or refusing to experiment cells cause if given the right condition it’ll grow.) This accounts for me seeing an egg under 9 weeks as it is, rather than the child that you see.
So you're justifying your position through the idea that it is a compartmentalizing of the issue to avoid your ego dealing with it. Thats what I understand you saying. This is not a rational response.[/quote]
Lydiaa wrote:
Remember also that I’m not talking about a foetus. I’m talking about up to and until 9 weeks when it is still in the zygote stage (mostly). And while it is a viable zygote, it is by no means alive or have the functions necessary to survive on its own, if removed from the mother.
How does a zygote not fullfill all the criteria for life that you issued above? You'll note nowhere in your own criteria for life is survivability outside a given environment. We don't assume polar bears are not alive because they cannot live in the Sahara for example.
It grows.
It metabolises.
It reproduces.
It responds to stimuli.
Lydiaa wrote:
Anyways with out going into it, let me answer your question.
1) If you go down into the most simple building blocks of our body, nothing that’s on us are alive. We’re made of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen… I could go on. This is why life is a miracle and why reproduction is a miracle. You mentioned previously that if we track back far enough, eventually we’d all have the same ancestor. I’d ask you to go a couple of steps further and spare a thought in that if we track far back far enough, we’re all just atoms. Kinda spins me out thinking about it.. but I’m digressing.
This doesn't answer my question in fact it all the more confirms that logically you must conclude that neither you nor I is alive. Also while theory exists that we came from chemicals there is no direct observation and no experiments confirming this is possible.
Lydiaa wrote:
Oh before I forget, I gave you the science def for Viable. Keep in mind that science hardly ever talk in black and white, with most things at a 95% confidence interval. So even though we usually say something was Viable, it doesn’t mean it’ll always replicate and start doing things like a good little cell. It simply means that it is capable of doing so. The body’s complicated and frigidy like that… makes my computer seem like a saint sometimes.
Which is exactly why I put the definition of viable as not defining a state but defining a state in reference to an environment. We are not discussing anything but a state which is why the term viable is out of scope for this discussion.
I still cannot understand how you can utterly evade this logic.
A zygote is not alive
Nothing not alive becomes alive.
I was once a zygote.
Therefore:
Z=~L
if (~L and (T or ~T)) then ~L
I = (~L+T)
Where Z = Zygote L = Life T= forward passage of time I= The individual reading the statement.