Talya wins for saying she had a love child with Foamy!
I do agree that eliminating the bottom 10% of the population would make my job easier, but that isn't my right to take their lives. They will take themselves out, I would say if I could I would offer doctor kevorkian services. I would because they are at that point they are able to decide for themselves if they want to die.
I see what you are saying about the many brilliant minds of the world and your numbers, but one mind that does not get that choice to live could be the most revolutionary thinker of our times or any time.
Lydiaa wrote:
Man craves life. Science helps to prolong life, even if it is destructive in nature. The removal of a clump of cell uses the same scientific theory, regardless if it’s for a benign tumour or a zygote. The only distinguishing thing in two similar procedures is the type of cell. For you to classify the same scientific theory of removing cells as natural or un-natural, would be an emotional/moral response and not a logical one. Science, depending on the definition of nature, is classified as a whole as natural or un-natural, you can not classify only part without adding emotional/moral components.
Natural abortions or miscarriages doesn’t always happen to zygotes who may be affected genetically. Would you also consider the aborting of those zygotes to be un-natural?
Man doesn't crave life, man craves to continue life. Again, I revert back to what I said before in my prior post, natural selection and sex drive are implanted with desire for the need to procreate. Why are you horniest at time of ovulation? Study has proven this if you read about libido, to want to produce off-spring. As for Science pro-longing life, I already addressed that in what you quoted me and agree that it does.
Fact,
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Science helps to proling life.
Opinion,
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Even if it is destructive in nature
This is greater based on an emotional response and not a logical one. To me, that sounds more fired with emotion then anything I have yet posted. No where has what I said about natural and un-natural abortions any or more illogical then saying science is destructive for a positive purpose. A benign tumour- A) supports your idea of science prolonging life because it needs to be removed to be tested for cancer. B) I think fairly many people would agree that removal of a zygote doesn't preserve life it destroys it. Two completely different things.
As for natural abortions vs. man made for
genetically flawed fetuses-- Never once in any of my posts in this thread, go back and check, have I addressed an abortion of a fetus if it is genetically flawed. This whole debate is under the presumption that the child carried is normal. Based on my ideas of Darwin and "survival of the fittest" Science and evolution only, not emotion, If that fetus does not grow normally with NO definite survival rate at birth then in essence I think it is ok. I don't argue moral, I argue what I have already defended what "nature" intended to do to survive and continue the species. And to address it, your body may not always abort it naturally, it may need help, but if sciecne didn't have that advancement you would carry that child to term and it would have died anyway. Darwin's theory completely- survival of the fittest. I think at that point then abortions do become emotional and help the mother cope with a dead child instead of carrying it to term. Still even without an abortion she would have carried it and it would have been dead. Basically emotional pain now or emotional pain later.
Genetic studies though dictate fetus, not zygote for finding the genetic defects. As a currently pregnant woman, doctors are not going to do scientific testing on a zygote unless it is artificially made for the sake of science in a dish. I don't know if you have ever been pregnant, but if your healthy like me, it would be to early to detect those genetic flaws on a zygote without me wanting to lose my child which obviously at 6 months now, I wouldn't want that to happen. It is too risky for the development of that fetus. Let's take Trisomy 18, my mother's friend's daughter just had to have an abortion of this fetus because it had over 64 chromosomes. It was not given any survival rate at birth because it had no liver, bladder, or kidneys. This genetic flaw was not able to be tested until at least 11 weeks and at that point the cells are a fetus. In this case because of my scientific views and not moral this to me seems normal. However, if we didn't have those advancements in science she would have had to carry that fetus to term and would have had to give birth anyway and the child would be dead. Again, nature knowing that that child was not meant to be. Sad and tragic for her because she wanted her baby, like poor LK wanted her babies, but nature said no for her sadly as well.
To Quote Talya- "Mother Nature is a *****."
Healthy off-spring, wanted or not, for the sake of evolution should be given that choice. Just as a person chose to have sex and not accept the consequences of why you had that sexual urge in the first place. There is no moral or emotion placed into that answer that is fact, you can not change sexual drive.
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This is where we differ. Where you see future humans, I see nothing. One can not miss, what one was never aware of.
We do differ here. You're right I see future humans and the greatness that they could become, where you see a clump of cells I see a viable life because that clump is not going to change into something other than a human what your natural reproductive system intended. It is not going to be afish, nor a dog, or cat. I don't believe that you can not miss what one never had, beacuse eventually it would have been. Try being the man who wanted, but wasn't able too because of choice. Even if you do, you can not say that you will never ever think about what could have been. I just don't believe that at all. I would wonder.
If you'll excuse me my prep time is over. This has been a great debate, but I think I will depart the thread at this point because I am neglecting to mark my Greek Tests that the kids handed into me. I am ashamed now for neglecting the great minds I hope to mold.