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#31
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Re: stem cell research
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#32
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Re: stem cell research
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I'm sorry I'm going to have to reply to your other points later, work is piling up, but the perspective you brought on those who believe in a soul and those who don't is a genuinely interesting one. |
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#33
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Re: stem cell research
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there is no way to anticipate whether an ectopic pregnancy will kill the mother at the point that the pregnancy is discovered. there is a high likelihood but no way to definitively identify one as life threatening moreso than another. abortion is necessarily the treatment for such abnormal pregnancies, even though death is not guaranteed. |
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#34
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Re: stem cell research
Deckard, your argument is just as or more circular than mine. You keep going back to 'well, sperm and unfertilized eggs are sacred because they could potentially make life like an embryo could', but you completely ignore or throw away the fact that an embryo is alive with an existentialistic 'what is life anyway?' argument.
well, let's consult dictionary.com and wikipedia. these are both fairly secular resources. dictionary.com: life /laɪf/ noun, plural lives /laɪvz/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [lahyvz] adjective –noun 1. the condition that distinguishes organisms from inorganic objects and dead organisms, being manifested by growth through metabolism, reproduction, and the power of adaptation to environment through changes originating internally. let's do a checklist: unfertilized eggs: 1. growth through metabolism? no. 2. reproduction? no. 3. adaptation to environment? no. embryo: 1. growth through metabolism? yes. 2. reproduction? yes. 3. adaptation to environment? this one is iffy; an egg cannot survive outside of the womb, but a grown human cannot survive in subzero temperatures, either. so there are differing conditions in the sensitivity of the person at different stages of life. wikipedia: Life is a state that distinguishes organisms from non-living objects, such as non-life, and dead organisms. Living organisms are capable of growth and reproduction, some can communicate and many can adapt to their environment through changes originating internally. A physical characteristic of life is that it feeds on negative entropy. In more detail, according to physicists such as John Bernal, Erwin Schrödinger, Eugene Wigner, and John Avery, life is a member of the class of phenomena which are open or continuous systems able to decrease their internal entropy at the expense of substances or free energy taken in from the environment and subsequently rejected in a degraded form (see: entropy and life). unfertilized eggs: 1. growth and reproduction? no. 2. communicate and adapt to environment? no. 3. feeds on negative entropy? no. embryo: 1. growth and reproduction? yes. 2. communicate and adapt to environment? yes. 3. feeds on negative entropy? yes. now, let's look at the definition of circular reasoning. Circular Reasoning – supporting a premise with the premise rather than a conclusion. Circular reasoning is an attempt to support a statement by simply repeating the statement in different or stronger terms. In this fallacy, the reason given is nothing more than a restatement of the conclusion that poses as the reason for the conclusion. To say, “You should exercise because it’s good for you” is really saying, “You should exercise because you should exercise.” It shares much with the false authority fallacy because we accept these statements based solely on the fact that someone else claims it to be so. Often, we feel we can trust another person so much that we often accept his claims without testing the logic. This is called blind trust, and it is very dangerous. We might as well just talk in circles. Last edited by bryantm3; 11-12-2008 at 10:47 AM. |
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#35
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Re: stem cell research
Ho hum.
I thought this would happen. It has polarised into a pro-life vs pro-choice argument, which is an argument that neither side is going to "win", frankly, because the views are so very deeply entrenched.
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"If I can't dance, I don't want to be part of your revolution" - Emma Goldman |
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#37
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Re: stem cell research
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I disagree that these factors - passing these thresholds - should necessarily introduce a moral threshold to a topic like stem cell research. If there is no suffering by anyone, I genuinely don't see why the loss of any 'potential' child/adult life should be a hindrance. But then I readily admit I don't share the notion of sanctity. Wonder, yes. Awe, yes. Beauty, yes. Sanctity? No. |
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#38
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Re: stem cell research
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Yeah, and let us back track to how many pro-lifers also voted pro-war. Man, too early for a drink just yet, but I'm def. gonna have one later.
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#39
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#40
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Re: stem cell research
that was the purpose of the thread. not to "win" or convert anyone, but to discuss the merits of each side of the argument and perhaps see something new.
personally i think a lot about this issue because it's taken me a long time to really solidify the rationale behind my gut feeling. like pointing out that i support organ donation which contradicts my stance on the use of fetal tissue. i know i don't have the ultimate answer or the most water-tight argument so i'm interested in reading how others view the issue because it helps my own opinion evolve. |
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