RagnaToad: I personally don't believe you've made your opinion very clear. On the one hand you do not feel comfortable with abortion. On the other you are progressive and liberal-minded. And then you claim that you're not necessarily attacking abortion when you quote Phoenix. These aren't in contradiction, but they do not add up to a whole. I could guess, but I think having the opposition define/guess at your views is unfair for both parties.
Phoenix is fully capable of defending himself. The guy will come in and say what he wants to who he wants regardless of what I say. I'm simply trying to take a different approach to the same question since we (seem to) take similar stances. I'm without problems concerning this subject, though. I just feel that this isn't much of a debate if both parties don't clearly state their viewpoint to the best of their ability.
Oskar: You could certainly view a debate like that. The only issue is that there has not yet been a stance for RagnaToad to be right or wrong about, making it hard for anyone to counter at all. It's just a matter of fairness.
That's an interesting viewpoint and I can somewhat see where you're coming from. There is no doubt a fetus is living on some level. The question is how we should classify its existence.
The problem with this line of thinking is that it leaves behind one very large implication. Humans are indeed multicellular organisms, but not all multicellular organisms are humans. That would mean we should extend this kindness to ALL beings that fit into this classification. Naturally, this means plants and animals. If you do not agree with this then I think it is necessary to explain why multicellular organisms born from a human egg and sperm are given priority. If you do agree... well, we're dead.
The issue is when we can finally call a multicellular organism a human. Before that, it is merely potential. I would say that the brain would need to develop to some particular stage before you could label it as such. It's really a debate left up to science, but I am not under the impression that it begins at conception. If it is, we really need to broaden our definition of what it means to be human.
As for the issue of rape... ethically, I suppose it becomes extremely hard to justify abortion even under those circumstances if it is in fact living and thinking as we do. But I have no reason to assume that a living organism is human simply because it is conceived, which in my mind gives a window of opportunity for choice. Beyond that... it's just a tragedy, and the feelings of those who have experienced that pain are just on a level that I could never completely understand.
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