Ayn Rand, Abortion, and Planned Parenthood.

Posted by Eudaimonia 8 years, 9 months ago to Politics
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Kevin Williamson of National Review did a follow-up to his piece which I posted here yesterday.
http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/...

In this current piece, again on the Planned Parenthood atrocity (my word), he takes a shot at Planned Parenthhood apologists by referencing Rand
"Why not have a Fast Freddy’s Fetal Livers Emporium and Bait Shop in every town large enough to merit a Dairy Queen? If you are having some difficulty answering that question, perhaps you should, as some famous abortion-rights advocate once put it, check your premises."

Some people have taken this line to also be an implication of Rand.
Me, I'm not sure, there's a few things I disagree with Rand on, abortion being one of them.

But, what is Rand's view on abortion?
Here is a link the entry in the Ayn Rand Lexicon.
http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/abo...

I think the most relevant portion is this.
"A piece of protoplasm has no rights—and no life in the human sense of the term. One may argue about the later stages of a pregnancy, but the essential issue concerns only the first three months."

In Rand's day, that's what abortion was.

Now, I'm no doctor, but I doubt very much that organ tissue can be harvested from a first trimester embryo.
I speculate that Planned Parenthood was harvesting exclusively from late term and even partial-birth abortions.

What Rand would say about this is also speculative, although we can infer from her words "One may argue about the later stages of a pregnancy..."

So, Objectivists, what say you?

Disclosure, my personal opinions on abortion - the human animal is a biological machine, as such it has core programming (instinctual drives). Maternal instincts are some of the most powerful any animal possesses, even stronger than Self-preservation or Species-reproduction. As such, I believe that when a woman has an abortion, regardless of the trimester, her maternal instinct kicks in at some level - automatic, unstoppable, irrevocable, unaffected by popular opinion of what abortion is supposed to be. As such, I believe that when a woman gets an abortion, she is doing deep and permanent psychological damage to herself. The existence of groups such as Silent No More lead me to suspect that my opinion is correct. What is the percentage of women who are psychologically damaged by an abortion? Who knows, and with today's Lysenko "scientists" I doubt there will be any unbiased research done. Regardless, until women who are considering an abortion first get counselling on the (what I believe) strong probability of psychological damage from the procedure, I can not be anything but against it.

This disclosure is also open for debate on this thread.


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  • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
    I don't know Eud; My experiences (two different women in very close relationships) were considerably different. I don't imply here that the decisions were easily reached and didn't involve a lot of soul searching on their parts. But what I noticed in both cases was the fear of external criticism and noises from non-involved sources. And there was a need for a lot of comfort, support, and assurance after the event for a significant period of time, as well as not involving any others outside of just the two of us.

    And later, when the situation was right for both women, I had two fantastic sons.

    I was also raised by a widowed mother with five (5) sons and I directly experienced the turmoil, stress anxiety, internal and external conflicts of her life as well as the failures of three (3) of those boys.

    Had I convinced those two women to have those children even with their concerns at the time, I'm not sure that wouldn't have done more damage to them than supporting them in their wishes to control when it was right for them.
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    • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
      Zen, I too have been close to women who have had abortions.
      When they felt comfortable enough in conversation to discuss it, each to a person claimed they felt an emotional sense of loss over it, some every day.
      They did not claim regret: regret is partially reason based, each knew that they had made what was for them the correct decision.

      My points are these:

      1) Science is corrupted by politics. The only evidence I can trust in an area of science which politics has Lysenkoized is evidence which I have seen first-hand. My first-hand evidence has led me to my conclusion about probable side-effects to the abortion procedure.

      2) I am not arguing on the morality/immorality of abortion per se. I am arguing over the morality/immorality of a medical procedure performed without full disclosure.
      Let me frame it this way.
      Suppose that you had to have surgery, either elective or critical, and that the procedure needed was presented to you as safe and routine.
      Later, you develop a side-effect which everyone knew about but didn't bother to tell you because it wasn't politic.
      How much would you sue for?
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      • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
        Eud; I certainly agree on the political corruption of science, in every aspect. The current book I'm reading 'Stephen Hawking Smoked My Socks' by Hilton Ratcliffe is exactly on point about that from the aspect of belief, on the part of the scientist themselves, by the established 'elders' of science, and by political and financial factors of the society they inhabit (or wish to inhabit).

        It's my memory that the two women I had my experience with were that both counseled prior to the procedure and given references to follow up services after the procedure. But both went through private clinics. I suppose that had either been on their own or in an oppositional environment, their experiences would have been much worse.

        I do wonder though, why we don't hear of such law suits happening.
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  • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
    Eudiamonia -

    Are you telling me what I am feeling? Are you deciding for me that I will be existentially hurt by decisions I choose to make and so I should not be allowed to make them? Are you saying that I have to have counseling for something that women have been doing for thousands of years on their own (abort early term embryos) because you have decided it is damaging for me?

    So...I can decide to join the military and go into combat and take the chance of getting killed...but I am not allowed to get the 'day after' shot to terminate a blastocyst?

    Hear the outrage in my typety-typing. This is absurd. It hearkens back to Victorian doctors deciding that women did not actually have orgasms; we just thought that we did.

    If you would like to ask women what they feel, that is different, but you have not only taken a stance that you will Inform us what we are feeling but that you will then make Rules that we have to follow in order to be magnanimously permitted to exercise free will.

    Jan
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    • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
      Agreed, I am shocked to hear Gulchers arguing to legislate against an action to keep the person deciding to take it from feeling bad after. You have got to be kidding me!
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      • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
        You are shocked to hear that a Gulcher is arguing that doctors must fully disclose to potential patients the possible side-effects of their treatment?

        Or did you misunderstand my argument?
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        • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
          Side effect to the patient, yes. What happens to the fetus is not a side effect to the mother.

          Requiring abortion customers to see what the fetus looks like is a bullshit scare tactic religious people want to use because they've lost the simple secular argument. It is just like vegans wanting meat eaters to watch their cow die and be slaughtered before they eat steak, and it is right out of an Orwell novel.
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          • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
            Did I advocate that?
            No.

            What I advocated is that the doctor performing the procedure inform the patient of all possible side-effects to the patient.

            As I responded to jlc:

            Start quote ---

            If it is possible that you are getting hung up on the word "counselling", let me clarify.

            I do not mean "counselling" as you see a psych health professional.

            Rather "counselling" in it's sense of "advise" or "warning".

            Meaning that the doctor should say, "Just so you know, x percent of women have experienced y degree of z side-effect."

            And that's it.

            I expect nothing less from any other medical professional.
            And if I get less, it is fraud and malpractice.

            End Quote ---
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    • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
      Jan, I have copied part of my response to Zen.

      I am not arguing on the morality/immorality of abortion per se.
      I am arguing over the morality/immorality of a medical procedure performed without full disclosure.
      Let me frame it this way.
      Suppose that you had to have surgery, either elective or critical, and that the procedure needed was presented to you as safe and routine.
      Later, you develop a side-effect which everyone knew about but didn't bother to tell you because it wasn't politic.
      How much would you sue for?
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      • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
        I may need someone to say to me, "This obscure surgical procedure might have side effects." (They probably would not actually need to say this because I would look up the surgery and its alternatives before I consented to it...but I can hypothesize that your case would be accurate in some instances.) How much would I sue for? Nothing. This happens all of the time. When my boyfriend had massive brain damage in an auto accident, no one mentioned the decades-long sequella of brain damage. When I talk to other people who have had, or their family has had, surgery or other medical procedures, there are often side effects that were not mentioned to them. This is routine in the medical care we receive - as is actively concealing important information from the patient because 'they can't handle it'. (Make sure that you always read your own chart, which they are required to let you do.)

        And do you really think that you need to tell a man, "Having a vasectomy can alter your behavior or self image." ? I think that is pretty apparent to the prospective patient, even if he has not done any research on the statistics. Likewise, telling a woman, "Having an abortion might possibly have some psychological side effects." is probably unnecessary. This is not esoteric knowledge. (The women I have talked to who have had them did not experience this, but others probably did - that is part of the decision they chose to make, and not a subtle part, either.)

        I think this falls into the category of, "Protecting the little stupid people from the repercussions of their own decisions by requiring them to jump through hoops in order to get society's approval." which is a lawmaking tendency that is strong in liberals. A woman should not need anyone's approval to get a legal abortion (per whatever the definition and limits of 'legal' are at the time).

        Jan
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        • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
          No, it's actually about protecting the teenager scared out of her damned mind that her "parents will kill her" and who is going to be to panicked to rationally sit at the computer and google possible side effects.

          I'm glad to see you think so little of me.
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          • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
            If it is possible that you are getting hung up on the word "councelling", let me clarify.

            I do not mean "councelling" as you see a psych health professional.

            Rather "councelling" in it's sense of "advise" or "warning".

            Meaning that the doctor should say, "Just so you know, x percent of women have experinced y degree of z side-effect."

            And that's it.

            I expect nothing less from any other medical professional.
            And if I get less, it is fraud and malpractice.

            Either way, if you assumed the worst the or not, how little you think of me is noted.
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            • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
              I apologize if I have offended you by seeming to attack you instead of your arguments. I will say that I am baffled...I say BAFFLED! to see many of the people on this list wanting to restrict the prerogative of a woman to make a decision that will possibly alter her entire life.

              In terms of counseling, I have no problem at all with helping people understand the options they have and the repercussions of those options. The medical profession can do better there! Bit I do NOT want this to come across as, "We know that if you decide to have an abortion you will regret this for the rest of your life. Now - do you really want to go through with this?"

              A woman certainly has the right to this decision, at least to whatever degree is not defined as murder. If you do not agree with this, I shall cease to be baffled and become completely FLABBERGASTED!

              Jan
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              • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
                I do not advocate the restricting of a woman's choice in this matter.
                I do not advocate the compulsory counselling of a woman considering an abortion (the misunderstanding here was my fault as I chose the incorrect word. I have been brushing up my Latin lately and the vocabulary word consilium [advice] is used a lot. I used it without considering its other, more compulsory, meaning)
                I do not advocate any "moralistic advocacy" in the disclosure.
                I only advocate the disclosure.

                Let me give you an example of what I am talking about.
                When in my late twenties and early thirties I suffered acute adult acne.
                It was f'ing horrible.
                I went to a dermatologist and we tried a few different treatments.
                Nothing worked.
                As a last resort he suggested a drug, but he warned me that it is essentially a "nuclear bomb" [his words].
                The drug had a considerable side-effect list.
                The doctor suggested that I look over the list.
                I decided to undergo the treatment.
                While under the treatment, I became dangerously depressed and suicidal.
                This was not a listed side-effect of the drug, so I chalked it up to a really bad break up that I had currently went through, not even thinking that I don't get suicidal over break-ups.
                I finished the treatment and it successfully did away with my adult acne.

                Years later I saw a TV ad for a Class-Action Ambulance Chaser.
                They were assembling a lawsuit for people who were prescribed the drug which that dermatologist prescribed for me.
                The suit claimed that the drug induced suicidal depression.
                I can vouch my experience, you bet your ass it did, at least in me.

                I did not join the lawsuit for a few reasons:
                1) I don't like that type of lawyer
                2) The dermatologist said "nuclear bomb", that's a pretty stiff warning
                3) The treatment worked
                4) (and most importantly) The side-effect was not known at the time.

                Now, if that dermatologist had known about that side-effect, and withheld that information from me because of a fealty to a personal political ideology...

                I just might have tried to sue his f'ing ass off.
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                • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
                  There is a rare syndrome called "XY Females". These are women who are in every respect physically female - but they cannot get pregnant. The reason they can't is because they are genetically male (but with a malfunctioning Y chromosome). When I was working in the lab there was twice that we got back a genetic result that indicated that the reason the woman was infertile was that they were XY Syndrome. In neither case did the doctor tell the woman the truth - he just counseled them to consider adoption.

                  I despised these decisions to deceive those women 'for their own good', and I agree that the patient should know everything that is available, in as reasonable a language as is possible, about their options and the ramifications of their choices.

                  And if a doctor fails to do this, then sue the bastard.

                  Jan, glad you got through the nuclear experience
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  • Posted by $ Abaco 8 years, 9 months ago
    Abortion in the 3rd trimester is murder. I came to this conclusion because I have two beautiful cousins, twins, who were born at 6 months. The girl has grown into a gorgeous mother of two and the boy is about to get married and start a family. Good enough for me to decide. I can only guess that Ayn Rand would agree with me.

    What this "doctor" from PP is doing is Nazi (if that can used as an adjective).

    Has anybody here gotten through that video? I couldn't do it. I got about half way through it and had to shut it down. Try it. See what you think.
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    • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
      Concluding from feelings is not sufficient.
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      • Posted by $ blarman 8 years, 9 months ago
        I disagree. Feelings are responses to stimuli. And they originate from somewhere. If you feel disgust when you look at maggots eating a moldy piece of meat and lose your lunch, that feeling came from something innate - you didn't just decide to be disgusted at something that to a fly is normal. While that doesn't mean we should allow our feelings to rule our actions (I am NOT suggesting anything of the kind), we must recognize those feelings and what they tell us as being a source of information.

        Consider the following emotions:
        disgust
        hate/abhorrence
        love
        guilt
        shame
        confidence
        outrage

        The list could go on. Are the emotions themselves meaningful? Only insofar as we allow them to influence our decision-making. But that gut-reaction to something shouldn't be merely ignored. When we see someone pull a gun and threaten a store manager for money, the emotional reactions come from a completely different portion of the brain than that used for reasoning, so we can not conclude that such reactions are the result of logic. Rather, they are primal and act as inputs to the logical portion of the brain.

        But the larger question is why almost universally normal people evaluate and react to the same stimuli emotionally. I would submit that in actuality, these emotions are indicative of the innate morality of the action being observed and allow us as humans to act instinctively without having to take the time necessary for cognitive evaluation.
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        • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
          One simply should not make decision/draw conclusions about issues based on feelings.
          I certainly did not deny emotions; but they are auto responses to one's values, not the drivers; not inputs to logic....
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          • Posted by Kerryo 8 years, 9 months ago
            I disagree with your premise. Since we are human and have emotions we are unable to make decisions without them. Of course some of us are better than others about balancing the use of logic more heavily than emotions. I've read of studies about people who have been brain injured in the area of the brain that is responsible for emotions. Their decisions are very different than ours. It is logical to think that emotions can and sometimes should be used in decision-making. Growing up on Ayn Rand, I must say that this is a fairly new concept for me but empirically proven. This particular topic is one that cannot have emotion eliminated because of the humans we are.
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            • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
              You are putting emotions before reason and values.
              E.g. if you get angry when someone steals something from you, you are automatically responding to your value for the object stolen and your right to that object. How did the anger help you with any decision? Or present a better example.
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          • Posted by $ blarman 8 years, 9 months ago
            Then you deny a very valuable tool and information source - yourself!

            "but they are auto responses to one's values, not the drivers; not inputs to logic."

            You have that precisely backwards, which is what I was trying to point out. Values are derived from logic and experience because they are a comparison. Emotions are innate and visceral. You do not choose to become afraid of getting caught stealing. You may be able (with some training) to control that fear or channel it, but the fear is not a product of one's values - it exists preliminary to them!

            Ask a combat veteran what the purpose of basic training is and how it compares with real battle. They will tell you that the purpose of their training is to help them deal with the eventuality of the emotions that will assault them the first time they are in the field for real. But every single one will say that despite all of that, the reality of the moment was such that despite those preparations they still encountered system shock. All will tell you that they were not prepared for that first time they were forced to take a life - even in self-defense - or the resulting emotions of such an event.
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            • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
              Emotions are the automatic results of one's value judgments integrated by his subconscious. They offer clues to what he values or feels threatened by.

              There is nothing innate in his subconscious; e.g. a child does not react differently to a dog or a wolf. Once he values and trusts dogs, his fear goes away.

              In your last paragraph, you show that fear comes from knowing the danger in advance, not from some innate sense.
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              • Posted by $ blarman 8 years, 9 months ago
                I advise you to study some psychology and medicine. Emotions are not the result of logic. The subconscious does not process logic - that is a role of the conscious portion of the brain only.

                With respect to the child's reaction to the dog vs the wolf, what you are describing is not the origin of the emotion, but the conditioned response to the emotion.

                "In your last paragraph, you show that fear comes from knowing the danger in advance, not from some innate sense."

                Again, please consult a medical psychology journal. One can anticipate a danger, but until the actual situation presents itself, one can not predict with any degree of certainty the actual response that will take place. For combat training, what they are trying to do is prepare the soldier to deal with the emotions generated productively. They can not and do not control the emotion itself.
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                • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                  Par 1 - I never said that.
                  2 - there is no emotion there.
                  3 - If you value your life and it is threatened, fear is expected. You're right - that emotion is not controlled because it is an automatic reaction.
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                • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
                  From what I have read, there are a handful of emotions that are innate: fear of spiders, fear of falling, a few others. Most of the rest of the emotions seem to be learned, and anthropology texts come up with some really strange variations in the human species.

                  I do think that emotions, if properly trained, can serve as a 'short cut' to laborious reasoning. Such 'intuitions' can be valuable - you may not know 'why' that patch of woods look spooky, but you quietly creep backwards and thus avoid the sabretooth.

                  As a current example, I am obviously responding with a different set of emotions to the situations posed concerning, pregnancy, abortion and/or sale of the tissue and organs from aborted embryos. This thread is full of a spectrum of emotions, not a reflection of innate emotions.

                  Jan
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  • Posted by khalling 8 years, 9 months ago
    I am an Objectivist. "As such, I believe that when a woman gets an abortion, she is doing deep and permanent psychological damage to herself. The existence of groups such as Silent No More lead me to suspect that my opinion is correct." thin territory, this. More proof needed
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    • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
      Without going into formal psychology, I can conclude that someone who gets an abortion is ultimately denying that A = A, or that existence exists. I am perfectly willing to oppose Ms. Rand on her position on this issue, because I think she is being logically inconsistent.

      As with a couple of her other definitions, most notably atheism, I disagree with her definition of when life begins. From what I have read of her opinions, it appears that her definition of the beginning of the rights of the unborn would start at the age of viability outside the womb at the earliest.

      The cases of rape and incest can certainly be reasonably argued, and in those cases, the psychological scarring is coming from the perpetrator.
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      • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
        Existence exists and every time you swat a fly you are removing something from existence. Denying the value of something is not the same thing as denying its existence. A(existence) = A(legit to be rendered non-existent) is not the same as denying that A = A.

        Rape and incest have nothing to do with it: If it is legit to end the life of a blob of protoplasm due to rape then it is OK to do it because it is the free choice of the woman to do so. And it is. We can discuss 'when'...but that depends on our arriving on a basic agreement of 'what'.

        Jan
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        • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
          While you and others may quite reasonably deny the value of a fetus and your logic at the end of the first paragraph is indeed correct, what one is denying with an abortion is the possible consequence of one's own choices. When one can so easily eliminate the consequences of one's prior actions, one has started down the road toward blanking out.

          To summarize the whole reason why many have taken offense at the recent Planned Parenthood video, one should recall the opening line of "For a Few Dollars More", the best of the Clint Eastwood spaghetti Westerns. "Where life had no value, death, sometimes, had its price." In this case, life had so little value that even the price on something that is dead had a small value.
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          • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
            I think that where I disagree with your argument is that I consider it valid to push the Undo button for an action. Yes, riding my bicycle without a helmet has consequences, but I have health insurance and am a cryonics subscriber to back up that choice. Hopefully, if I fall off and crack my skull, my health insurance will put me back together (let's hope my cryonics subscription is not needed!).

            I have made a choice: riding without a helmet. If this should turn out to be a poor choice, then I can try to Undo the harm via a medical procedure.

            To me, this differs from an early term abortion only in that I am undeniably valuable to me but a lump of protoplasm is of no value to me. So that makes an abortion a much easier choice - I am only getting rid of something that I do not want.

            Jan
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            • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
              Regarding the bicycle analogy, pushing the Undo button may be possible, but it might not as well. One can prepare for the bicycle accident by getting insurance and perhaps can undo the harm by getting the medical procedure, but not all actions have reversible consequences. Abortion is one such case.

              Look at your bicycle example from the following perspective. Let's say you need that medical procedure, and that requires my skill as a tissue engineer (actually my current field), what would you consider the scaffold I generate along with the adult stem cells that I harvest from you and then genetically reprogram to regenerate a body part custom made for you? Would that be undeniably valuable to you? I think so. To others in this forum, it would be worse than a lump of protoplasm to them; it would likely get rejected because your immunities are different than theirs.
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              • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
                I think you make an excellent case for my argument. People who want a child would find that lump of protoplasm cute and cuddly (well, 9 months later they would consider it cute and cuddly). But if I do not value it, then I am free to get rid of it.

                It is a trash/treasure case.

                Ultimately, autologous stem cells are going to provide the most benefit in most cases, because of the immunological problems with embryonic stem cells. Correcting genetic errors will be an exception until we get better at modifying the genome.

                Jan
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                • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                  Personally I don't find children cute and cuddly until they are several months old, but that really isn't relevant. On the autologous stem cell issue, we are in agreement.
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                  • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
                    I find them interesting when they are old enough to talk philosophy with me over a brandy. This can come surprisingly early with some children (and I have no hesitation to serve them brandy or wine in such cases - I was raised European and drank liquor from the time I was a child (sips and diluted, admittedly, but I felt very grown up). I regard a person as an adult when they start behaving as one...sometimes this does not happen with my age-contemporaries.) Since several of my friends have had children, I have acquired coping mechanisms that allow me to interact with them for short periods of time before I flee in disorder.

                    The 111 year old woman who was studied had all of her remaining lymphocytes of a single familial strain. This news should have received more attention than it did, as it is crucial to our understanding of aging.

                    Jan
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                    • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                      On all of this, we agree. It reminds me of the famous part of the Indiana Jones movie involving the search for the grail when Sean Connery playing Jones' father says, "You left just when you were becoming interesting."
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          • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 8 years, 9 months ago
            I think that the idea of a woman being forced to carry a fetus to term as a consequence of it being her choice to have sex and not if the sex is forced on her is completely off base.

            Either we are talking about the destruction of a human life that we should protect, or it's no one's business but the mothers. We can't accept murder only if it's not her 'fault' -- if we believe it to be murder.
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            • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
              I did not bring up the subject of murder anywhere in the discussion. I expected disagreement with some of my other points, but not this one.

              From a purely Objectivist standpoint, one should live with one's choices. In the case of rape or incest, the sexual act did not involve consent. Are you really going to argue on behalf of telling someone to live with the consequences of a decision that was made for them against their will?
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      • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
        Rand's views stem logically from Metaphysics; you need to read her more closely.
        Life simply cannot begin at or anywhere near conception; that creates an untenable contradiction of rights.
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        • Posted by H6163741 8 years, 9 months ago
          I am really tired of the pro-abortion side telling me what Rand would say. You don't know, and neither do I. However, as she did espouse the rights of the individual, I would guess that she would oppose abortion, at least after a certain point has been reached. (Maybe brain activity?). BTW- per the original post, Rand only specifically favored abortion up to three months. That's a long way from abortion on demand at any time.
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          • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
            We do know what Ayn Rand said because she said it herself. Your guess that she would oppose abortion is wrong and so is your assertion that she opposed it only after 3 months. Please read what she wrote about it, including her explanation of why, which in turn depends on her explanation of the origin and nature of human rights.
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          • Posted by khalling 8 years, 9 months ago
            it's pretty clear that Rand had an abortion and that she "sent home" for the money to pay for one.
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            • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
              I am not criticizing Ms. Rand whether or not she had an abortion, but I am curious if you have more details regarding that she "sent home" for the money to pay one. I hope that was a loan that she paid back.
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              • Posted by khalling 8 years, 9 months ago
                it was in Heller's book. why are you referring to her as "Miss Rand"? that's something a cultist would do-
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                • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                  I was taught as a child to address adults with Mr., Mrs., Ms., Dr., etc. as a sign of respect. I apologize to any of those offended by me referring to her as Ms. Rand. Cultural norms have been turned almost 180 degrees in my lifetime. I have been known to unknowingly offend people. I suppose this is one such time.
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        • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 9 months ago
          How do you define "life?" From simple biological measures, the zygote has life at conception. Organs and heartbeat develop during the first trimester, and the fetus has already taken on a distinct human form by the end of that period. Reactions that indicate a response to pain stimuli are present before 20 weeks. Determining sentience is trickier, so we have to rely on viability outside the womb. That is getting to be really uncertain as technology that supports "preemies" is making it possible for ever-younger babies to survive early birth.

          Just curious as to the logic behind your statement.
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          • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
            Human life as opposed to potential life. "Form" does not count. Read Rand.
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            • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 9 months ago
              Define when "human life" is achieved. That's the tough question faced by many who want to set a point during pregnancy when a medical procedure becomes homicide.

              Then there's the legal side, which essentially makes the mother God, by giving her the right to declare whether or not the life growing within her is human or just fetal tissue. A physical assault on a pregnant female that results in the death of a gestating fetus can result in a charge of murder against the assailant, but that same court system will not charge that same mother with homicide if she willingly and with "malice aforethought" decides that fetus should be terminated. No wonder this subject is a moral dilemma!
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              • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                It's not really tough. It is when the fetus is or can be (in case of late-term pregnancies) a complete, independent human being, When rights no longer conflict.
                A mother has to have a right to her own body - a right given by her nature, not govt. or anyone else. An assault on her that results in the death of a fetus is an assault on her property - that's why it is a crime. But govt. does not have a right otherwise dictate what she can do with her body. I see no moral dilemma.
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                • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 9 months ago
                  I think you'll find some problems with your distinctions. A fetus isn't "property", any more than a child is property. When an assailant is charged in such a crime, he isn't charged with destruction of property, but with homicide, which is causing the death of a human being. In such a case, the court assumes the mother wanted the child carried to term, and that the termination of human potential is homicide. In effect, the mother decides the fetus, whatever age, is human, not property or fetal tissue.

                  A complete, independent human being? How independent? Preemies at a very early stage of development can survive with the assistance of medical equipment, but do they qualify as human, by your definition?

                  What I'm trying to establish is that the conditions that support abortion are subjective and volatile. Too often we throw out our own subjective terminology, making the mistake of thinking others have the same understanding we do, when in fact their understanding of the same language is radically different. It's the variance in understanding that makes decisions about laws regarding this subject difficult.
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                  • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                    Wrong - everything in a woman's body is her property. The law may read that way, but the Obj.ist support for calling it criminal is due to that fact.

                    in the mother's womb, it is not "independent" until removed with high likelihood or survival. The fetus is only a potential being until then, not an actual one. This is a key distinction because of the concept of rights that you and others here choose not to deal with.
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                    • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 9 months ago
                      The dilemma I have with your position is that if an infant is born premature and survives, that makes it human, by your definition. However, if that same infant, at the same stage of development, is aborted, it isn't human, simply because it was denied the opportunity to survive. That's pretty arbitrary, and seems devoid of any moral precept.
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                      • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
                        Life isn't fair. There are no guarantees of equal outcomes and Nature is a cold, cruel bitch.

                        Rand had a statement about rights, that had something to do with they were not an imposition on others to implement. We are all letting ourselves get pulled into the emotions of a human baby's existence and what some supernatural god might intend for us, instead of the rights of a human at a philosophical level. We must place our thoughts on this subject at the same level by realizing the effects of any regulation, rules, and laws imposed by this type of argument on the rest of the philosophy and of individual freedom and rights.

                        We must move this argument out of the realm of what's right and good and nice, back into the realm of what do we know with maybe a list of what we don't know yet and need or would like to know more about. But certainly out of the realm of beliefs based on what we think we know of what a god wants of us.

                        We are for the most part Objectivist on this site and state that there can be no contradictions, and if it appears that you've found one, you need to check your premises. All of this discussion centers on a pregnancy restricting the rights of a living human to direct their own activities, in favor of the rights of another potential human. If that is so, then the pregnant human is in a different class of humans with less rights than those of others. That can't be.
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                        • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 9 months ago
                          So the question is whether or not Objectivism is nothing more than a repackaging of Thomas Hobbes' cynical philosophy, e.g. "The condition of man is a condition of war of everyone against everyone." It's self-deceptive to dodge moral issues by flippantly dismissing such things as nothing more than an artifact of obsolescent religiosity. Atheist Humanists would be offended to be equated with an amoral view of the world.

                          If, in my case above, we decide that the right of an individual to make choices has primacy over personal responsibility for the life of another human, then abortion on demand, at any stage of fetal development has to be the Objectivist position. Ayn Rand herself obviously would disagree with this absolutist position, since she drew the line at the first trimester.

                          My point in this issue of abortion is that it isn't as simple as drawing arbitrary lines so we can safely ignore the moral dilemma. If the Objectivist view is that moral contradictions can't exist, then Hobbes was right, at least for Objectivists: "Life is brutal, nasty, and short."
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                          • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
                            I see the comparison of Objectivism to Hobbes as a bit of a stretch. Objectivism is about reality and in reality, is it wrong or amoral that some fertilized eggs fail to implant or the Uterus rejects some others before viability, or that a pregnant woman can come down with a number of diseases or illnesses or injuries that cause spontaneous rejections.

                            The problem we seem to be centering in on is man's intervention, rather than nature's or god's, for some. But that's kind of the definition of man, to use, manipulate, and even modify nature for his benefit in living and his life. If your argument is that man's intervention in when or if to have a child is wrong, then man's intervention to save a preemie, to implant a pacemaker, to go into space, to correct a birth disfigurement with surgery, and etc are all wrong as well.

                            In that case, then men have no rights. They must submit to nature's or god's will. That's not Objectivism. That reasoning puts us back into the caves hunting on the savanna with our bare hands, and praying to the gods of nature for our survival.
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                            • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 9 months ago
                              The difference between Objectivism and Hobbes is that Hobbes' view was that man was naturally selfish and amoral, while the Objectivist reasons that man makes the best use of his energies by doing what's best for himself, and the result is generally positive. Both philosophies are built around a focus on self, rather than an altruistic concern for others. Hobbes, however, views this self-absorption as a result of survival instincts, and not healthy for society. Hobbes' solution is to have the selfish masses led by a natural leader who can provide moral guidance (see "Leviathan"). The Objectivist believes that sensible, thoughtful actions that benefit oneself are not destructive, and provide value to society without symbolic sacrifice "for the greater good". Clear enough?

                              That being said, the relation between action and consequence can't be disregarded, or our actions do in fact become amoral, as Hobbes predicted. This has nothing to do with spiritual or natural forces, but with humans as social creatures. A disregard for life, demonstrated by abortion, is destructive in how it affects our actions in general.
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                              • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
                                Yes, it's certainly 'Clear enough', at least for this discussion. In a way, Hobbes may have something right about man on an instinctual level. And i think that's where AR showed her genius, by looking at man in combination with his mind, and with his actions then determined through logical reasoning and rational thought, rather than on Hobbes instinctual level.

                                I think that an Objectivist decision to act considers consequences of that act, based again on that rational thought and logical reasoning. And again on that level, we disagree on abortion being a disregard for life. I still see it as a decision based on the regard of a life that is self owned and realized compared to a potential life, with life in my mind as personhood, not just that of biology, thermodynamics, or any other branch of study.
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                                • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 9 months ago
                                  The question for me is why I and other taxpayers should pay for irresponsible choices that create the moral concern. If a woman definitely does not want any (or more) children, then a tubal ligation settles that, and simple, scar-free surgery is something I would gratefully be willing to pay for. I also see nothing wrong with making contraceptives freely available. Those are choices that make more sense than choosing to have irresponsible sex.
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                                  • Zenphamy replied 8 years, 9 months ago
                      • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                        No dilemma - human is human! The definition is not arbitrary. Again, you don't reference the moral principle here of rights nor understand the def. of a right.
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                        • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 9 months ago
                          Reference my description above: either the fetus is human, or it isn't, at a particular stage of development. "Human is human" is a meaningless statement without context, which you've dodged several times now. There is a moral hierarchy of rights and responsibilities, and simply defaulting to the right of an individual to do as he or she pleases, and ignoring any sense of responsibility, or the consequences of one's actions is a cop-out.
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                  • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
                    This is a question that is interesting to me, but I think it is a different question than is the root of this thread (not that this branch isn't worthwhile).

                    When we have Uterine Replicators that can carry a blastocyst from conception to birth, then the rule of thumb of 'viable outside the human body' breaks down. Right now, while that rule is (I feel) ultimately doomed, it is the best we can do.

                    I would suggest that the binary of sentient/non-sentient may be too gross a granularity. I think that there may be subdivisions, with various levels of action appropriate at each point.

                    Jan
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                    • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 9 months ago
                      Thoughtful observation, and one that illustrates my point that the issue is not binary simplicity. Choosing whether or not to end a developing human life should depend not just on a calendar, but the quality of that potential life. There are facts that weigh on that decision, including inherited genetic disorders, that make the decision to end the life a logical solution. If the choice to terminate a life is a result of nothing more than a whim or inconvenience, our whole moral persona comes into question.
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                      • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
                        Reading your email has brought this subject back into the top ranks of what I am thinking. I don't know if the topic is 'ripe' yet to start a thread on, but I feel that it is getting near.

                        Jan
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          • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
            When I was 17, one of my cousins gave birth to a girl who was less than 1.5 pounds during the 26th week of her pregnancy. While she was in the neonatal ICU for 2+ months after that, she has done quite well with some complications showing up just in the last year (She is now 31.) that the doctors warned us might happen. At the time, she was the youngest to ever be born in Florida. Since then, the envelope has been pushed back to 21 weeks.

            I define life by the simple biological measures that lead to your saying that "the zygote has life at conception". Sentience is a much trickier problem, as you correctly say.
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        • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
          Aye, there's the rub. Rand's views do stem logically from metaphysics, and I have read her quite closely. However, metaphysics and biology have quite different definitions of when life begins. There is, as you say, an untenable contradiction of rights, and that is really the whole point of the debate. One thing that Ms. Rand was quite clever at doing was defining terms to suit her worldview. This is an issue that I, unlike Ms. Rand, am willing to accept a little ambiguity in my life (I don't see it as a contradiction in this case.) because a complete knowledge of the answer cannot be conclusively known.

          I break this argument down as follows. If one chooses to mate with someone else, with or without "protection", one has to realize that there is a possible consequence of getting pregnant, however unlikely. If one does not want to live with consequence, one should not mate in the first place. If however, one does mate, to have an abortion as after-the-act birth control is inherently anti-life, a subject Ms. Rand wrote about in AS.

          I will not force my views on this subject on others, however.

          I agree with ProfChuck on the idea that "government should play no role in the abortion debate".

          I will agree with you that sentient life does not begin at conception, but most life forms, particularly non-animals, are not sentient. Just because one has the ability to terminate a life like one might squash an insect does not mean that the insect was not alive. I am not going to argue that the unborn life form has rights, but that does not make it not alive.
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          • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
            You have to better distinguish between Phil. and Biology. Rand was not "clever"; she formed an entire philosophy that holds no contradictions. Until biology or any other field discovers something that contradicts that philosophy, then the latter remains in tact. But the beliefs of biologists are not in themselves relevant here.

            Your abortion argument is not logical. You still cannot create a conflict of rights.

            I never disagreed with what you said in the last paragraph.
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            • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
              I will agree with you and Rand only when you are able to show me that abortion is not a process of denying that existence exists. It is a form of blanking out. Keep trying. You have a difficult burden to prove, and unlike Ms. Rand's atheism argument where her definition of atheism left her with no burden to prove the non-existence of a deity, in this case, there is still a burden of proof that must be met.
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              • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                Abortion eliminates a fetus, but no one can deny its existence. You just can't equate a potential being with an actual human being, else you create a conflict of rights between the mother/her body and the fetus. You need to understand the role of rights in morality.
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                • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                  I don't equate a potential being with an actual human being. The relationship between the fetus and the mother is commensalistic. Importantly, however, that commensalistic relationship commenced upon the volition of both mother and father, so it would be contradictory to the prior act of copulation to terminate the fetus. In another part of this post, you said that I cannot accept error. That is not true, but I cannot accept that one can cavalierly choose to live free of the consequences of one's own actions or inactions. If one makes an error, you admit it, but that doesn't mean that you get to erase the consequences of that error.

                  When the relationship between the mother and fetus does actually bring harm to the mother, it becomes parasitic, and the morality changes accordingly.
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                  • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                    One certainly does not live free of consequences....
                    That has never been the question.
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                    • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                      On that, we can agree. However, you stated earlier that there would be no psychological scarring. I doubt you would because you do not think abortion is a violation of your moral code. Many people, including many of those in this forum, Objectivist or not, are not so sure that abortion is not a violation of their moral code. It is in this lack of surety that the psychological scarring occurs. Whenever someone violates his/her moral code, one should quite reasonably feel guilty over that. If one is unsure whether one has violated his/her moral code, then that leads to the dreaded second-guessing that plagues many of those who use psychological services.
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                      • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                        I said no psy scaring NECESSARILY. And that has nothing to do with my moral view here.
                        I agree - and implied such - that those who do not sufficiently think through their decision as well as their moral principles are more likely to be scared.
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            • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
              When it comes to objective definitions of life, the biological definition is more quantifiable than the philosophical. As for Rand's philosophy, it holds no contradictions if you accept her definitions. I reject her definition of what constitutes life and accept the biological definition. Ms. Rand's definition of life is appropriate for sentient life, and as a basis for determining rights.

              Wikipedia's characteristics of life are fairly complete.

              Homeostasis: Regulation of the internal environment to maintain a constant state; for example, electrolyte concentration or sweating to reduce temperature.

              This is one of the harder items for fetuses to do.

              Organization: Being structurally composed of one or more cells — the basic units of life.

              This starts happening after the first few weeks of pregnancy. By the time a woman knows she is pregnant, one can detect the fetus's heart beating (18 days).

              Metabolism: Transformation of energy by converting chemicals and energy into cellular components (anabolism) and decomposing organic matter (catabolism). Living things require energy to maintain internal organization (homeostasis) and to produce the other phenomena associated with life.[49]

              This starts to happen within the first few weeks of gestation.

              Growth: Maintenance of a higher rate of anabolism than catabolism. A growing organism increases in size in all of its parts, rather than simply accumulating matter.

              This happens almost immediately after conception.

              Adaptation: The ability to change over time in response to the environment. This ability is fundamental to the process of evolution and is determined by the organism's heredity, diet, and external factors.

              This happens almost immediately within the womb.

              Response to stimuli: A response can take many forms, from the contraction of a unicellular organism to external chemicals, to complex reactions involving all the senses of multicellular organisms. A response is often expressed by motion; for example, the leaves of a plant turning toward the sun (phototropism), and chemotaxis.

              Certainly fetuses respond to stimuli, even in the first few days of gestation.

              Reproduction: The ability to produce new individual organisms, either asexually from a single parent organism, or sexually from two parent organisms.[54][55] or "with an error rate below the sustainability threshold."[55]

              Of these, reproduction can be considered on the cellular level (in which case early-stage fetuses are capable of reproduction) or at the organismic level (in which case one should not have rights until puberty).

              Of these, response to stimuli and adaptation are the two that come close to the definition of sentience, but they are an incomplete definition for sentience.
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              • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
                j, just for discussion sake, I just found a definition on Rationalwiki that's interesting:

                Metabolism: "From a metabolic perspective, i.e., cellular activity such as respiration, life is fairly easy to define. A cell is either functioning or it isn't (ignoring "dormant" cells and exotic organised chemical processes for now). This has profound consequences for the definition of "life" because taking this view there is, in a very real sense, no one point when life can be said to begin. Both the sperm cells and the egg cells are alive in the same sense as any other single or multicellular organism. Indeed, cellular life - and the metabolic processes performed by this - can continue to occur long after an organism can said to be dead. It's said that fresh (uncooked) sausages contain enough live cells on order to easily clone the pig it came from. Hence, from this cellular metabolic point of view, life begins when the gametes are formed from loose chemicals and ends when every cell in the body has ceased to be active."
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                • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                  I saw this part of the definition in your earlier post. This is why metabolism is one of several criteria that define life. I think the web site I directed you or someone else to earlier had seven criteria in the biological definition of life. The egg and sperm cells, as well as the uncooked sausages, would not meet the definition of life by the other criteria, but an unimplanted tissue derived from one's own stem cells could be considered life by those criteria, but not by Rand's criteria for human life, which requires sentience at a minimum.
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              • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                You don't fully understand her definitions; and you still ignore the concept of rights. Life and rights are linked in a way that biology does not address. "living" (animals, plants, fetuses) is not "human life."
                It's a little like libertarians not understanding Rand's morality, thus making many errors in politics.
                You clearly have not grasped fundamentals.
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                • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                  I do fully understand Ms. Rand's definitions. In some cases, I disagree with them. On the subject of the definition of sentient life, I agree with Ms. Rand's definition and her conclusions. As to the definition of life, Ms. Rand's definition is inconsistent with the accepted dictionary definition that I and most others choose to accept. I am not making any arguments regarding rights for unborn life, merely existence - existence that is being eliminated.
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                  • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                    It certainly does not matter that her definitions are inconsistent with yours or with anyone else.
                    It matters that she is consistent within her philosophy. Her def. of life is well-developed, and no life by that def. is eliminated.

                    If you are talking about any existence, we eliminate many things every day; that is not a philosophical issue.
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                    • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                      Definitions DO matter. If one uses his/her own definitions instead of using definitions that are accepted by the majority of society, it is quite difficult to have a reasonable debate. It is quite easy for naysayers to reject definitions (or premises) right from the start.

                      Ms. Rand's definition of life is quite acceptable for determining rights (or lack thereof) for the unborn, but it is quite inadequate from a tissue engineering standpoint. Ms. Rand did not have to consider that, because tissue engineering did not exist in her lifetime. That is no longer the case. It is for just this reason that my students are required to take a bioethics class.

                      We have no disagreement regarding the last 2/3 of what you said. Ms. Rand's definitions and philosophy are quite self-consistent.
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                      • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                        It is not difficult when definitions are so well constructed as Rand's; you know exactly what she means, and you can see the error in other def.s. Can't worry about the naysayers: they generally aren't interested in the philosophical implications of bad def.s.

                        Tissue engineering def.s are not philosophical; she would not have defined life your way if there was such a thing.
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                        • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                          I do care about the philosophical implications of bad definitions. And as for inalienable rights that can be assigned to sentient human life, I agree with her definition. However, as for the field of regenerative medicine that is my career, while such specimens are not worthy of rights, the cells are capable of all of the biological characteristics of what everyone but Objectivists agree upon as "life". By your definition, my field would have no reason to exist; however, by my definition, my field can revolutionize much of the aging process. If I am able to extend your life or make your senior years more enjoyable, have I not provided something of great value?
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                          • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                            "Life" but not "human life" - yes.

                            Yes to the last Q, but irrelevant to the moral Q.
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                            • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                              It may be irrelevant to your part of this thread regarding the abortion question, but the title of this thread also included Planned Parenthood.
                              As the driver for this thread was the cheapening of life via the inexpensive sale of embryos (although unstated, ultimately to R & D types in tissue engineering), my point is relevant to a different part of the thread than yours. My question will among the bigger ethical debates over the next generation.
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                        • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                          Tissue engineering definitions are indeed not philosophical. Based on your statements, it is clear that you think that philosophy trumps biology (and perhaps any other science). On that, we will forever disagree.

                          You are correct in saying that Ms. Rand would not have defined life in the way that I did, or in the way that the rest of society does. It is precisely this reason as to why I have described Ms. Rand as "clever". In both her definitions of atheism and life, she has constructed her own definitions in such a way that are self-consistent. While the question of atheism is inherently unknowable, the question of life is not. Life has the characteristics that I described earlier. Sentience is not a requirement for a life, although adaptation to surroundings is.
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                          • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                            Yes, philosophy has to trump! There is no "clever". Her philosophy is consistent from Metaphysics to Politics; "Life" is a fundamental value in Morality.

                            If you developed a complete philosophy that would be compatible with your def. of life, then it would have to be subjectivist in nature.
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                            • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                              On this we will have to disagree. Philosophy can never be as objective as science, because philosophy involves value assignments (a form of opinion) moreso than science.
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                              • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
                                Then you really do not under Obj.ism.
                                Opinions are individual judgments not based on facts. Value judgments can most certainly be based on facts and objective philosophical principles.

                                I may value a specific movie subjectively or objectively, the latter based on phil. principles.

                                Many scientists agree that their "facts" need to conform to reality and reason as defined in philosophy. Other details within their fields have nothing to do with phil.
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                      • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
                        j; During my undergrad days, admittedly a looonng time ago, we were taught that the delineation between branches of science was a language, or set of definitions particular to the branch, i.e. volts, amps, etc. Are we trying to talk about her realm crossing or mixing terms and definitions from our's?
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                        • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                          I think you have hit on the main point of contention, Zenphamy. AR's definition of life is suitable for sentient life and for the basis of defining the rights (or more precisely, the lack thereof) of unborn life. However, Ms. Rand's definition of life is inconsistent with the definition of life that biologists generally accept. Consequently, when the new field of tissue engineering is literally creating living tissues for subsequent implantation, Ms. Rand's definition of life is narrow enough that it handles situations that existed during her lifetime self-consistently, but really is too narrowly defined to handle the emerging field of tissue engineering. As this is my field, I have spent considerable effort pondering what constitutes a self-consistent approach to life. Tdechaine and I have agreed to disagree on whether philosophy trumps science.
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                          • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
                            Jim, I've found a site that offers a very rational approach to this question that makes a lot of sense to me and addresses the question from several standpoints.

                            http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/When_doe...

                            When does life begin? is a question that seems simple and straightforward, but really isn't.
                            Defining life to begin with is hardly straightforward, but for the purposes of this question we mean "human life," and more specifically we mean the life of an individual human being, as "life" in general only began once, and has existed continuously since the dawn of the first cellular organisms billions of years ago. Hence, this is more a question of "when does personhood begin?" for a particular person, rather than any definition regarding abiogenesis. This question is crucial to a number of complex ethical debates regarding abortion, premature births and, at the other end of the spectrum, brain-dead patients. It is almost as complicated as defining life itself. Ultimately, it is not a question of science, but of morality, politics, and ethics.

                            Ecology/Technology

                            Further past this point, a baby is born at the natural time. However, there is still one hurdle to jump in defining unique "life" and that is the nature of sentience, or self-awareness. Experiments on very young children show that they are certainly not as self-aware as adult humans - indeed in some cases other primates can beat them on the tests administered. The fact is that all humans are born somewhat prematurely, while the young of other animals can drop out of the womb or hatch from an egg and be up and running in minutes, human infants need far longer care. This is due to a developed human cranium being too large to be held by the mother and be given birth to safely, this problem essentially forces the mother to give birth at nine months when in an ideal universe it should be longer. So defining life based on self awareness, you're not really alive until sometime after your first birthday.


                            The Conclusion is that the question may well be meaningless, but can only be answered subjectively on the individual level and one definition can't be forced on anyone from a legal or moral point.
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                            • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                              As for the definition of personhood or sentience, and assignment of rights, I really don't think that I am in disagreement with the others that I have been arguing with on this site.

                              Far more so than a human embryo, what I deal with is "potential life", and yet it has value if cultivated properly. I am not saying that what I deal with should have "rights", but I am arguing for the value of what I do.
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                          • Posted by conscious1978 8 years, 9 months ago
                            Jim, philosophy always trumps science. ;) Without, you get the State Science Institute and worse.

                            This is a case where premises have to be carefully separated and analyzed. It may be an 'elephant' even though someone may have the tail and another the trunk.
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                            • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                              As someone who nearly went the State Science Institute route before reading AR, I certainly agree that philosophy is critically important, but I don't think I can be convinced that either one is superior to the other. The reason why engineering schools require some humanities courses is to prevent students from going to "the dark side" (as discussed in another thread over the last day or two). On the other hand, philosophy without science is bereft of its tie to reality. Both science and philosophy are necessary.
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                              • Posted by conscious1978 8 years, 9 months ago
                                Those "humanities courses" are based on some kind of philosophy. ;)

                                It's not a question of whether philosophy can do without science. A rational philosophy lays the foundation for rational (sadly redundant) science and is its most tenacious defender.
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    • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
      "Thin territory" - as is any "scientific" opinion on a politically charged subject which is issued by our current crop of Lysenkoists.

      That said, I can only go by what I have experienced myself - and that is Objectivist.
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      • Posted by khalling 8 years, 9 months ago
        same here. I am not "deep and permanently" psychologically scarred by that experience. I as however, deeply scarred by p[olitical slavery which drove me from my country of birth.
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        • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
          I never claimed "all", I claimed strong probability.

          If I am correct (which is neither provable nor disprovable with our current politicized science), women should be made aware of that probability so that they have all of the information possible to make their decision.
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          • Posted by khalling 8 years, 9 months ago
            completely agree. but I still stand by opinion that a difficult moral decision is left to the decision maker. I got that from Oliver North. First person to say that in my reading
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            • Posted by $ allosaur 8 years, 9 months ago
              My ex regrets the abortion of her first child (before I met her).
              I've seen women on TV say they now regret an abortion. I know a woman who still mourns a miscarried child lost two decades ago.
              I'm sure there are plenty of skanks who will say "Oops!" at a missed period and beeline to PP on our dollar like it's all about nothing.
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              • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
                Allosaur, I have hidden this post because you never know who you might be offending with a blanket statement of "skank".
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                • Posted by $ allosaur 8 years, 9 months ago
                  While I was out in the hot sun picking up the mess a strong storm made in my yard, it occurred to Old Dino that you may be alluding to yourself.
                  I was referring to moocher skanks. Wasn't that obvious?
                  If you want to be a plain old skank, fine. Just make sure you and any sex partner pays for the contraception.
                  Also telling PP to go to hell with their assembly line "war on babies" abortions would be appreciated but not demanded by Libertarian me.
                  Come more to the point next time. I may have something on my mind. Like my yard on a hot day.
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                  • Posted by khalling 8 years, 9 months ago
                    as Rand would have informed you-once a program, it is fair game for any taxpayer to partake. For me, it was the only game in the STATE. The iony and sadness and regret- the doc who sent me up to the University, was the doc who took his time to show up to my baby brother's death (pneumonia) 9 months old, my mom screaming into the phone that her baby could not breath. I got the irony. I should have had the baby. I now counsel women on this issue. but YOU do not get to choose for them
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                    • Posted by $ allosaur 8 years, 9 months ago
                      I don't want to chose for anyone.
                      I want to First Amendment voice my opinion is all.
                      Libertarians do not boss people around.
                      Correctly-thinking Christians don't want to do that either.
                      Prison inmates used to call me boss but that was just a job,
                      Oh, another thing, I thought YOU were a guy who called himself a skank up until now.
                      Why not? I've seen the b-word directed at guys.
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                      • Posted by khalling 8 years, 9 months ago
                        dino-I am a girl. sigh
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                        • Posted by $ allosaur 8 years, 9 months ago
                          Since it is teach the dino time and this is hid, I've been curious about your connection to D K Halling--and how come you get to hide things?
                          After college, I started out as a nosy reporter and the sensitive snout of an allosaur is very similar to the T-Rex, who came later.
                          I can stand a no comment if you like. Me be a big dino.
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                          • Posted by khalling 8 years, 9 months ago
                            I did not hide things. Euda chose to hide our comment. He did not really want to. Dale and I are two people. we write books together. You and I have been talking for a year. You KNOW me.
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                            • Posted by $ allosaur 8 years, 9 months ago
                              There have been times when I was not sure where you were coming from. I'd be wondering does this guy dislike me or what? Gal, I now mean.
                              If it makes you feel any better, I thought Robbie was a girl.almost up until the time he faded away.
                              Why?
                              I was very fond of a female Robbie a good long time ago.
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  • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    You, I, and other citizens should not pay for any procedure or medical treatment of anyone for any reason other charity, if we feel charitable. In that manner, those that support procedures such as abortion could voluntarily contribute and those that don't support, could choose to not contribute.

    But as our country is now, neither can ever be satisfied, and the reality is that the conservatives want the government to coercively deny that procedure. That is statism, and we all lose.
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  • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
  • Posted by jtrikakis 8 years, 9 months ago
    Life simply cannot begin at or anywhere near conception; that creates an untenable contradiction of rights." How so? If a mustard seed is planted then it has to grow (assuming it has proper water, soil, and light) into a mustard tree. The whole process of conception is to develop a human.
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    • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
      No it isn't. It is potentially the beginning of the development of a human. Assigning "rights" to the blob of cells at conception misuses the concept of rights as a floating abstraction severed from the facts of the nature of human beings that give rise to the concept. It is a typically religious mystical notion that does in fact contract rights, violating rights for the sake of entities with no rights.
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      • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
      • Posted by jtrikakis 8 years, 9 months ago
        Those "cells" are not random things that can be developed into something other than making a human being. I heard a cool analogy recently, a guy told another guy to shoot any bull dogs he sees. The guy saw a poodle and shot it. Then asked why, the guy said, you never know what its going turn into.
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  • Posted by walkabout 8 years, 9 months ago
    Why, since "the pill" has been available universally for more than 50 years (as well as other effective means of conception prevention) is abortion even a viable business. Yes, as the pro-abortionist say, "it is a choice;" a choice to engage in intercourse (w/ or w/o adequate protection). Once, it is conceived, it is a consequence; it is clear you have already made a choice. To the pilots among us, I reminded everyone that every takeoff is optional; every landing is mandatory.
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    • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
      It's interesting that so many can fight abortion, but few care about the use of the pill. Both prevent a fetus from being born.
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      • Posted by walkabout 8 years, 9 months ago
        An egg cell is not a fetus. "The pill" prevents ovulation, thus potential exposure to sperm (of course, use of condoms, celibacy, coitus interuptus and sodomy also prevent exposure). All of which prevents conception. The pill does not prevent a fetus from being born -- it prevents a fetus from being created. Most "pro-lifers" start their argument at "conception." Data show that under natural circumstances about half of conceptions self terminate (miscarry) -- typically prior to the woman becoming aware she is pregnant.
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      • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
        And this is precisely why the birth control pill is fundamentally anti-life as well. Sex is a celebration of life. To do anything anti-life while, before, or after participating in that celebration of life is inherently contradictory.
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        • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
          My opinion is totally different. I abhor the idea of having a child - internal parasite, sapping your strength; total waste of my time and life after it is born. Sex is fun, and for me it forms a bond with the partner. That is all it needs to be or do. It may be an 'affirmation of life' for you, but is not the case for everyone.

          Keep the little drippy-nosed suckers away from me: prevent conception, with abortion as a back up measure.

          Jan, not a mom
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          • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
            It is interesting that you view children as parasites. I hope your parents did not view you as such. I had argued earlier tonight that the fetus/mother relationship is commensalistic. If one knows going in that having a child/parasite is a potential consequence initiated through the consensual volition of two consenting adults, then perhaps those two consenting adults are acting irrationally. While sex is fun, one must realize that, everywhere throughout the animal kingdom, one of the objectives of sex is procreation. If children are indeed purely parasitic, then our existence is a contradiction. I'm not ready to go down that path.
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            • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
              This is precisely why I should not be a mother!

              I do not argue that most people consider children to be parasites (my parents loved children and would have liked a huge family), but I think of Alien whenever I consider an embryo, living inside me, sucking out my life. Blechch! And when they are born - they they ruin your life for the next couple of decades...until you can get rid of them.

              But this admittedly extreme view does give me a good perspective from which to respond when people say things like, "all women want children". Uh...over here!...No, I don't.

              Jan
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              • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                Your view is not an extreme one. My older daughter is a biomedical engineering student who does not want children either.
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                • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
                  The big clue is, "We know we would not be good at that role, and we avoid it." There are enough unwanted children; people should stop trying to bully couples into having them from a sense of familial duty. The only people who should have kids are the ones who love children and think that having them is the funnest thing they can imagine.

                  Jan
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  • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
    I was thinking more about this. I think in order to answer this properly you must, and I mean MUST in your own mind define what is life, and when does it begin.

    I was doing some additional research on what SCIENCE determines life to be and when it begins and while there are varying differences there are also some extremely consistent identifiers.
    http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/lif...
    http://academic.wsc.edu/mathsci/hamme...
    According to Hickman, Roberts, and Larson (1997), any living organism will meet the following seven basic properties of life:

    1) Chemical uniqueness. Living systems demonstrate a unique and
    complex molecular organization.
    2) Complexity and hierarchical organization. Living systems
    demonstrate a unique and complex hierarchical organization.
    3) Reproduction. Living systems can reproduce themselves.
    4) Possession of a genetic program. A genetic program provides fidelity
    of inheritance.
    5) Metabolism. Living organisms maintain themselves by obtaining
    nutrients from their environments.
    6) Development. All organisms pass through a characteristic life cycle.
    7) Environmental reaction. All animals interact with their environment.
    The fertilized egg, from the moment of conception, meets each of the properties that have been found to determine if an organism can be classified as living. Based on this definition, life begins at conception.

    http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/us/...
    1

    a : the quality that distinguishes a vital and functional being from a dead body

    b : a principle or force that is considered to underlie the distinctive quality of animate beings

    c : an organismic state characterized by capacity for metabolism, growth, reaction to stimuli, and reproduction

    "C" a fertilized fetus meets this requirement the second the cells divide.

    http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/s...
    Living things tend to be complex and highly organized. They have the ability to take in energy from the environment and transform it for growth and reproduction. Organisms tend toward homeostasis: an equilibrium of parameters that define their internal environment. Living creatures respond, and their stimulation fosters a reaction-like motion, recoil, and in advanced forms, learning. Life is reproductive, as some kind of copying is needed for evolution to take hold through a population's mutation and natural selection. To grow and develop, living creatures need foremost to be consumers, since growth includes changing biomass, creating new individuals, and the shedding of waste.


    Every scientific journal that defines "life" indicates that the second the egg and sperm come together and divide, they possess DNA and a complex mechanism which separates it from "protoplasm" which is specifically defined as:

    However...Protoplasm itself within its own definition uses "LIFE".

    Oxford Dictionary:
    The colourless material comprising the living part of a cell, including the cytoplasm, nucleus, and other organelles.

    So going back to Ayn Rand saying a protoplasm has no rights indicates that life has no rights.

    So in the end I guess the discussion will go on for eternity and will be completely based on each persons specific set of morals, beliefs, and convictions.
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  • Posted by johnpe1 8 years, 9 months ago
    Rick, the sum of a human egg and sperm is a human being,
    and its host may eliminate it at will, according to current law,
    "until birth." . if I were a female, I could not do it. -- j
    .
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  • Posted by Esceptico 8 years, 9 months ago
    We probably do not yet have the enough scientific knowledge to make the determination of when life begins. We know enough to say it does not begin when the sperm buries its head in the egg, because most do not result in a pregnancy and even three days after the big collision (dare I say “bang?”) the pair has only increased from two cells to about 150. For comparison, the eye of a fly has about 4,000 lenses, not to mention the number of cells. We’d probably all agree the “morning after” pill is fine, but it gets more difficult as time goes on after that. Probably vasectomies for all or installing a micro valve in the plumbing would solve most issues.
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    • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
      Beginning of life does not determine when and why born human beings have rights.

      Religionists do in fact denounce the "morning after pill".
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      • Posted by Esceptico 8 years, 9 months ago
        I am sure they do. This is not a subject to which I have directed much thought because it does not impact me. It certainly is an interesting subject, deciding when "rights" attach. One or more of our Objectivist betters should address this.
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    • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
      I like this idea a bit. A significant problem we have is people having children they cannot raise properly, and the state paying the price for it. I have not seen a statistic on this, but I bet the costs are outrageous.
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      • Posted by Esceptico 8 years, 9 months ago
        I bet the costs are out of sight. Just look how the rest of us subsidize the education of children not our own for an idea of subsidized baby production. Subsidize something and you get more of it. Just what a world of 7 billion needs: more children.
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      • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
        To me, a key point is that as a country becomes more affluent, and child mortality drops, no government intervention is needed for the birth rate to decrease. Singapore is down below 2 births per couple.

        It seems that the instinct to reproduce takes into account the survival rate and population pressure.

        Jan
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        • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
          Point taken. However, I'm not as confident as you that the checks and balances there are really working. For example, in the US the highest birth rates are among those that in general are fiscally less capable of support the children. I think there are two factors, 1) affluence and a conscious decisions (as you note), and 2) discipline and responsibility to plan ahead, use protection, etc. Failure in the second doesn't work in accordance with the checks and balances, e.g. the US, China and India.
          I do agree, in the end game your checks will work, but socialism that will likely come from supporting the less productive portion as we see all around us.
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        • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
          I think I just read within the last two weeks that world population has hit 7.5 billion and the max is now projected to reach 10 Billion.
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          • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
            It might go as high as 10.5, but I think it will start to decrease after that point (and some argue for 9 billion). This could be changed if we develop extreme longevity, of course.

            Jan
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  • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
    First it is important to separate abortion from this issue of selling/using rejected tissues. One is dependent on the other, but a separate moral question.

    I fundamentally see the issue as a beginning of life question, and the lines form up quite pretty well along religion and science. Arguing that at conception is the beginning of a human life is simply technically foolish, there isn't even a nerve cell yet. Arguing that after a child is 1 yr old is not is just as silly. Somewhere in the middle is the only sensible position. Presently this time is set at 28 weeks, and yes at that point a fetus looks like a tiny person and has all its organs.
    One can argue about the timing of when it life begins, but it is clearly not when the embryo is 16 cells. In my mind the fetus is fully dependent on its mother to survive, and the burden is on its mother to nourish, protect and care for this fetus. Sometimes this burden is accepted to be carried partly accepted by the father and extended family in support of the mother during pregnancy and delivery, and in caring for the child after; however, the burden and responsibility is fundamentally with the mother. In addition, childbirth is quite its own burden. Therefore, very simply as the one responsible for all this nourishment, inconvenience, pain, cost etc, there can be no question among people believing in freedom of where the decision for the maintenance of the fetus lies. In capitalistic terms, the mother pays, therefore the mother decides. Now, this breaks down if the life of another is in question...sort of, but that is the beginning of life debate. Therefore, the mother should have freedom to decide what to do with her own resources, without restriction, until the fetus is a human life. This is clear and simple.

    Another argument I see here is the psychological trauma/damage to the mother by making this decision. I have a big problem with this argument. First, again it is the mother making a decision she must live with. Does one of us really support the concept that society/government should protect a mother from making a bad decision? Really?
    Separately, is this negative "trauma" a concern about other people's opinion or one's own? Clearly there are both. The internal ones are the only ones of substance. Other people's opinions are noise.
    Lastly, this entire concept of physiological trauma is not based on logical thought in the mother. Clearly illogical thought happens, much of the time, but among us we would seek legislative action to control this? Really?

    I may be the most vocal male supporter of abortion rights on our site, so as Kent said to the giant Jiffypop in Real Genius, "Lemme have it!".
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    • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
      I give you several points, but the little thumb will not cooperate...so you just get the one point for, "Other people's opinions are noise."

      Jan
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    • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
      The separation of abortion from the use of rejected tissues is not an easy one. As a tissue engineer who must follow society's norms (FDA approval mostly), when someone gets to flagrantly go around those rules by inexpensively purchasing aborted tissue, I must scream, "Foul! This is not a level playing field." This goes to whether or not I can expect a reasonable return on investment for my efforts.
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      • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
        Seems easy enough to separate them to me. One is a freedom of a woman to decide what to do with her body and resources. The second is what can be done with the waste products. Quite easy, see?

        It is convenient to combine perceived abuses, particularly one with so much media power, to support but a single argument that is lost on its own.
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        • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
          The problem with separating abortion from the use of rejected tissues is that selling the aborted tissues has long been a part of the business model for Planned Parenthood clinics. Many of us in the tissue engineering field have known this for years. The woman's right to choose is dependent on the economics of the abortion provider's abiilty to stay in business. Their business model includes not only the selling of aborted tissues to some of my less scrupulous competitors, but more importantly, my sanction (via my taxes) to pay for some of the abortions. If both cronyist aspects get removed, then abortions would become "rare" as President Clinton at least said he hoped would happen.

          As for "perceived abuses", I know of two non-USA competitors who are buying aborted fetuses for their tissue engineering development. If I were to do so, even if I thought it morally acceptable, I would quickly be in jail. Moreover, if I were to use aborted fetuses, it would have cut > 1 year of development time and more than $100 K. That is money I have to consider as part of my capital investment when doing ROI calculations that my foreign competition doesn't.
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          • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
            Again, I find this argument a convenient combination of independent issues. I do not believe for one second that abortions are not economically viable without selling fetal tissue.

            Use of the fetal tissue and taxes to pay for them are unrelated to whether abortion is morally inappropriate and should be illegal.

            A completely separate issue is whether there should be legislation limiting the use of fetal tissue. Personally, if productive use can be found for this otherwise waste material, I have no issue with its use. This is a separate argument.

            I understood you the first time, but the combination of these two issues is like considering a theif's use of stolen items in the decision regarding the legality of theft. Irrelevant!
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            • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
              If people getting abortions had to pay the full cost of the procedure themselves, their decisions might well have a different conclusion. As an analogy, the number of people signing up for Obamacare as an inexpensive alternative to their prior healthcare coverage would have been minimal, were it not for the subsidy that they are getting from us.

              Rush Limbaugh has correctly stated that liberalism is a series of easy choices. If society makes such choices even easier by subsidizing them, then that requires my unwilling participation. If people choose abortions and pay the full amount, I will tell them politely that I disagree with their decision, but at least I have not had to provide sanction to it.
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    • Posted by H6163741 8 years, 9 months ago
      I'm editing this comment because, after retreading your post, I actually agree with quite a bit of what you've sad. No, I don't think it is the government's job to protect women from bad decisions. However, I do think there is a point (see below) where the fetus become it's own person, and, as such, is entitled to individual rights.
      BTW- PP has a policy of not allowing the mother to see the baby (fetus, child, blob of cells, whatever) when they perform an ultrasound to determine the fetus's position. I totally disagree with this. If we must let each women decide for herself, at least she should be fully informed.


      I disagree with just about everything you've said, (I do agree that there should be some point after conception where 'life' should be defined. Logically I would use the presence of brain activity.)
      HOWEVER, I do appreciate that you have spelled out you views reasonably and diplomatically. Wish I could say the same of others...
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      • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
        I agree the mother should be allowed to see the ultrasound, but not forced to see it.

        Not sure how you and I differ on the emotional trauma, but sounds like we do agree to some definition of the beginning of life, and on the concept of a child's individual rights. It seems we may differ on the transition from the mother's responsibility and rights to the child's rights. If you agree with this conceptual transition (which is very cool), then the next would be a discussion of the technical details of the transition.

        I have a problem with simply using brain activity as a defining moment this does not indicate conscienceless, or any kind of higher thinking; therefore, it is not different than using the heartbeat, which happens even earlier in the development of the fetus. I can't see assigning the beginning of human life to something present in all animals, and even animal fetuses.

        Sometimes I'm not so diplomatic, and I regret it when speaking with people who are, or when I inspire reasonable people to inflammation.
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    • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
      Of course there is no nervous system at conception, to say the least, and it takes more than having a nervous system to have rights.

      The religionists don't care. They have no understanding of why we have rights and what the requirements are. They have a mystical notion of the source of rights and misuse the concept as a floating abstraction, contradicting the rights that human beings do have.
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    • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 8 years, 9 months ago
      While I'm at least at the viability position, I will take exception to your "clearly not when the embryo is 16 cells". Those that make the argument that human life begins at conception point to the fact that the unique genetic code for the resulting individual is set when there is only a single fertilized cell. A unique combination has been created. Whether that matters is, of course, a philosophical question, not a technical one.
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      • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
        I understand that position, but the only thing that distinguishes that unique collection of cells from every other species unique collection of cells is that it has other elements of the code that also make it human. Snowflakes night skies and the embryo of every other animal are similarly unique.

        In addition, what makes that unique combination more precious than all the ones we decided not to allow to proceed (e.g. condoms, etc).

        Unique, yes. A meaningful, sentient life to be taken, no.
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        • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 8 years, 9 months ago
          It's uniquely human which is why the question of whether it deserves protection as other humans do is relevant.

          The problem is that there is a continuum of existence for that individual collection of genetic material through adulthood. Even after birth it does not qualify as an independent rational member of society until years of effort have been placed into protecting and nurturing it.

          There are two points in this development which stand out. The first is when the organism can continue to survive, with assistance, if taken from the mother's womb, although that process can be significantly invasive as to the mother's rights. The second is at birth when someone else can take over care without imposing a medical procedure on the mother.

          I'm not sure when it's a meaningful sentient life.
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          • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
            You may be right, it is relevant and interesting. In my mind we humans are just way too arrogant about our greatness, and therefore assert some infinite need to protect a human life. Clearly the need to protect a life is not infinite because as a whole we do not protect human life at the expense of all other things. we do not stop going to war. We do not stop driving cars. We do not stop drinking. We do not donate money infinitely to support the success of actual born, walking, speaking human lives in rural countries. (I don't either)

            I consider the assertion that abortion is murder by most people is laughable, when there are gobs of starving actual walking, functioning humans dieing every day. Unless the people arguing against it have exhausted their resources supporting these other people first, they are simply hypocrites.

            Certainly the uniqueness concept has intellectual merit in evaluation, but it is a practical red herring.
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  • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
  • Posted by AmericanGreatness 8 years, 9 months ago
    I would hope that her opinion would change with technology. We now know brain activity begins as early as six weeks and premature birth that would once has resulted in death are now common.

    The seminal question is, when does life begin? If not at conception, when?
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    • Posted by ProfChuck 8 years, 9 months ago
      The most broadly accepted definition of death is the cessation of detectable brain activity. It would seem reasonable to assume that a similar definition of the beginning of life could be drawn. Electroencephalographic measurements indicate that distinctly human cerebral activity is detectable late in the first trimester. If the cessation of brain activity indicates the end of life is it not reasonable to suggest that the appearance of brain activity indicates its beginning?
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  • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
    First, it is absurd to claim that a woman who aborts is doing "deep and permanent psy. damage." You even contradict yourself by saying you don't know how many might be so damaged.

    2. An Obj.ist has to accept the morality of abortion - an issue of rights.

    3. For those late-term abortion cases (which are fairly small in number): if the fetus would be breathing/alive upon removal, then one could claim it to be "human." But like Rand said, that is not where morality lies (on the extremes).

    4. I don't have a problem with the use of fetus parts in research. But the mother of the fetus should have a say in that use and be compensated in some way (e.g. for hospital bills).
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    • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
      Actually, as part of the consensus of ethics, a woman may not be compensated for the use of embryonic cells or organs. This is to prevent her making a decision based on economics. She is also not supposed to be informed of the possibility of using the fetal cells/organs for research or medical procedures so that she does not make the decision in light of compassion for someone else.

      I do not actually agree with these policies, but I can see that they are currently necessary in order to totally divorce the decision from taint of medical scandal.

      Jan
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    • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
      "First, it is absurd to claim that a woman who aborts is doing 'deep and permanent psy. damage.'"

      Why?

      "You even contradict yourself by saying you don't know how many might be so damaged."

      How?
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      • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
        No, I was referring to someone else who said they do not know how many. I said it might hurt some who are insecure re their decision to abort. But one can't claim necessary harm.
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        • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
          Ok, I'm not sure what you are trying to say here, so I'm going to restate my claim for you.

          1) In my own dealings with women who have had abortions I have noticed a pattern of "emotional loss"

          2) I have noticed that abortion survivor support groups have formed for women claiming similar distress.

          3) Abortion science is politicized (Lysenkoized) and therefore suspect.

          4) Any study done on the subject is therefore also suspect.

          5) Having to choose between suspect expert evidence and experiential evidence, I have chosen experiential.

          6) Expert evidence says that women claiming distress are minimal in number or politically motivated and therefore their claim can be ignored.

          7) Doctors performing any procedure do so out of expert evidence.

          8) Not informing a patient of a possible side-effect for any medical procedure has a legal term: malpractice.

          I am not arguing for or against abortion.
          I am arguing against what I believe to be malpractice.

          You are now free to ignore and flame at will.
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          • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
            Doctors issuing warnings with no understanding of the cause of the danger and with misleading attributions is unethical. The cause of the emotional problems is the false beliefs about morality and abortion, not the procedure itself.
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          • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
            I have my view on the entire abortion discussion, but here are some definite facts.

            ALL abortions are an invasive medical procedure. This is a fact.
            Other than abortions any invasive medical procedure MUST follow specific guidelines by law, which includes to the patient full complete disclosure of all possible side effects or risks.

            Why is abortion not treated as ANY other medical procedure? Convenience and politics.

            Since an abortion IS a medical procedure, and an invasive one at that and either local anesthesia or IV sedation is used, this eve further dictates that full disclosure of every possible risk should be clearly outlined to the patient as in any other medical procedure.

            Roughly 47,000 women die every year FROM abortion complications. Another reason to enforce full disclosure and treat as any other invasive medical procedure.

            I am not advocating for or against abortion here, simply pointing out some facts, that indicate that abortions SHOULD be treated live real medical procedures, not like a McDonalds drive through at some non-medical facility where the women can get REAL medical care.

            Anything short of that IS malpractice.
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    • Posted by $ blarman 8 years, 9 months ago
      There are a whole host of psychologists who differ from you here. Your statement is like saying that Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder isn't a psychological disorder either.

      2. Objectivism deals with reality and accepts the tenet that we have only our perception with which to evaluate reality. Since our perceptions are subject to change with more information, NO subject is "settled". There is always room for the adjustment of theory to account for new information.

      3. This is your opinion, but obviously many differ from you. What you are saying is that until the blueprint is complete, that it doesn't matter that it is a blueprint at all regardless if the process is underway. What you are in fact doing is denying the potentiality of value in an unfinished product.
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      • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
        Don't you think it depends on the individual? Sure, some may be impacted...the weaker ones who have conflict with the abortion decision in the first place.
        There is no "new info" to change the moral principle.
        "Potentiality" does not equate to "actuality" when it comes to rights.
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        • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
          The weaker ones with a conflict over abortion have no idea why it is moral and have been manipulated into guilt.

          The warning required is: "If you adhere to religious pronouncements and don't understand what you are doing you will experience emotional problems. You are psychologically damaged."
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          • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
            Some who have a conflict over abortion have been manipulated into guilt. The psychological damage comes from violating one's own moral code, if one believes he/she has violated it. In your case, you would feel no guilt because you have not violated your own code.
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            • Posted by ewv 8 years, 8 months ago
              People can only be manipulated into guilt by reference to moral ideas they take seriously. The current frenzy over abortion is based on confused religious morality and a confused idea of what morality is and why. We see people who don't ordinarily take religion seriously in their normal living but because they don't understand the nature and source of a proper morality are easily manipulated into opposing abortion despite the damage to the women they want to control.
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    • Posted by H6163741 8 years, 9 months ago
      Please don't deign to tell us what an Objectivist HAS to accept unless you are Ayn Rand. Maybe not even then...
      What about the rights of the fetus?
      Are they granted upon exit from the birth canal? No. In our law, fetuses have property rights. It is considered child endangerment to take drugs while pregnant, and, if a pregnant woman is killed, also killing the fetus, it is usually charged as double murder.
      If you still don't think a fetus is a person, I ask you to pick up a high school biology textbook or What to Expect When You're Expecting.
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      • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
        You simply cannot call yourself an Obj.ist if you contradict Obj.ist principles.
        No, fetus does not have rights - period. The woman has rights to her body, thus the laws you reference.
        Don't let emotions cloud your reasoning.
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        • Posted by H6163741 8 years, 9 months ago
          It has nothing to do with feelings. It has to do with science. Go pick up a biology textbook. And a law book. You may be surprised to find that you could actually be wrong about something. An objectivist is open to learning. Apparently, you are not.
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          • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
            No biology textbook stays that fetuses have "property rights".

            Laws associated with damage to a fetus are morally based on the mother's rights and choice to have a baby.
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            • Posted by H6163741 8 years, 9 months ago
              Of course not. Laws are found in statutes and case law, not biology books. Scientific fact is found in biology books. Hope that clears up your confusion.
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              • Posted by ewv 8 years, 8 months ago
                You wrote "In our law, fetuses have property rights" and "If you still don't think a fetus is a person, I ask you to pick up a high school biology textbook."

                Science has not determined that fetuses are human beings with human rights like property rights. You are confusing religious dogma with science.
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  • Posted by ProfChuck 8 years, 9 months ago
    Statistics reveal that government sanctioned abortion is, defacto, part of an agenda of eugenics and racial cleansing. The original goal of Margaret Sanger when she founded Planned Parenthood was the reduction of the population of undesirables and the racially inferior by means of reducing their birth rate. Today's liberal progressives will never admit to this but the numbers cannot be denied.
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    • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
      That is an absurd and irrelevant statement. Whether or not any particular individual has a rational defense of his advocacy of the right of abortion, alleged "statistics" claiming "an agenda of eugenics and racial cleansing" say nothing about those who do. Government protection of abortion rights or protection of any kind of rights cannot be denied as "defacto" part of an agenda of eugenics and racial cleansing".
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    • Posted by $ blarman 8 years, 9 months ago
      Correct. Sanger was not only a eugenicist, but a racist.

      "We should hire three or four colored ministers, preferably with social-service backgrounds, and with engaging personalities. The most successful educational approach to the Negro is through a religious appeal. We don’t want the word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population, and the minister is the man who can straighten out that idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellious members."

      - Woman, Morality, and Birth Control. New York: New York Publishing Company, 1922. Page 12.
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    • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
      That's nonsense. But I will say that govt. has no business being involved in what should be an individual decision.
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      • Posted by ProfChuck 8 years, 9 months ago
        I agree at least partially. The government should play no role in the abortion debate but that is not the case. Liberals love to cite "defacto" activity such as "defacto racism". The statistics clearly reveal that "minority" races dominate abortion rates. This is consistent with those supporting eugenics and racial cleansing. It is immaterial that the liberals would deny it.
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  • Posted by JoleneMartens1982 8 years, 9 months ago
    If our tax dollars are to be used to aid these people in resolving poor choices, I say look not to abortion but to education and birth control. I know many people who would have gladly paid to have a full historectmy at a young age, but were denied by society. Also, all of these trailer park welfare women living off tons of illigitmate children that they do not love, care for, or even provide for, why are we not offering affordable permanent birth control options. It cost me $6000 out of pocket to get my tubes tied, why would they spend on that when they could get a boob job for less. It infuriates me to talk to welfare mommas. They are proud of being worthless.
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  • Posted by LibertyBelle 8 years, 9 months ago
    I used to think that it should be allowed at all stages. But in 1991, I read that in some cases, the
    fetus "thrashed around" during the procedure. If it
    can thrash around and fight, I guess it must be a
    separate entity. That does not mean that it is an
    actually separate human being from the moment
    of conception, however. I think that it should
    make a difference whether it has brain waves
    yet, or not.
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  • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
    I have noticed on this blog that whenever a subject is addressed that is emotionally charged as this one, many participants are either non-Obj.ists who will always question, and those who call themselves Obj.ists who are failing to understand Obj.ist fundamentals. I'm not sure why the former group stays on, especially when they only question and show no attempt to learn. The second group simply needs to better integrate principles as discussion ensues and they read further into Rand's works.
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    • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
      I do not call myself a Randist or Objectivist in this company, because I do not agree with many of the quotes or policies that are cited as being part of those philosophies. I am on this blog because I am an independent and rational person who has read Ayn Rand and who is wallowing in interacting with other people who have fundamentally the same perspectives as I do.

      So, I am not an "-ist", but this blog is valuable to me.

      Jan
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    • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
      1) I am not the person who downvoted you on this item. I am giving you a point for this item.

      2) I share common views with Ms. Rand on >> 90% of her points, but do not consider myself an Objectivist. The life question we are discussing on this thread is the first or second most serious disagreement I have with Ms. Rand.

      3) In the cases I disagree with Ms. Rand, it is on her definitions. Her conclusions are consistent with her definitions, but in a couple of cases, she has chosen definitions that are not standard. In those cases, I have chosen to reject her premises, and consequently do not consider myself an Objectivist.

      4) Although I consider myself a non-Objectivist, I find my views and values more often reflected here than any other similar venue, and thus I return value for value in an effort to live a non-contradictory life.

      5) When someone lives in a way that I consider contradictory, I will point it out, but not force it upon them. If one chooses to live a contradiction, then that contradiction will be its own punishment. If one chooses to live a life of non-contradiction, as I presume everyone in the Gulch does, then I am glad you are on the right path.

      6) Specifically with regard to this post, as a tissue engineer, the definition of life is a critical one. When I grow part of (or eventually all of) an organ from one's own adult stem cells, the product that I have created will not have sentience, yet it must be alive when I implant it back into one of my patients. These patients value the value that I and my colleagues have created. To you, it may be an unviable tissue mass, but to me and my patients, it is the opportunity for a significantly improved quality of life. Your (and Ms. Rand's) definition of life cheapens the value of what I do, and consequently, I must defend my definition. In addition to the questionable morality, what was in the Planned Parenthood video has the potential to seriously lower the value on what I do. Less than or equal to $100 for a liver is a lot less than I will demand for my services! When I and others have to follow reasonable rules set by a society regarding the way that I conduct my tissue engineering, and then someone else gets to flaunt those rules and completely undercut my sales point, then you can be damned sure that I will be upset!
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      • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
        Ayn Rand based her concepts and definitions on essentials, not the invalid concepts you regard as "standard".

        Nothing in Ayn Rand "cheapens" any science.
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        • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
          I am not disagreeing with you on this one, but if I were to create my own definitions, you and everyone else would immediately say, "Who the heck are you to define terms in a way that is different from everyone else?"
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          • Posted by ewv 8 years, 8 months ago
            Valid definitions are objective, not what "everyone else says". See the chapter on definitions in Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology. When some provides a true definition I do not say "Who the heck are you to define terms in a way that is different from everyone else?"
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            • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 8 months ago
              I was not the person to downvote you on this one, but I stand by my point. When Ayn Rand makes definitions that are objective, you choose to agree with her because of the objectivity of the definition. However, the definition of life in most dictionaries and in all biology textbooks has certain characteristics that are easily identified (such as the ability to adapt to its environment) and hence objective. You have chosen to reject that definition.
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              • Posted by ewv 8 years, 8 months ago
                Ayn Rand described life as "a process of self-sustaining and self-generated action". That is not non-objective and does not contradict science. Your problem is that morality and rights are not based on being alive alone, and do not properly pertain to fetuses. It has nothing to do with not being alive, which no one claims. Biological definitions of life are not relevant to that

                You stated, "If I were to create my own definitions, you and everyone else would immediately say, 'Who the heck are you to define terms in a way that is different from everyone else?" That is not true, and you cannot in logic "stand by" a misrepresentation of what you imagine someone else would say. Definitions are true or false in accordance with whether or not they correctly specify a concept in terms of essentials, not whether or not they are "different from everyone else".

                The clown who voted this down has his own problems.
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                • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 8 months ago
                  I wish I had read this before commenting on another post, because I used the same "self-sustaining and self-generated action" line myself. That definition starts at the point of sentience, but is not complete until adulthood. It is an objective definition. The choice of point of birth for assignment of the right to not be terminated is a poor one, because infants lack the ability to conduct enough self-sustaining and self-generated actions almost as much as when they were in the womb.
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                  • Posted by ewv 8 years, 8 months ago
                    Life does not require sentience or any kind of consciousness, and rights have nothing to do with mere sentience. There is no excuse for abrogating the rights of the mother for a potential human being. The requirement that a human be born as a necessity of having rights is not a poor one. The limited rights formulated for infants and children are another matter and are no excuse for abrogating the rights of a woman who does not want to bear a child. More at http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts...
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    • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
      And I for one am honored to have such an expert policing my threads.
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      • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
        Just an observation. Sarcasm is not needed.
        I just thought this blog was for Obj.ists or those aspiring to be so.
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        • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
          [Sarcasm mode off]

          There's actually been a lot of discussion recently about that.

          The decision the Admins made was that Producer membership requires advocacy of AR/AS/OBJ and that regular membership is open to all (until they become an obvious troll of course).

          And the troll bar is set very, very high by the admins, sometimes very much to the chagrin of some of the members.

          I would suggest that you look into and consider a producer membership. http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/faq#f...

          It's really not that expensive, the fee is meant as a minimal "money where your mouth is" commitment.

          One of the perks is access to the very underused "Gulch Lounge" category.
          If your concern is having more Objectivist themed conversation with more Objectivist minded people, that would be the category to hang out in.

          Although, as you can see from this thread, even we producers knock heads from time to time.

          BTW, don't take my sarcasm too personally.
          People here know me for my infamous "Two Strike Policy"
          http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts...

          When I'm serious, I start calling strikes.

          I hope to see you on the producer side.

          Rick (Eudaimonia)
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          • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
            That has nothing to do with his comment on those who post here with no interest or effort in understanding Ayn Rand's ideas and who systematically contradict it.
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  • Posted by H6163741 8 years, 9 months ago
    How about we just agree on mandatory ultrasounds prior to abortion? Or do you not believe that the woman should be fully informed before making such a life-altering decision?
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    • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago
      I don't think it should be mandatory for the woman considering abortion to have to do anything.

      I do, however, think it should be mandatory that those who would perform a medical procedure disclose the risk.
      That's why we have all those fast talking voice actors at the end of each commercial for each new pharm-wonder-drug... could cause spontaneous-combustion, permanent blindness, and zombification...
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    • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
      An analogy would then be to require reading Upton Sinclair and watching cows be slaughtered before we eat steak.
      If it is an acceptable action to take, why should we make it more unpleasant that it already is?
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  • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
    Ok if A=A then lt's look at this from a current secular perspective only.

    First legally and according to statute "What is Life and When does it begin?"

    Second is human life more valuable than animal life?

    16 U.S. Code § 668 - Bald and golden eagles
    https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/te...

    Owning, moving, possessing, damaging "eggs" from a bird is punishable by "$10,000 or imprisoned not more than two years, or both: "

    42 CFR 71.52 - Turtles, tortoises, and terrapins.
    https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/...


    Now if the Federal Government is defining an egg, which is NOT a live bird and is not fully formed as requiring protection, I would think that by any reasonable definition, that a human embryo which is the point at which two eggs begin to grow and subdivide and metabolize, would and should be entitled to protection under the law as well.

    How can one define a bird "egg" as alive, and not a Human fetus? Or at the least how can one dictate that an "egg" should have legal protection and a human fetus not?

    Nothing above even remotely hints at religion only the legal standpoint of where life is considered to deserve protection.
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    • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
      ...but humans also spend money to raise endangered animal species. by your logic, since we do not spend money to similarly raise humans, humans are less important than animals.

      Neither holds water. The government has not asserted that the eggs are life.

      Capturing and sterilizing an endangered species would also land you in jail, but not so for a vasectomy or "tube tying" in a human. Does this also mean animals are more important than humans? No.

      No one thinks abortion is a positive thing to be encouraged. Perhaps there is a real secular argument against it (the above is not one). However, I question how many people have not made a decision on abortion and subsequently seek secular arguments against it.

      We have: murder - lot of work to do here.
      We have:the woman will feel bad after - Really, Gulchers want to make something illegal because the decision maker will regret the decision?
      We have - You have to live with your bad decisions. Right. You had sex, too bad so sad. Cut it out. You bought a pretty, but unreliable car. You have to keep it until we agree you've suffered adequately.
      We have: allowing abortion encourages irresponsible social behaviors - Clearly not if people feel so bad after them.

      The only reasonable secular argument against abortion is the rights of the child, and that depends on the child being an individual human when the abortion occurs. Since the cost and burden is on the mother who would seek an abortion, the burden of proof is on those seeking to limit her freedoms. Demonstrate the fetus is a human in any manner also relevant in demonstrating humans are different than animals. Simple, and I bet you can't.
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      • Posted by CircuitGuy 8 years, 9 months ago
        "Demonstrate the fetus is a human in any manner"
        Suppose the fetus were a human life. Then we'd have a tough problem. How much sacrifice could we demand of mothers to protect that life? Could we deman expecting mothers take a break for high-risk jobs and activites. If a doctor says they should be on bed-rest, could we use force to make sure she complies?

        I actually do think a fetus has rights, but I don't see how we can put its rights ahead of the mother's. I hope one day there is technology to extract an unwanted fetus and incubate it with no harm to the mother or fetus.
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        • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
          I would agree with the challenge if it were clear that a fetus is a human life, but it seems like a thought experiment to me.

          I actually think it would be sadder to pull the plug on a truly self-aware machine than to abort an unaware fetus. One of these two can recognize its own end. The self-aware machine can probably even pass the Turing Test. The fetus cannot even respond.

          If your hope comes true, I add the hope that we also have the wisdom to do this ONLY when there is a nurturing, willing, interested party that will responsibly care for the eventual child, and that the procedure is paid for by this party. Otherwise, you just multiplied a problem we already have.
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      • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
        I said "Legal protection" and punishment for harming..
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        • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
          Don't know what that means. Legal protection of whom? Punishment for harming whom?
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          • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
            Government law dictates that the "egg" from an Eagle is protected from harm by people under punishment. Reasoning is because it will grow to an Eagle, therefor protected.

            Fetus grows to a human life, therefore should also be protected from harm by humans.

            It is a classic case of contradiction of law. Animal egg is life and protected, Human is not life and not protected.

            I thought what I wrote above was pretty clear...even placed the legal statutes.
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            • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
              What you've described is your perfect wet dream of statist control of all humans based on some anti-life law and regulations already imposed by an existing statist regime imposed not for the protection of eagles, but as a step in a program of incremental control of human action.
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              • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                What I am doing is showing that people want to have it both ways where the definition of life is concerned.

                We "want" to define life as an egg when it pertains to something convenient, or emotionally appealing, like saving the eagles.

                BUT we do not want the same definition to apply to people because we all love the thought of abortion and that the woman should have the right to rip something out of her body if she chooses and we conveniently do not call that life.

                The point I am making is that there is no consistency at all, either life begins at conception or it does not.

                Or does life begin prior to conception such as a bird egg but not a human. Which is it? You cannot have it both ways and still claim A=A
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                • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
                  To be brutally honest, I don't really care when life begins. Life is not fair, humans are equal in relation to their rights at birth, not before birth and not for any outcome. Nature is a cold, cruel bitch. Some live, some die, and some just exist. A=A, and existence exists.

                  What I really care about is individual rights and freedom of humans. AR said something about rights, on the order of rights do not place an imposition on others to implement them.

                  I also care that no laws get passed that effect the lives of existing humans in any way, shape, or form. I care that a lot (nearly all) of existing laws get repealed or cancelled. And I really care that the government 'Keep It's Damn Laws Off Human Bodies' and human, free market interactions.

                  And that if you wish for more laws that further restrict the freedom of any human in any way, that you go somewhere where you can do that, but not where I'm at. That is statism, pure and simple.

                  Let the birds fend for themselves or for people that care about them to spend their own money and time raising them, and if dead fetal tissue can be utilized for research that stands the chance of improving the future lives of humanity I'm all for it. If you don't do that, it get's thrown into a furnace somewhere.
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                  • -1
                    Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                    Zenphamy, again I was not advocating at all one position over another, simply pointing out a massive legal inconsistency.

                    So far we have seen some justification to alter the definition of life based on risk of extinction, but that has no bearing on the root definitions in reality.

                    I am not advocating one way over another just spurring some thought.
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                    • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
                      Your "logic" is verbal manipulation with no understanding of the meaning of the concepts.
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                      • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                        You would be the only person who thinks this is verbal manipulation.

                        Life is Life PERIOD.
                        Non-Life is NON-life PERIOD
                        A=A

                        If one is defined as life at a certain point so also is all other life or non-life. Period.

                        Although I was using the term LEGAL Protection.

                        If Egg = Legal Protection for Animal
                        Human is an animal
                        Human Egg/Fetus = Legal Protection.

                        There is NO manipulation, this is simple A=A. Perhaps this concept is to simple for some. Or perhaps not "convenient."
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                      • -2
                        Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                        Also Mr. ewv. I see you are still not a "producer." Do you not believe in Objectivism?
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                        • Posted by sdesapio 8 years, 9 months ago
                          Being a Galt's Gulch Online Producer does not make one an Objectivist or a "Producer" in real life woodlema. Nor does it prove one's level of knowledge and/or understanding of any particular subject.

                          Not being a Galt's Gulch Online Producer also does not make one a moocher or a looter.

                          Galt's Gulch Online Producers are however expected to hold themselves to a higher standard and not berate, belittle, or attempt to pressure others into becoming Gulch Producers. This would actually be considered conduct unbecoming a Gulch Producer.

                          Let's raise the bar.

                          Thanks,
                          Scott
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                          • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                            Scott,

                            With all due respect your statement "Nor does it prove one's level of knowledge and/or understanding of any particular subject." I completely disagree. In the "About section" of this forum, an Objectivist who DOES have understanding should be self-motivated to action.
                            No Free Lunch
                            Value for Value
                            All core concepts to one who understands and has knowledge. Wisdom is the proper application of knowledge.
                            http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/about
                            "Producers are members of the Galt's Gulch community who have read Atlas Shrugged, are advocates of Ayn Rand's ideas, and understand that there is no free lunch. They understand that running this site costs money. They understand that the value they get from this site deserves a fair value-for-value exchange."
                            Value for value. I joined the Gulch because I was motivated by Ayn Rand after I read Atlas Shrugged, then The Fountainhead, then a few of her other lesser known works.
                            To self-identify as an Objectivist, one MUST view things from a value for value proposition.
                            Being flagged "Producer" while certainly not required to participate, indicates a specific level of "value-for-value" acknowledgement.
                            One who self identifies as an Objectivist is forced by these principals to ask themselves do I find "value" here? If I do then I should be motivated to as this site points out in its "About" section, know "there is no free lunch."
                            I joined this site, and remained a guest for a view months to determine if I found "value." I was self-motivated as were so many others who found value.
                            I did find a great deal of value so I made the choice being motivated by Objectivist principals knowledge of those principals, and the wisdom to ACT on those principals, I acted on that value and subscribe.
                            Some who contend they are the epitome of Objectivism, and do not find value, should not be taking harsh tones with others on this site who DO find value here and express that value with a subscription, thus being flagged "producer" whereby I have taken the product of my labor, to pay for the product of another person's labor, i.e. this forum.
                            To be honest, the value I paid voluntarily is less than smoker pay to suck down carcinogens on a regular basis, making this forum a significant value vs. the amount requested.
                            To quote directly from Ayn Rand.
                            The Virtue of Selfishness
                            "Since a value is that which one acts to gain and/or keep, and the amount of possible action is limited by the duration of one’s lifespan, it is a part of one’s life that one invests in everything one values. The years, months, days or hours of thought, of interest, of action devoted to a value are the currency with which one pays for the enjoyment one receives from it."
                            I guess one must ask what currency. Well since money is the tool by which men freely trade with one another and establish value, and as the "About" section points out there is NO free lunch. A person who holds Objectivism dear would most certainly ACT by providing that value, currency in the form of a subscription, else that person must not hold those values as dearly as proclaimed from the roof-top.
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                    • -1
                      Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                      I have not altered any definition, it is those who "think" that they can alter based on their personal preferences at the time.

                      Quantity of a species does not change the definition, it only changes the justification of the action.
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                    • -1
                      Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                      Simple If-Then-Else logic.
                      If an Eagle egg is alive and deserved protection under the law, then so must a human fetus be considered alive and receive protection under the law, else the law is inconsistent and needs to include human fetus.

                      If a human Fetus is NOT alive therefore deserves no protection under the law because it has not been born, i.e. exited the womb, then an Eagle egg must also be considered not alive because it has not hatched, and deserves no protection under the law.

                      See no avocation for one over the other, only bringing to light the massive inconsistency.
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                      • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
                        The eagle laws had nothing to do with the life of an eagle. It was about stopping man from using DDT and gaining one step in statism/socialism. I wonder how many millions of humans have died since from malaria and other mosquito born diseases.

                        And it's no more inconsistent than a cop getting away with killing an unarmed man while a citizen would go to prison. It's all anti-humanism and anti-rights.
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            • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
              Endangered animal egg is protected because it supports life (different than = life).
              Human egg and sperm are not protected even though they support life (not = life).
              Why? Because one is in danger of extinction (or was when the law was drafted). The other is far more in danger of extincting.
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              • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                Interesting, So what you are saying is that life definition is based on the "Quantity" of available types of that species, and if there are plenty then the definition does not apply?

                So A does not Equal A then.
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                • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
                  What life definition? Do you assert that an egg is life?
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                  • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                    Did you read what I wrote. I made NO assertion.

                    I said if the Law in the USA deems the egg of an eagle something to be preserved then the "eggs" of humans also should receive at least the same protection under the law.

                    The quantity or rarity of a species is not relevant.
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                    • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
                      Ok, so the eggs of human females should be protected or the eggs of eagles should be left open for consumption, right?
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                      • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                        pretty much. Because you cannot have it both ways.

                        Either the egg of a bird is of the same value as a human or visa versa, and both deserve protection under the law, or neither, since the egg is not life therefore should not be protected at all.
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    • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
      Sounds like the craziness of belief over reason, to place the value of animals over that of human life by restricting and regulating how humans can interact with their environment.

      What would the free market have done in the place of the statist solution?

      Wait, I get it now. You don't really agree with humans interacting in a free market in a value for value interchange do you?
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      • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
        How did you get that?
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        • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
          Because you're advocating for government to pass a law protecting human fertilized eggs at least on a level with eagle fertilized eggs. That 's a growth in statism over the present level. To not get that i'd need to see that you advocate to repeal the eagle egg law and stop the rest of the anti-life nonsense.
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          • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
            I was not advocating anything. I was just bringing up and pointing out a major inconsistency.
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            • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
              Wood, you're being a bit disingenuous, at least considering how many time you've commented and replied that same note. All while conflating two separate issues. Bald eagles weren't in any more danger than some turtle in the desert or the delta smelt or the spotted owl and the laws passed to restrict human activities related to those issues had more to do with making certain activities and human uses of nature out of bounds, pushing a radical agenda of 'man is bad' and 'nature is good' as a step towards statism and socialism.

              Your issue on this post is blatantly anti-abortion. You just need to go ahead and state it and fully accept that you're trying to get the state to act for you against those that don't believe as you. And further that doing so is the very definition of statism leading to more state control of humans by taking control of a woman's body.

              That's one of my issues with conservatives that talk small government and less government interference out of one side of their mouths, while out of the other side trying to get bigger government and more interference. That, I maintain is an inconsistency.
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              • -1
                Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                First nothing I posted in this thread is either pro abortion or anti abortion in any way shape or form.

                I have also not in this thread discussed anything about big or small government.

                I have also not endorsing any controls.

                I have only been bringing to light significant inconsistencies.

                Zenphamy please point out in this thread ANYPLACE I said to pass a law protecting anything.

                I am pointing out that under the premise of A=A, you cannot have it both ways. I am pointing out that people use convenience to justify their view, and ignore that they often turn it into A<>A.

                If you or anyone claims that the egg of an eagle needs saved for any reason other than it is life, then that definition also passes to all living creatures. A=A.

                If the egg of an Eagle is not alive then no law should be there protecting it period, and then you are being consistent in that the human embryo is also not alive.

                But NOPLACE in this thread did I state any anti abortion view, or any pro abortion view, not any bigger government or more control government, just pointing out major inconsistencies that need rectified so A=A.
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                • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
                  wood, your continued efforts at sophistry and rhetoric in an attempt to get around the issue of A=A in the case of your opinions and beliefs on abortion are ludicrous, at least.

                  You begin your comment above: "Ok if A=A then lt's (sic) look at this from a current secular perspective only."

                  Then: "First legally and according to statute "What is Life and When does it begin?""

                  But you fail to list any 'secular" or any 'legal' reference. In Wikipedia, which is certainly secular (meaning non-religious), examining several viewpoints from science, it's first determined that what's really being asked is 'What is Personhood' and 'When Does It Begin', because life has too many definitions and attempts to define, and can't be consolidated down to one answer. The Conclusion is:

                  "Further past this point, a baby is born at the natural time. However, there is still one hurdle to jump in defining unique "life" and that is the nature of sentience, or self-awareness. Experiments on very young children show that they are certainly not as self-aware as adult humans - indeed in some cases other primates can beat them on the tests administered. The fact is that all humans are born somewhat prematurely, while the young of other animals can drop out of the womb or hatch from an egg and be up and running in minutes, human infants need far longer care. This is due to a developed human cranium being too large to be held by the mother and be given birth to safely, this problem essentially forces the mother to give birth at nine months when in an ideal universe it should be longer. So defining life based on self awareness, you're not really alive until sometime after your first birthday."

                  And in Conclusion: When discussing the philosophical and/or ethical issues surrounding the start of life, the desire for science to provide a clear cut human/non human boundary is very understandable. We need to be able to define this because it is important in our laws and our understandings. However, even from the brief descriptions given above, it is clear that there is no simple answer that science can give. It may well be that reality doesn't have an answer for us, and that "when does life begin?" is, in fact, a meaningless question.
                  Scott Gilbert concludes based on these premises that:
                  "The entity created by fertilization is indeed a human embryo, and it has the potential to be human adult. Whether these facts are enough to accord it personhood is a question influenced by opinion, philosophy and theology, rather than by science."
                  Indeed, the potential for human life can begin very early, but it is personhood that is the sticking point. The question is very much whether the two are equal and therefore happen at the same point. Leaving the answer in the hands of philosophy and opinion however makes the distinction between "life" and "non-life" purely subjective and the answer will be different for everyone. This is the most important fact to bear in mind, particularly when discussing legalities - subjective thoughts cannot and should not be forced upon everyone fairly."

                  Then you try to equate human life to the embryonic, in the egg phase of an eagle and even amphibians, attempting to take the examples of legal protection of animals threatened at the extinction level, and compare that to a human life. Then you go on to attempt comparisons of the protections afforded the eagle egg (by neglecting to also include that the protection is also afforded to the nest or parts of the nest of the eagle as well as other parts). It seems that your argument should be directed at the uterus since that's the most equivalent to the egg shell of a bird or amphibian and the nest since it's purpose and design is to hold the egg, the embryo, and the baby chick until it reaches eagle-hood.

                  Not only is your argument fallacious, but your attempt to dissemble is pretty easily seen through. And that's only an analysis of your first and second sentences. I only ask that you be honest with us, nothing more.
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                  • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
                    Ok I know what you are driving at. You want me personally to state what my personal view is.

                    I did not state my personal view as in the discussion it was not relevant.

                    I was simply pointing out 2 particular Government statues (there are a lot more) that assign legal protection to the eggs of animals.

                    Perhaps I assumed you knew that these statutes were driven by the left and those conservationists and activists that also support planned parenthood.

                    My point is not as complicated as you are making it, and perhaps I touched a nerve in pointing this inconsistency out.

                    If the left/liberal/conservationist/activist, through legal statute define the unhatched egg of a bird worthy of protection, and does not afford the human the same thing THAT is inconsistent and not A=A.

                    That is all I was pointing out.

                    Again you cannot have it both ways.

                    I "I", was not defining when life begins nor was I in any way indicating any such thing other than via the logic of the Federal Statute that is in existence and is FACT, (the legal statute) that was argued by liberal conservationist activists.
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                    • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago
                      wood, and what I'm replying to you is that regardless of what brings anyone to this issue from the standpoint of an Objectivist, all we see is environmentalist, animal rights idiots, liberals, or conservatives--they are all asking the government to get between a man and his decisions and control of his body and life, when it's used, what it's used for, the very essence of human liberty and rights--and all based on the subjective belief of those irrational activist and all contributing to the growth of the state over the loss to the individual. And most of them speaking from both sides of their mouths.

                      It's not that your 'inconsistency' in law touched a nerve in me, it's that an avowed conservative on this site advocating for greater control by government over our lives and larger growth is abhorrent to me and only serves to drive me further away from involvement with this society of fools and panderers.

                      Where are the men of the mind, the individuals that will stand up for themselves and their rights, those with the moral certainty to stand in the face of socialism, collectivism, and statism and say NO, I am a free man.
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    • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
      Interesting point. Thank you for bringing it up.

      My answer is that if the human race were in danger of extinction, any viable blastocyst would be worth a whole lot more than 10K!

      Jan
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      • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
        jlc, but that is not the point, the quantity of a race or species in the definition.

        The definition does not change, only the justification. So again, life begins when has nothing to do with how many of a species is in existence.
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        • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 9 months ago
          If I had a way of obtaining ova from an eagle and sperm from an eagle, these might be as protected as the fertilized egg - for their potential in maintaining a species. I guess that what I am fumbling around, trying to establish, is that the value might lie in the potential to reproduce, not in the fact that the egg itself is viable.

          Jan
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          • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
            But then again you are skirting the issue of "life".

            If at any point you determine for any reason that the egg needs protected because it's potential for life, then the same passes to the human fetus.

            Quantity of a speciies does not change what the definition of life is or should be.

            If Egg of eagle is alive, so is embryo of human.
            If Egg of Eagle is not alive neither is human.

            If the fertilized bird egg is "alive, then so is the embryo of a human.
            If the fertlized egg is not alive then neither is human.
            A=A.

            A=A.
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  • Posted by Temlakos 8 years, 9 months ago
    I conclude: allowing abortion does not follow necessarily from Objectivist precept. Else, how "might one argue about later stages of pregnancy"? You either allow it or you don't.

    The moral standard for Objectivist ethics is supposed to be "man's life." Hence one does not allow murder. But: that also means one should not allow any practice that desensitizes a person and makes him more likely to commit murder. And that is what abortion allows--and the later in the term, the stronger the effect.

    If we do not allow harvesting an adult or a born child for parts, how can we allow that from an unborn child? The second practice, if society allows it, desensitizes the public so they might allow, even demand, the first. How long, then, before "You ought to be broken up for your organs, and maybe then you would be useful to the world" becomes a common insult? And how long after that before that becomes an allowable sentence of a court?

    A few things to think about, in light of the Planned Parenthood revelations.
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    • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
      Her theory of rights necessarily makes abortion moral. Late stage abortions represents a special case. Like all pro-lifers, you start with the wrong assumption - that a fetus is a human being.
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      • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 8 years, 9 months ago
        She was comfortable with first trimester abortions.

        Many people, including the Supreme Court in Roe v Wade are guided by the viability argument -- that once the fetus could live outside the mother (note even a baby can't live independently of human effort) it becomes protected.

        It was known at the time of the decision and continues to be true that its a moving target. Eventually at any point after fertilization technology will be able to bring it to term so we will have some interesting debates.
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        • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
          Everything the Supreme Court says is now a "moving target". Roe v Wade protects the right to all abortion, not just the first trimester.

          Whatever may happen after an abortion in terms of viability does not negate the woman's right to abortion.
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      • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
        In "The Voice of Reason", Ms. Rand wrote, "For conscientious persons, an unwanted pregnancy is a disaster; to oppose its termination is to advocate sacrifice, not for the sake of anyone’s benefit, but for the sake of misery qua misery, for the sake of forbidding happiness and fulfillment to living human beings." I cannot disagree with this statement. The logical conclusion is to not mate in the first place if one does not want a pregnancy.

        I am sure that all of us have read the following by Ms. Rand.
        "Thinking is man’s only basic virtue, from which all the others proceed. And his basic vice, the source of all his evils, is that nameless act which all of you practice, but struggle never to admit: the act of blanking out, the willful suspension of one’s consciousness, the refusal to think—not blindness, but the refusal to see; not ignorance, but the refusal to know. It is the act of unfocusing your mind and inducing an inner fog to escape the responsibility of judgment—on the unstated premise that a thing will not exist if only you refuse to identify it, that A will not be A so long as you do not pronounce the verdict “It is.” Non-thinking is an act of annihilation, a wish to negate existence, an attempt to wipe out reality. But existence exists; reality is not to be wiped out, it will merely wipe out the wiper. By refusing to say “It is,” you are refusing to say “I am.” By suspending your judgment, you are negating your person."

        I do not need to start with the assumption that a fetus is a human being to come to the conclusion that abortion is immoral by Ms. Rand's own standards. Abortion, except in the cases of rape or incest, constitutes an attempt to escape from the consequences of one's own actions. It is a statement, and more importantly an action, that says "that a thing will not exist if only you refuse to identify it, that A will not be A so long as you do not pronounce the verdict 'It is.'"

        Moreover, when it "wipes out the wiper", the wiper should and will have psychological scarring, because abortion is a form of blanking out.
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        • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
          If you wish to limit the choices of the mother, the burden of proof is on you, not her, to show that the decision she seeks to make is somehow a violation of another's rights.

          This business of saying one must live with one's own decisions is clearly true, but is says nothing about the following actions. I may choose to break something I can easily replace. Am I then compelled to live without that thing forever? Clearly not. This statement is similarly irrelevant to limiting abortion.

          As separate from logical argument as this may be, I wonder what the correlation between religious beliefs and positions on abortion are, even among us. I think the data would be telling and identify an motive to back into the conclusion with logic.
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          • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
            I don't wish to limit the mother's choices, only to point out that the consequences of the mother's choices. If one chooses to make a decision that denies that existence exists, then one must live with such consequences.
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            • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
              As long as you are picketing with an "Existence exists" placard, and not calling your legislators, we are good.
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              • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
                No, it's not good. His claims that Ayn Rand's position denies that "existence exists" are preposterous. Choosing to not carry on a pregnancy for months and not have a child does not refuse or deny the consequences of one's actions or "A is A". Having a child is one possible outcome that depends on a number of factors, none of which anyone is obligated to provide.

                This is rationalistic sophistry intended to support such absurdities as demanding to "not mate in the first place if one does not want a pregnancy". It is an excuse for the thousand year old Catholic dogma that the only purpose of sex is to procreate and that sex for human pleasure alone is evil. This irrational, anti human dogma is all the more offensive cloaked in context dropping parroting of Ayn Rand's own principles.

                That kind of mentality and irrationality cannot possibly end up as anything but the equivalent of "calling your legislatures".
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                • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
                  History would prove you right. I kind of supposed the concept of not turning one's religious opinion into legislation would prompt a response. It will probably happen, but few here would suggest it is appropriate.
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                  • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
                    The religionists are already turning it into legislation. Duties based on teleological theories and arrogant demands to "live with the consequences" always do. (Look at Scott Walker in Wisconsin and others already imposing bans past the first few weeks in a militant attempt to roll back Roe v. Wade.) The repeated history you refer to is no accident. Political philosophy rests on ethics, epistemology, and metaphysics, and intrinsicist ethics leads to statism by those who take it seriously.
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                • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                  With due disrespect, that is not my position. Please do not put words in my mouth. I said that ONE purpose of sex is procreation, and it is. Human pleasure is certainly another valid purpose for sex.
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                  • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
                    You wrote, in your own words, "The logical conclusion is to not mate in the first place if one does not want a pregnancy."
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                    • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                      In proper context, if one is not prepared for all of the potential consequences of one's actions, then one should not engage in those actions.
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                      • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago
                        Hmmm.

                        Methinks one protests too quickly with respect to consequences. How many of the misdecisions of today are rectified by technology, yet are not rejected because they do not challenge religious "norms"?

                        Car repair, cardiac health, typos (retype the page, use white out, print over)...but somehow, this decision cannot be overcome by technology...why?

                        I foresee a circular argument coming
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                      • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
                        That is not true. We do things all the time with numerous "potential consequences" -- and with the ability to avoid or change them, especially when they are sufficiently delayed in time. Your assertion that "The logical conclusion is to not mate in the first place if one does not want a pregnancy" is morally repugnant and decidedly not logical.
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        • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
          so you can't accept error? People take precautions and believe they won't get pregnant. You can't oppose sex on the basis that a woman might get pregnant accidently and then want an abortion. If you get In an auto accident, does that mean that you shouldn't have driven the car?

          You conclusion does not follow: you totally ignore the concept of rights. You incorrectly assume that a woman has sex knowing she will get pregnant, and thus loses her right to her body by having an abortion. Absurd.
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          • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
            Let's say you need a medical procedure after that auto accident, and that requires my skill as a tissue engineer, what would you consider the scaffold I generate along with the adult stem cells that I harvest from you and then genetically reprogram to regenerate a body part custom made for you? Would that be undeniably valuable to you? By your definition, that would not be called life. I will agree that the tissue I am engineering has no rights, but if it were not alive, then it would not help you when my surgical colleagues implanted my customized body part inside you.
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            • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
              You did not address what he wrote. You ignore the concept of rights and go off on tangents about a "definition of life", which he did not mention and which is not relevant to the subject. And neither is anyone's "skill as a tissue engineer".
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            • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
              Irrelevant. No rights implies abortion is moral.
              "Alive" here means nothing.
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              • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
                It may be irrelevant to you, but as someone who does this for a living, the precision of this definition either validates or invalidates my career. I value what I do. If you do not, then I will gladly sell my services and products to those who do. If you die from not getting that medical procedure, I will feel no guilt, as you did not wish to provide value for value.
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                • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
                  What you do for a living has nothing to do with this nonsensical sophistry claiming "abortion is a form of blanking out" in the name of Ayn Rand's own metaphysics. You are dramatically sloganeering with Ayn Rand terminology with no idea what you are talking about.
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          • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
            Most errors are preventable. I do not make any such incorrect assumptions. Your analogy to driving automobiles is a good one, even though your conclusion was incorrect. When one drives, one should realize that one is driving a potentially deadly weapon. If one drives and gets into an "accident" that kills a pedestrian or another motorist, the driver will not be spared the consequences of the accident. I am actually dealing with that issue right now with regard to my teenage daughter wanting to drive my car. She is quite frustrated that my wife and I are not letting her get her driver's license because at this point, her chances of getting into an accident are still too great. As her skill has improved recently, we are reconsidering, but at this point, her likelihood of getting into an auto accident does in fact mean that she shouldn't be driving the car alone. Thank you for proving my point.
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            • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago
              You're getting off topic. An error in aborting without full knowledge of the consequences is not immoral. Abortion is moral whether one understands all the consequences or not.

              The analogy was not as you described it, but it is not worth further explanation.
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    • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 8 years, 9 months ago
      I can't buy the 'desensitize" argument. Otherwise violent computer games or even books desensitize people.
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      • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
        Living a non-contradictory life is harder than most people realize. The violent TV shows, movies, porn, computer games, etc. make living a life that affirms life challenging indeed.
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      • Posted by woodlema 8 years, 9 months ago
        Do not kid yourself, they do. different effects based on the individual personalities, the reality of the game, movie or book, the duration and repetition of exposure....

        http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/...
        http://pss.sagepub.com/content/20/3/2...
        http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/...

        Bartholow. B. D., Bushman, B. J., & Sestir, M. A. (2006). Chronic violent video game exposure and desensitization to violence Behavioral and event-related brain potential data. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 42, 532-539.
        "Hundreds of studies have shown that exposure to media violence increases aggression. Media violence is believed to increase aggression, at least in part, by desensitizing viewers to the effects of real violence. Media violence initially produces fear, disgust, and other avoidance-related motivational states. Repeated exposure to media violence, however, reduces its psychological impact and eventually produces aggressive approach-related motivational states, theoretically leading to stable increases in aggression."
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        • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 8 years, 9 months ago
          When I said I can't buy, I should have been more specific. I meant I cannot buy the "desensitize" argument as a reason to ban something.

          My threshold for using governmental force to ban something has to be a lot higher than violent media increases aggression. Your aggression has to rise to the level of initiating the use of force before we can do that.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
    Regarding "Fast Freddy’s Fetal Livers Emporium", from an entrepeneurial standpoint, I can agree with that, but there are problems with such an emporium.

    The first problem regards the ethics of how the livers were generated.
    A good primer on stem cells is at
    http://biochem158.stanford.edu/14%20S...
    Particularly focus on slide 13. The reference to Yamanaka at the bottom of the page should have ended the stem cell debate, at least from a moral standpoint because it is no longer necessary to harvest embryos to obtain pluripotent stem cells.

    The second problem with the generation of tissues is the immune response. If one reprograms one's own stem cells, the immune response is nonexistent. If one uses a different source of stem cells, the immunogenic responses range from minimal to outright rejection, with most responses being significant but not showstoppers.

    The third problem is the long-term cancer risk. Because such tissues are not native to that human being, this is a significant biological control problem. In 20-50 years, biomedical engineers will understand all of the necessary control variables and their levels, but right now we (and I have moved into this field over the last several years) have a teenager's understanding of such tissue engineering. Sometimes we get it right. Other times there are some serious accidents, just like teenagers in cars. Fortunately the vast majority of these "accidents" happen long before clinical trials.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago
    Most biomedical researchers prefer undifferentiated tissue because they want to be able to differentiate the stem cells into the tissues they want to create. As I have stated previously, Yamanaka has made this point moot now by allowing one to make adult stem cells act as if they were embryonic through genetic reprogramming.

    Tissue from later stage pregnancies are preferred for some studies, but certainly not most.

    The transition from "embryonic" (read pluripotent) to "adult" stem cells (not pluripotent) happens much quicker than previously thought. A heart starts beating in the 3rd week of pregnancy.

    I do nothing that I or anyone else would consider ethically compromised in this respect.
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  • Posted by JoleneMartens1982 8 years, 9 months ago
    I don't believe in abortion, not for any reason or at any term. I believe every life belongs to God and only he has right to take it. However, I believe if someone chooses to harm another be it death or in a way that they will struggle mentally or physically, the person should pay for that life with his/her own. I also include people who manipulate others. I believe public executions should be used swiftly and in all of these cases. I do not believe a murderer or a child molester, or a man like Charles Manson should remain in our society after they have so obviously destroyed others, just to spread the madness. End their life and perhaps save many!
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    • Posted by ewv 8 years, 9 months ago
      This is a site for those who are attracted to Ayn Rand's philosophy. Theocratic execution of those who live without regard to religious injunctions about "life belonging to god" are savage. This is not the place to promote such barbarism.
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