THBT: On balance, the US ought to make abortion illegal.
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 10 votes and with the same amount of points on both sides...
- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 3
- Time for argument
- One week
- Max argument characters
- 17,000
- Voting period
- One month
- Point system
- Winner selection
- Voting system
- Open
THBT: On balance, the US ought to make abortion illegal
BoP:
The burden of proof is shared.
RULES:
1. No Kritik.
2. No new arguments are to be made in the final round.
3. The Burden of Proof is shared.
4. Rules are agreed upon and are not to be contested.
5. Sources can be hyperlinked or provided in the comment section.
6. Be decent.
7. A breach of the rules should result in a conduct point deduction for the offender.
- PRO holds that all beings who are humans possess personhood.
- CON holds that all beings who are humans and possess X characteristic (be it birth, self-awareness) possess personhood.
- Level of development
- Environment
- Degree of dependency
- Introduction
- The requirement of consistency is deeply rooted in English Law. The rule of law requires that laws be applied equally without unjustifiable differentiation.
- Inconsistency is one of the most frequent manifestations of unfairness that a person is likely to meet.
- The legal system needs to permit those subject to the law to regulate their conduct with certainty and to protect those subject to the law from arbitrary use of state power.
- The fetus is a person and this is known.
- The fetus is a person and this is not known.
- The fetus is not a person and this is not known.
- The fetus is not a person and this is known.
- You have intentionally killed a human being.
- You have unintentionally killed a human being
- You have intentionally risked killing a human being.
- You have done nothing wrong.
- CON appears to be right about the broken link in PRO's opening which attempts to prove that human beings come into being at the moment of conception. The operating link is here and is also corroborated by the following sources, which states 95% of all biologists affirmed the biological view that a human's life begins at fertilizations (5212 out of 5502).
- The first is that, when CON stipulates that the beginning of personhood is an unknowable fact, they are appealing to incredulity - they are asserting that their world view does not possess the vehicle for determining personhood. The "don't and can't know" reflects only their position and oughtn't be understood as a universal difficulty which involves PRO's position, for PRO can easily prescribe a stage in which human beings possess human rights (personhood).
- Though CON alleges that the prescribing personhood is an undoable task and involves a fact which we "can't know", their case (and the doings of humanity) hinges on the notion that human beings have personhood. CON's assertion that we can't prescribe personhood (they stipulate "my position regarding the beginning of personhood is that of uncertainty - we don’t and can’t know") carries great difficulties - if it is the case that we cannot prescribe personhood, it follows that no humans have personhood, which implicates the notion that no humans have rights. Obviously, CON disagrees with this sentiment - they don't really argue that "personhood" isn't an unknowable fact, but rather that it is a vague occurrence which takes place somewhere between conception and birth. This vague and ambiguous prescription is both morally indefensible and legally unacceptable (elaborated in PRO's r1, subsection subjectivity and ambiguity.
- CON essentially concedes the entire uncertainty principle argument here - I will elaborate on the significance of this in the relavant section.
- CON argues the harms of abortion are uncertain by virtue of PRO's uncertainty principle. This is false - the uncertainty only arises when we adopt CON's subjective benchmark for prescribing personhood - it is an issue only for those (CON) who wish to deny biological humanity as solely sufficient in converting personhood.
- If it is accepted, as I have postulated, that the unborn are deserving of human rights, it follows the killing of them (over half a million of them) is a far more morally depraved act than any negative effect of abortion which CON has postulated.
- The helplessness of the unborn human oughtn't be compared to the unlucky "mother". Consider the following thought experiment.
- Suppose there exists a room which gives all those in it a natural spike in dopamine for a period of 20 minutes. The entrance is free, however, there is one condition - if you enter, there is a 2 percent there about's chance that you will exist with a human being, whose life is contingent upon your body, attached to you for a duration of just under a year. Now suppose that you enter this room multiple times with no repercussions, however, after a number of trips, you find a human being attached to you. Are you morally allowed to kill this human being?
- I assert that, in the thought experiment, it is a moral crime to kill the human being attached to you. Observe that the above is not some make belief scenario - it is the bedroom in which people have sex. The argument that there are risks in carrying the human (a risk which is well documented, observed and understood by any with minimal knowledge) does not hold - it is clear that these minute dangers were present before one enters a room and are implicitly accepted upon entrance.
- The alleged "leap" is merely one which assumes that "unjustified killing" (killing which is tautologically unjustifiable) ought to be illegal. CON's argument that abortion bans are not effect does not harm this argument, for if it were the case that abortion bans did not work, the fundamental immorality of unjustifiably killing a human being still remains. For example, if it were the case that slavery bans did not lower the number of slaves that were captive, it does not follow that slavery ought to be legal, for the very principle of allowing slavery is itself a terribly immoral and negligent act.
- CON's fundamental postulation that abortion bans do not work is erroneous.
- Demands for abortion among residents in Ireland was steadily declining for a decade until 2019, in which a 142% increase for the demand for an abortion was observed. Coincidently, the legalising of abortion in Ireland took place a year prior.
- Demands for abortion among residents in the UK was steadily declining for a decade until 2017, in which a 58 percent increase for the demand for an abortion was observed. Coincidently, the UK began funding abortions in the same year.
- CON's own source is problematic for its numerous extraneous variables. The study only observed similar abortion rates when comparing poor countries such as Mexico (where there is minimal sex education, low contraception use) with technologically and educationally advanced countries which are, in the article, described as the "richer" countries which "have strong health care systems". An honest comparison between these two populations is simply impossible - obviously the country where there is no education (hence leading to more unwanted pregnancies) or culture (the US for example, through education, as fostered a culture in which sex ought to take place with contraception) is going to be the one with more unwanted pregnancies and a higher number of abortions. PRO's source compares a country before and after the policy, which removes many extraneous variables.
- CON opines that the two reasons I provided which I charge as "unjustified" are not substantiated. Recall that they were "having a baby would dramatically change my life" and "I can't afford a baby". I had assumed that these were obvious - if I were to attempt to justify the killing of my hypothetical child on the grounds that the child would drastically change my life and that I don't have the money for it, these would surely be absurd. One would surely say that I could have at least with them up for adoption. But notice how the advocation is for adoption, and not killing the child. In the case of abortion, there is no third option, so the "adoption" hypothetical can be nullified. If one is not willing to allow for the killing of the child on the two reasons proposed, they oughtn't allow for the killing of the unborn on the two grounds.
- P2: Making abortion illegal would inflict structural violence
- The unborn are not deserving of human rights (PRO's argument that they are deserving of human rights is false), thus the net harm of terminating them is lesser than the net harm which abortion entails.
- The unborn are deserving of human rights (PRO's argument that they are deserving of human rights is true), however, the net harm of terminating them is lesser than the net harm which abortion entails .
- Unborn = human right to life
- Born = human right to life
- Unborn right to life = Born right to life
- Consider the hypothetical scenario in which 20% of the population act as slaves for any family who wishes to have their services, and that this has been a common practice for half a century. The slaves do many mundane jobs - they ensure that the streets are clean, that people get their food (some of the slaves work on farms and produce products) and that the city is liveable and safe (roads are paved etc). Now suppose that, after a while, the population begins to wonder whether the keeping of these slaves is moral. One side argues that it is wrong - the slaves are humans who ought have rights and liberties. The other side, however, argues two points - 1) the net happiness is higher than if we allow these slaves to go free and 2) as we have already had these slaves for half a century and become accustomed to their service, the removing of them will cause much harm (people will starve, driving amidst unmanaged potholes and uncleared obstructions will result in deaths and diseases will spread as no one is sanitising the streets).
- It relies on utilitarianism as a framework, which Pro has rejected
- My framework should be preferred (see: II)
- Lack of solvency means he can’t access it
- Abortion is banned and law enforcement investigates widely including a many miscarriages, which yields the harms I laid out in R1
- Abortion is banned and law enforcement must establish intent (mens rea) before proceeding with investigations and bringing charges
- Theft analogy
- Intended only to prove that a law oughtn't be universal in order to be implemented
- Slavery analogy
- Intended only to prove that
- Utility is not synonymous with moral
- "Structural violence" as a result of banning X is not necessarily negative
- a racist aristocrat who dies because he no longer has slaves to get him food and himself has become reliant on slaves is not a deterring factor to banning slavery, though it is technically "structural/systemic violence".
- CON's critique is that if banning slavery resulted in "structural violence" then they would oppose it. Notice how they ignore my previous argument,
- Consider the hypothetical scenario in which 20% of the population act as slaves for any family who wishes to have their services, and that this has been a common practice for half a century. The slaves do many mundane jobs - they ensure that the streets are clean, that people get their food (some of the slaves work on farms and produce products) and that the city is liveable and safe (roads are paved etc). Now suppose that, after a while, the population begins to wonder whether the keeping of these slaves is moral. One side argues that it is wrong - the slaves are humans who ought have rights and liberties. The other side, however, argues two points - 1) the net happiness is higher than if we allow these slaves to go free and 2) as we have already had these slaves for half a century and become accustomed to their service, the removing of them will cause much harm (people will starve, driving amidst unmanaged potholes and uncleared obstructions will result in deaths and diseases will spread as no one is sanitising the streets).
- Though lengthy and already mentioned, this is extrodinarly crucial. Notice how this example results in structural/systemic violence, yet I would wager that CON would not allow, in the above scenario as opposed to their vague "structural violence" one, that allowing slavery is morally depraved. Much the same is for abortion, though there may be harms, the fundamental immorality of allowing abortion is simply unignorable.
- There exists no criteria for instilling personhood, thus no humans have rights.
- It is impossible to weigh the alleged structural violence of banning abortion with the act of abortion.
- 2018 - 2872
- 2019 - 6959 (abortion is legalised)
- 2020 - 6577
- 2021 - 4577 (a drop resulted by the pandemic)
- Being an acute minority
- An exception (mothers life's in danger)
- To contend PRO's criteria of biological humanity entails that no human, born or unborn, have rights. Our society is one which grants moral rights to humans, so we can grant that it is axiomatically true that humans have rights, and thus my position too, axiomatically follows.
Yes, I changed my mind upon review. I apologize for taking so long to vote.
Full decision and analysis (over 3.5 Thousand words):
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/97ia4f02gbaydahjfltdl/Untitled.paper?dl=0&rlkey=r2ezb6gm3zms7h87q3ptofleq
Excerpt documenting final section:
I judge debates on the strengths and weaknesses of arguments. Pro’s moral equalization established that the unborn ought to have human rights and protections carrying the same rights as a born individual. Con does not propose any criteria, he calls it irrelevant to his case, however, if this is true, as the instigator shows, how does con establish that anyone has rights at all? He says his argument applies “the existing legal standard for granting rights to persons and examine the consequences of extending it to all the unborn,” however he does not attempt to justify the current legal standards in respect to pro’s argument, and this harms his position. It also clashes with his previous assertion: “I have no criteria for personhood.” Both propositions come in conjunction, and I am left as a voter to defer to the grounded and consistent argument, not the ontologically vacuous one.
Con has the less philosophically consistent framework, his position does not attend for this counter. Con also states that I ought to assume that all reasons for abortion are justified, ignoring pro’s moral equalization arguments. This entails that I ought to also assume that they are justified for killing born children, and the implications for this are drastic and unaccounted for. Con does not engage with this point when countered, thus I grant it to the instigator.
Next, con falls to the slavery analogy as his position entails that we ought not to ban slavery if such a ban causes any form of structural violence at all. While focusing on the absolutes of pro’s case, he forgets about the absolutes of his own syllogism, and pro exploits this mistake quite well. This is proponent from flaw (II. a), and con does not deal with this in his argumentation while pro deals with the majority of his own flaws. Con’s conception of structural violence was vague from round one, and while seemingly clarified in round three, the criterion does not do due diligence, it can seemingly be applied to any policy. It also isn’t clear is to why con’s justification for 15 weeks is sufficient because if such a policy created structural violence (Flaws II. e), even if just to a single person, con also tells me it should not be implemented, This is self defeating. I can only conclude that the syllogism that con defends is poorly constructed so long as he does not falsify his own policy as in-congruent with premises one and two.
As for pro’s syllogism(s), he is able to defend that the notion of “illegal,” always entails exceptions, and consequently, his position does not commit him to arguing that every single abortion that exists will be prohibited.
Addressing impacts, I give con the upper hand in establishing harms stemming from this policy, at least potential harm given that his data does not seem to give me a more strictly empirical analysis of the majority of them. However from pro’s sources, it is clear that the legality of abortion in part creates such a large demand and expansion of it, and I get the impression that the removal of abortion services in the public domain has a deterrent effect. There is a slight epistemic gap here as con does not prove that abortion bans do not decrease abortions (comparing undeveloped and developed countries without controlling for pregnancy rate does not demonstrate this). Thus, con convinces me that there will be both harm and structural violence that exists as a result of this policy, just not to a sufficient degree that offsets the killing of people proven to have a morally equivalent right to life to born children especially as pro counters many of the proposed impacts from the contender.
My verdict: con’s argument suffers from reductions, and is logically unstable. This is enough to shift me from voting a tie to voting for the instigator narrowly. Pro could have argued much better, saying such may even be an understatement, but his case is on balance the stronger of the two. Deductive arguments go to pro for the aforementioned reasons.
In R1, Bones states the burden of proof within this debate is shared. Bones refers to a study saying 96% of biologists believe that life begins at fertilization. It has been shown that this is not true (see in my comments). Con states that policies that inflict structural violence ought not be implemented and making abortion illegal would inflict structural violence. In R2, Pro argues that abortion bans do work. Con gives some more sources arguing that bans don't work. Pro's main issue here is that they haven't argued that the number of abortions prevented outweighs the structural harm mentioned by Con. In R3, Pro moves this debate into, if the unborn should have rights at all, without adequately defending against the harms and lack of shown benefits to his proposal.
Con closes with Pro having violated Rule 2 which is "No new arguments are to be made in the final round.” My opinion of the debate is that Con has more convincing arguments and better conduct.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1cygx85Yt7pDjS65jVxrgyjq_ftp6k_3HzK3X2nSzOwk/edit#
What a debate. I missed out on many small points and clashes, but I hope I made enough sense. Feel free to contest me on any points I've made.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1tCv13jOLlGAQZMd-wrOh9sx1TH6R7DWdswtbTTEtccw/edit?usp=sharing
This was a good debate, although long and convoluted. I hope this RFD made sense. If not, I can clarify.
Overall, I think Pro wins on personhood. Obviously, Con's case did not rely on this, and Con took the path of arguing that abortion bans fail from a policy perspective. It's a risky strategy, but let's see if it pays off.
R1:
Con argues a number of harms from abortion bans. These arguably don't outweigh the harm caused by abortion, but he also argues that abortion bans don't work anyway. I suspect "whether abortion bans work" will decide the debate. He also argues about several rare scenarios (and as I'll address later, I think Pro wins this point in the end by arguing for exceptions.)
R2:
Pro points out some flaws with Con's source and argues that abortion bans do work. Pro argues from principle as well. Con gives some more sources arguing that bans don't work. Pro's main issue here is that they haven't argued that the number of abortions prevented outweighs the structural harm mentioned by Con. It will depend on the strictness of "new arguments" and what counts as expanding on an earlier argument in R3 if Pro has a shot here.
R3:
Pro argues exceptions well here, but that doesn't get them out of the woods yet. Pro argues here that abortions have decreased by a lot (as they mentioned earlier) which does seem like it would outweigh the structural harms given and I don't think Con specifically rebuts this all that effectively. I won't criticize Pro as contradicting themselves on utilitarianism; I think their argument is that abortions should be banned no matter what because they are immoral and they don't contradict themselves. They do argue effectively, however, that banning abortions would also succeed in the benefits outweighing the costs (a framework that Con establishes rather well), so as a result Pro's argument still works.
Now it's Con's turn. There's an appeal to emotion at the end that comes across to me as annoying, but that's probably due to my bias and I won't hold that against them. Con reiterates several of the harms from earlier and argues that we should assume all abortions are justified (Pro did better arguing morality, so I don't think Con wins on that point.) But Pro's numbers (as Con points out) don't address abortions that people could obtain in other countries. If the burden of proof is equal, Con hasn't established that abortion bans will fail (their sources aren't perfect either and plenty of bans for other things work) but there's one point that settles things (at least imo):
Con stated in R2 that "And Pro helpfully provides another way to avoid prosecution, since he claims that mothers “are merely ignorant to all the facts”, which makes malice aforethought impossible to establish (this also undercuts his Dopamine Room argument - you can’t both claim that they have perfect reproductive knowledge of pregnancy and every associated risk while simultaneously claiming that they’re prone to accepting reproductive misinformation). This alone destroys most of his solvency." Pro didn't respond to this directly, and it does seem to provide a loophole that destroys their argument. The examples of solvency they gave didn't allow such loopholes. Arguably, if anyone can get away with an abortion easily, the only harms to women are time wasted on investigations and patient-provider trust. But still, this helps Con.
Con wins on a few small details, which isn't great, but they do poke holes in Pro's argument. In the end, I can't give the win to Pro if there are several points they don't address that would destroy their solvency entirely. I'd have liked if Con restated the last point in R3, but a win is a win.
Reasons fully explained in comments.
Pretty much, this debate comes down to a single question which Bones poses and reiterates throughout his rounds. The question is, is the unborn alive? If yes, then the damages of legalising and structualising abortion results in the deaths of the unborn which far outway the harms which whiteflames cite. If not, well, that would nullify Bones’ entire argument - however, Bones knows this, so he dedicated his entire 1st round to proving that the unborn ought to have rights. If whiteflames wanted to go down the route of asserting that the fetus doesn’t have rights, they would have to address the philosophy, which they pretty much didn’t. Whiteflames’ entire case was “making abortion illegal would result in bad things for the women such as XYZ” but as bones said, this is only the case if we assume that the unborn doesn’t have rights, which whiteflames essentially assumes (I will cover their rebuttal of bones’ case later, but they are evidently secondary in his argument and very short).
Bones also brings up the slavery example which is quite extrodinary - it is that EVEN IF we give whiteflames the benefit of the doubt and say that even if having no abortion causes structural violence to a greater extent than rights of the fetus, this STILL is not a reason to kill it the fetus because they have rights even if their utility is lower.
Whiteflame’s only attempt at disapproving the philosophical grounds of bones’ argument is his refutation of the inconsequential difference (he only refutes the others through showing that they do not have “solvency”, which, essentially, concedes the philosophical aspect and argues instead on the pragmatic front. However, as bones says, the pragmatic falues for whiteflames, because the killing of the fetus is worse than that of banning abortion)
Whiteflames’ attempt to use the argument onto the fertilisation stage is disingenuous. As bones said, IN THE FIRST ROUND (preemptively) “ To contend PRO's criteria of biological humanity entails that no human, born or unborn, have rights. Our society is one which grants moral rights to humans, so we can grant that it is axiomatically true that humans have rights, and thus my position too, axiomatically follows”. Whiteflames never engages with this and merely repeats themselves.
The only way he could have won was to say that the unborn ought not have rights, but as bones had already preemptively destroyed this position and exposed the inherent flaws (first argument from him), they probably knew to stray away from there. To end with some opposites, I'll cite some issues with bones and positives of whiteflames. The issue with bones is that 1. He speaks too complicatingly and 2. He dropped his dopamine experiment which is unstoppable. Also, he should have mentioned the words “structual violence” when refuting, and made explicit the fact that whiteflames is contributing to structural violence, something which bones should have clearly mentioned. The good thing with whiteflames is that his case appeals greatly to emotion - it is difficult not to think about the pains of the mothers who are denied abortions. However, bones does come back and make this philosophical and puts a rational objective lens, which is where he wins.
I’ll leave with this, which pretty much recaps the entire debate - Whiteflames entire case is the “structural violence” of banning abortion, however, as bones says, If the unborn are human beings, the effects of killing them is more immoral than the effects of banning abortion”, essentially underminding CON’s entire case.
Good jobs to both contestants!
With pro's proposal seeming to wish abortion to equal first degree murder, and no problem with miscarriages equaling manslaughter, and no benefit listed for anyone from this, it's a wide margin win for con.
...
R1
Pro lengthily attempted to frame con's stance in his opening, which as I can't see whatever discussion they had outside this debate, became highly awkward to read.
This became worse under the rule of shared BoP, and pro opening with trying to move the goalposts onto con based on declarations con presumably made in a PM? I can only grade based on the debate that's been presented, to include con's lack of having made various statements about if fetuses are or are not people.
Pro moves on to declaring that abortion is in fact already illegal via being first degree murder... I've never understood why anyone thinks such an impassioned declaration is effective at changing peoples minds. Worse, it's a piece of hyperbole which is notoriously easy to flip.
Con opens with a completely different stance than the one pro promised he would have.
I dislike the term "structural violence" but with it supported by an EDU site, I'll not dismiss it out of hand as hyperbole...
Ok, con brings up harms from forced non-viable pregnancies being carried to term. Con follows up with abortion bans likewise banning birth control in general; which seems to fit well with pro's definitions of personhood.
Con uses a source from Duke University for likely increased mortality rates which might be caused by such a ban.
Con brings up suffering of babies (I dislike pathos appeals, but it was supported with evidence). And follows up with how the legal system would punish woman for miscarriages (apparently 26% of pregnancies end in miscarriage anyways).
Con gets into statistics of abortions not being prevented by bans, further questioning the benefit of the proposed policy.
R2:
Pro argues that extenuating circumstances could be argued as a defense during the criminal trails, which therefore makes it best to still make it illegal.
Pro moves back to his attempt to pre-define cons burdens, seeming to wish to talk about when personhood should begin rather than the policy benefits of his proposal...
Pro dismisses the effectiveness of abortion bans with "were the case that abortion bans did not work, the fundamental immorality of unjustifiably killing a human being still remains." This doesn't actually challenge what was presented, merely says he wishes to go ahead with the law regardless of the cost/benefits analysis. Using obvious propaganda sites to challenge edu sites only makes this worse.
Pro ends this round with a defense that women who suffer miscarriages wouldn't necessarily be investigated for murder under his proposal, instead planned parenthood would be... This is a critical fault found in the proposal, and I can't make sense the defensive logic here. It's a weak round from him, exemplified by seeming to complain that the opposing case was "complex" and "utilitarian" as if either thing is inherently bad.
Con leverages pro's slavery argument back around, as another form of structural violence, which ought to be prevented.
He moves on to mostly repeat himself; a highlight of this is women already being sent to prison for manslaughter if they have miscarriages in the USA.
R3
Pro ties to move this debate into if the unborn should have rights at all, without adequately defending against the harms and lack of shown benefits to his proposal.
Con closes with mostly more repeats (what looks like some copy/pasting of his previous rounds).
The heart of any debate on abortion, I believe, focuses on what the Unborn is. It is a moral issue that Con brings up with his views on structural violence against the woman and his views on personhood as well as his view that abortion SHOULD be legal.
CON: "This framework precludes all other moral considerations because it necessarily includes all affected parties in any moral calculus, drawing attention to those who would otherwise be excluded as subjectively unimportant, “becom[ing] either invisible, or demeaned… so that we do not have to acknowledge the injustice they suffer. To reduce [the] nefarious effects [of moral exclusion], we must be vigilant in noticing and listening to oppressed, invisible, outsiders."
Wow! "All effected parties?" Does that include the Unborn? No, his supports its death. It has become INVISIBLE to his way of thinking, and he demeans it and ignores the injustice it suffers if he does not recognize the following as true:
Can Con say that the Unborn is NOT a human being? (I do not believe he can reasonably do this, nor has he. What is the consensus from Science?).
Can he say that the Unborn is not a PERSON? (He has admitted he can't).
Can Con say the Unborn is only a blob of tissue? (Not according to science).
Can Con say it is okay to kill human beings without just cause? (Not unless he believes human beings are not intrinsically valuable).
Does Con believe innocent human beings such as the Unborn are worthless? (If he does, and he appears to, he also places little to zero worth on his own life or that of his family. Is he willing to do that? Can anybody just take those lives without reprecussion? Where is the justice there? There is none. Yet he permits it in the case of the Unborn. Where is the justice there?).
Is the Unborn an innocent human being? (What has it done wrong? Nothing. Did it choose its circumstances. No, generally speaking, the woman and man consented to sexual intercourse knowing that it could lead to pregnancy. Does she have a responsibility in engaging in sex? She now thinks not).
Is the woman consenting to kill another innocent human being? (Yes, she is if she agrees to end the life in her womb without just cause).
These are all questions that Con should be held accountable for, and I welcome his response in supporting his position.
I appreciate the extensive thoughts on the topic, but I'm a bit lost on what you're looking to get from all this.
We've discussed this issue privately at great length, and I'm willing to extend that here, but you seem to be bouncing between presenting your own arguments for why certain points require more attention from me and talking about issues that were directly covered in the debate. If you want to talk about this debate as we wrote it, we can do that. If you want to talk about your perspective on the topic and personhood, specifically, we can do that. I'd rather ensure that I'm focused on one than try to cover both simultaneously.
CON: "One, Pro claims that the most common reasons for obtaining an abortion are unjustified (his P3). Pro doesn’t explain why either of these reasons [is] unjustified and provides virtually no distinction between justified and unjustified reasons."
I think Pro does explain why abortion is unjustified, and that is that the Unborn is a human being and most likely a person that Con cannot demonstrate otherwise.
I would have liked to have seen Con refute the four positions developed by Bones in Round 1 regarding the position of uncertainty more fully rather than just denying them their validity by stating that multiple factors drive abortion demand. While it is true, it avoids the Pros' contention that only four drive whether the Unborn is a PERSON or not. Remember Pro's contention: "...there must be absolute certainty that it does not murder a human PERSON."
So, can Con think of other possible scenarios that determine whether it is a person or not? In Con's refutation (3. The Principle of Uncertainty), he does not address but changes the topic. Thus, it is still not discussed whether killing the unborn is killing a human Person or not, the crux of Pro's argument, not the additional factors of harm to the woman while forgetting the irrevocable harm to the Unborn. Before you kill something, surely you should know what it is you are killing. Con can't demonstrate that he does know. He admits not. Per my previous arguments, this is unacceptable unless there is no right and wrong, no such thing as morality. Con believes there is, or he would not argue that a particular position is morally justifiable.
Theoretically, can Con propose another classification as to the Unborn's Personhood? That is what this syllogism is about. Its intent is to show that only one position is justifiable in killing the Unborn, if it is definitely NOT a Person. I would contend further that it being a human being is another consideration. If it is human, and it is, then what justifies killing one human being over another? Since Con does not know what it is, how can he say it is alright to kill it upon the woman's choice unless he believes it is okay to kill some classes of human beings without exception or distinction?
What is the Unborn/fetus?
The fetus is a person and this is known.
The fetus is a person and this is not known.
The fetus is not a person and this is not known.
The fetus is not a person and this is known.
The ramification of abortion in each of these situations are:
You have intentionally killed a human being.
You have unintentionally killed a human being
You have intentionally risked killing a human being.
You have done nothing wrong.
***
I see nothing wrong with this thinking, the point of making such distinctions, as Peter Kreeft and others have so effectively made. If you don't ask what you are killing you are in big trouble.
On it's development, quoting Con:
"Any stage of development, including those that come before fertilization (e.g. the separate gametes), is only distinguished by the “inconsequential differences” Pro claims cannot determine moral agency. If they are inconsequential distinctions from later forms of human development, the same applies to those that came before."
Inconsequential differences? Great justification! I.e., not as human; therefore, kill it if you so desire.
Inconsequential distinctions? I.e., not quite as developed as a human; therefore, kill it if you so choose.
Later forms of human development? Ah, Con recognizes it is a developing human because he states as much, yet he discriminates against its worth because of its development and probably does not realize it. On such thinking, the toddler is not as developed as the adolescent or adult. Does that change what the toddler is? No, so why should it change what the unborn is??? Because of its environment?
Cannot determine moral agency? Why not? If I can't determine that someone is human, does that give me the right to kill a human being? Can we at least agree that the unborn are human if the sperm and egg are from human beings? If not, what is it? My contention is Con, and abortion advocates generally like to use the term "fetus" or "gametes" because it lessens the impact of what the unborn actually is.
Pro can give better and more consistent moral reasons for the personhood of the unborn and its being. Coming from a human male and female, it can't be something other than a human being. For the most part, science seems to agree that a separate, individual human life begins at conception, not at birth. A separate human being begins to grow at conception when the cells divide and grow into this unique person. It is different from the sperm and egg; it is its own being, usually consisting of 23 chromosomes from each parent.
Con uses development as a discriminator against the unborn, as he also uses the unborn's environment to determine its WORTH. "In the womb, up to 15 weeks, it is okay to kill it. Go ahead; it is not AS human as other humans."
My last point:
Con: "By contrast, known harms and benefits have legitimate weight. We know what effects an abortion ban will have."
This sentence of Cons is all one-sided pleading, IMO. What about the HARM done to the unborn, the taking of human life? Has Con considered this? By her consent to kill, the woman is not just killing "a blob of tissue" but a human being. Where does this ever factor into the Pro-choice position? Where? Con lists all the determination and harm regarding the woman but forgets to mention that done to the unborn, the actual destruction of the most vulnerable of human life. How can Pro-choicers be silent on perhaps the most horrific genocide in the history of humanity? Is it because they don't recognize all human life as intrinsically valuable and are willing to expend the life of the most vulnerable who cannot speak for themselves yet? Is their devaluation and dehumanization of human life something that should be so? Careful here, or else what makes killing a human being wrong? Is it because you don't like a particular class of human beings, whether that be the unborn, Jews, Arabs, Caucasians, African Americans, the mentally challenged, gays, a specific colour of people, a certain type of people (men or women, strong or weak), a particular size, or level of development, or dependency, or environment (those in the Artic - Eskimos, or in the Australian Outback - Aborigines, or in wombs - the Unborn).
I find the Pro position far more consistent and morally justifiable on point 1.
So, the beginning of personhood SHOULD influence his case. The reason being is if personhood starts at conception, Con's position is guilty of devaluing the human being by using the law and/or popular opinion as a hammer and claw to destroy a human class of living beings almost indiscriminately (well over 1.5 billion abortions since Roe v. Wade). And the central part of such killing (I argue murder in most situations) is because of socio-economic reasons, not health reasons. Bluntly put, the woman finds having a child at this stage in her life undesirable. So abortion could be considered the greatest, or close to, genocide in human history (of one class of human beings). Now, some States are pushing for abortion up to and including the point of birth and beyond. There is something radically flawed in such thinking. For one, it places all human value in the hands of those who make the laws or at the hands of majority rule or some other unjustifiable system such as tyranny or oppression. Hilter was able to exterminate around 13 million undesirables after dehumanizing them. South Africa was able to discriminate and devalue all classes of people as less than the ruling class. Hinduism can discriminate against people based on the caste system's classification. Kim Jong-Un is able to do so on the grounds of sheer might. He, at the moment, controls the power in North Korea. What about President Xi of China and the Uyghurs? The volume is too great to list all the human atrocities, even the current ones, or on a yearly basis, such as almost 600 riots and over 10,000 demonstrations in the USA in one year (2020) in which many people were killed and cities pillaged and vandalized and a class of people demonized, even dehumanized and discriminated upon, by those who held the House (Republicans or Conservative were demonized and still are by the Democrats as undemocratic and unAmerican just for expressing their concerns and opinions). Ideas and common sense were ignored by name-calling and pointing the finger.
So, this brings up the point of where HUMAN rights come from. Is all human life INTRINSICALLY valuable, or can we treat some classes of humanity as less valuable than others? That is a slippery slope. That is the same type of dehumanization that Hitler and most depots and tyrants use. Are there natural rights, as the framers of the American Constitution and Declaration of Independence believed, given by God, or a human construct that changes and has no fixed standard or point of reference? Morality and the law are relative and subjective if the latter is the case. It does not matter what is done as long as the person (people) doing it have the power to do it. Is that the kind of world we live in? Is it the kind we want? If so, this debate is pointless, as are all "moral" values and distinctions. They are just subjective preferences that one group pushes on another because they can. Now, why are you objecting to a particular position if that is the case? Inconsistent, right? Obviously, it is not "right." There has to be an unchanging standard for something to be "right." You can't just make it up and say, "This is right." If it is just desired by those who control or have the power to control, then it is just preference. Therefore, how can anyone object to something being right or wrong? It just is. Yet Con does try to demonstrate by their argument that something is right and something is wrong. So, if he does not have an ultimate, universal, objective, unchanging standard, I claim he is being inconsistent. Inconsistency suggests something is wrong with his thinking.
That is the position I regard Con coming from in this aspect of the debate on abortion. When he says,
"Pro wants to have it both ways: he acknowledges uncertainty regarding when personhood begins, but claims with absolute certainty that fertilization is the first possible moment of personhood."
Con admits he doesn't know (uncertain - see the first quote of his above), yet he wants to kill something that he does not understand what it is. Does that seem justifiable to anyone? Does it make sense to kill indiscriminately? Pro's point here is that Con should first know what it is, is valid. Can you just go around killing anything that you don't know what it is? And on the point of not knowing, isn't it self-evident, or at least most reasonable, to believe that human beings begin at conception and that what is necessary for their growth and development comes from what they ARE? Is it not self-evident to watch human beings grow to know that their personality develops as they develop?
Hi Whifeflame, Bones.
I just started reading your debate over again. I am going to break it down by rounds. Before I start, I make no apologies for my belief and recognize my bias. I am Pro-Life.
Any debate regarding abortion addresses a moral issue.
1. The question of personhood and how that relates to the dehumanization or discrimination of the unborn.
This question of personhood is fundamental because it addresses the value of being human and what a human being is. Does Con believe some human beings are not persons? It appears so. Thus, he has an obligation to pinpoint when personhood begins. Otherwise, he could be guilty of killing people or consenting to their killing by his ignorance.
In my mind, Pro correctly states, "...all beings who are humans possess personhood." He also contends with a reasonable justification (much of science states as much) that human life begins at conception. Then, he challenges Con to identify when a human becomes a person, reasoning that if they cannot legally and reasonably identify when the human possesses personhood, the decision should favour the unborn. I agree. It should favour the unborn except in cases where the woman's life is in imminent danger, and the unborn cannot be saved without the woman and the unborn dying. Con's point is valid in my mind, only on such matters. There is justification for taking the unborn's life if the woman's life is gravely threatened. Saving one life is better than losing both.
Con states: "My position regarding the beginning of personhood is that of uncertainty - we don’t and can’t know. The beginnings of personhood do not influence my case."
Con has taken his position. He believes we cannot know. My question is, what makes him the judge? Does Science? Is that his final and ultimate authority? Does science know?
This is a moral issue. The beginning of personhood SHOULD influence Con's case.
My belief: It is most reasonable to believe that personhood starts when the being comes into existence. Con has stated his uncertainty. Therefore, the benefit should lie in favour of the unborn beings as persons. Second, Con uses the environmental argument that Pro identifies in round 1. That argument is the environment of the unborn makes a difference to what it is, but alternatively, the environment of a toddler or adult makes no difference to its personhood. Neither does its size, dependency, limitations, or level of development, or else you would have to apply the same standards to all those who are not equal in these areas. That is discrimination at its minimum and dehumanization at its maximum regarding the unborn. To base human values on nothing more than size would mean that only the tallest or shortest human would qualify. All else would be considered inferior and at the discretion of the tallest or shortest, depending on which side of the scale the value judgment is used. The same with dependency. If someone is dependent on someone else, does that mean the dependent one is expendable? Does Con recognize that toddlers and adults, as human beings, are at different stages of development and dependency? Why not the unborn? Dependence, environment, development or dependency are contentions against abortion or pro-choice. Silly that someone would regard the dependency of one human being and discriminate against that of another who also is dependent, based on level, right? The point is both are human beings regardless of the level of dependency.
Thanks
That's easy enough, will do
"He got 5,502 responses; 95% of those self-selected respondents said that life began at fertilization, when a sperm and egg merge to form a single-celled zygote"
It's a fine way to determine the belief of biologists. Please stop playing dumb. I would even guess that most of the biologists who answered are pro choice. How biologists define life is very specific and perhaps different than how the lay man does.
What you are doing here is trying to automatically dismiss good evidence merely because you don't like the conclusions.
Nobody wit an IQ of 80 or above can try to claim that there was not enough study participants
And I ignored that because that is one study - you are ignoring Embryology text books, Princeton Education, and Human Embryology and Teratology.
I hear chit chat, but see an unaccepted debate titled to you?
Hahahahaha, dirty voting saves the so-called pinnacle of voting moderation.
How can flrw still vote? All his votes are bad reasoning.
Who cares, this is the nature of the game.
Didn't you see this comment of mine on page 2 of the COMMENTS?
Bones argument that 96% of biologists believe that life begins at fertilization is not true. This is based on a brief filed in the Supreme Court.
The brief, coordinated by a University of Chicago graduate student in comparative human development, Steven Andrew Jacobs, is based on a problematic piece of research Jacobs conducted. He now seeks to enter it into the public record to influence U.S. law.
First, Jacobs carried out a survey, supposedly representative of all Americans, by seeking potential participants on the Amazon Mechanical Turk crowdsourcing marketplace and accepting all 2,979 respondents who agreed to participate. He found that most of these respondents trust biologists over others – including religious leaders, voters, philosophers and Supreme Court justices – to determine when human life begins.
Then, he sent 62,469 biologists who could be identified from institutional faculty and researcher lists a separate survey, offering several options for when, biologically, human life might begin. He got 5,502 responses; 95% of those self-selected respondents said that life began at fertilization, when a sperm and egg merge to form a single-celled zygote.
That result is not a proper survey method and does not carry any statistical or scientific weight. It is like asking 100 people about their favorite sport, finding out that only the 37 football fans bothered to answer, and declaring that 100% of Americans love football.
In the end, just 70 of those 60,000-plus biologists supported Jacobs’ legal argument enough to sign the amicus brief, which makes a companion argument to the main case. That may well be because there is neither scientific consensus on the matter of when human life actually begins nor agreement that it is a question that biologists can answer using their science.
Assuming that it is possible, I would support having a mod decision on FLRW's vote, particularly if it provides the opportunity for further voting.
I will give an RFd either way. Probably Wednesday or Thursday. I believe. I don't know how much I will get into the RFD, it depends on whether I can write it out while reading it on a word document or if I will be restrained to a pen and a pad.
Do you mind adding 72 hours to the voting period please?
I don't mind, although, if such a feature is possible, I think that, if an agreement can be made, FLRW's vote has got to go. Although, I respect that the voting has concluded and am fine with the vote remaining.
Yeah, this would be a first. I encourage you to ask Mike. Wouldn't be opposed personally, but regardless, I would appreciate your decision and RFD.
I literally cannot.
You can ask Mike, but I don't believe if he has it setup to allow himself to do that.
Personally, I wish we had a timer rule that would extend the countdown if votes occur within 72 hours of closing... Sure, some jerk would troll it, but t he damage of that is less than what happens with trolling under the current system (had I seen it before time ran out, I would have deleted a certain one of those votes with prejudice).
Wylted the madlad
I suspect it is. I think Mike hinted at the possibility before.
Are you sure this is possible?
Open up voting again and let me break the tie. Or get Mike to do it
"Bones argument that 96% of biologists believe that life begins at fertilization is not true. This is based on a brief filed in the Supreme Court."
I actually seen a study on this where there was a questionnaire sent to biologists. The ones who answered admitted it was when life started. Some of the ones who did not answer would occasionally send emails back bitching that the intent of the question was for obvious conservative talking points.
"Bones argument that 96% of biologists believe that life begins at fertilization is not true. This is based on a brief filed in the Supreme Court."
I actually seen a study on this where there was a questionnaire sent to biologists. The ones who answered admitted it was when life started. Some of the ones who did not answer would occasionally send emails back bitching that the intent of the question was for obvious conservative talking points.
"Bones argument that 96% of biologists believe that life begins at fertilization is not true. This is based on a brief filed in the Supreme Court."
“Human life begins at fertilization, the process during which a male gamete or sperm unites with a female gamete or oocyte (ovum) to form a single cell called a zygote. This highly specialized, totipotent cell marked the beginning of each of us as a unique individual.” “A zygote is the beginning of a new human being (i.e., an embryo).”
—Keith L. Moore, The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology, 7th edition. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders, 2003. pp. 16, 2.
“Fertilization is the process by which male and female haploid gametes (sperm and egg) unite to produce a genetically distinct individual.”
—Signorelli et al., Kinases, phosphatases and proteases during sperm capacitation, CELL TISSUE RES. 349(3):765 (Mar. 20, 2012)
“Although life is a continuous process, fertilization (which, incidentally, is not a ‘moment’) is a critical landmark because, under ordinary circumstances, a new, genetically distinct human organism is formed when the chromosomes of the male and female pronuclei blend in the oocyte.”
—Ronan O’Rahilly and Fabiola Mueller, Human Embryology and Teratology, 3rd edition. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2000, p. 8
"Development of the embryo begins at Stage 1 when a sperm fertilizes an oocyte and together they form a zygote."
— Princeton Education
“Development of human beings with fertilisation a process by which the sperm from the male and the egg from the female unite to give rise to a new organism which is the zygote”
—Dr. T.W Sadler
"It is the penetration of the ovum by a spermatozoon and resultant mingling of the nuclear material each brings to the union that constitutes the culmination of the process of fertilization and marks the initiation of the life of a new individual." (1)
-EPM.org
"It is scientifically correct to say that an individual human life begins at conception”
-Dr. Michelle M. Mathews-Rohs, from Harvard Medical School,
“We can accept that the embryo is a living thing in the fact that it has a beating heart, that it has its own genetic system within it. It’s clearly human in the sense that it’s not a gerbil, and we can recognize that it is human life”
-Ann Furedi, Chief executive of British Pregnancy Advisory Centre, the UK’s larger independent abortion provider.
“I think we have deluded ourselves into believing that people don't know that abortion is killing. So any pretence that abortion is not killing is a signal of our ambivalence, a signal that we cannot say yes, it kills a fetus”
-Faye Wattleton, longest reigning President of Planned Parenthood
“This (life beginning at conception) all seems so simple and evident that it is difficult to picture a time when it wasn’t a part of the common knowledge”
-Alan Guttmacher, former President of Planned Parenthood, (1933)
Thanks for the new link. I'll take a look at this later.
Here is a different URL. I am not sure why the previous one would mandate that people sign in, so for anyone else that wants to read the full 3500 words, you can make use of this link as well.
https://justpaste.it/7pvtv
Okay it's not a very important point, especially as I was saying "4th" to imply that you were an early voter.
Again, thanks a bunch for the debate - I truly enjoyed it. Also, not bothered by the result at all, it's the best I could hope for against someone like you.
Why deny when you could just count? 5th out of 10 votes puts me in the front half of voting.
Below
Thank you all very much for your insightful votes. I appreciate the fact that this was quite a long debate and am truly grateful that you took the time to look over it.
Either I'm hallucinating all this isn't true. You were like the 4th person to vote...
Ok I usually do not comment on votes but what the fuck are you doing
Appreciate the vote and analysis, even if I disagree with some of the reasoning that I can view. I can’t actually view the whole thing, though, since it says that I’m required to sign into this paper in particular in order to view it. Any way you could share it without requiring that?
I'm the moderator chiefly responsible for writing the current voting policy.
Sorry, who are you? And why is your education important to me?
I have other debates to work on. My task here is done.
Please read the voting policy before casting more votes. As a voter you need to at least try to separate your bias from your votes.
That you wish pro had argued those shouldn't be considered miscarriages, doesn't make it valid to vote on the basis of arguments he didn't make.
"it clearly does discuss miscarriage"
No. I already explained. I explained 50 times. Wont repeat 50 more times just because you dont get it.
Please strive to include more detail in future votes.
Last minute votes do not yield time to review and take any merited actions against.
> one side lied
Had one side actually lied, sure. But that isn't what happened here. The lie you claim to have spotted is that the source did not actually discuss miscarriages, which anyone else else who has opened the source can see it clearly does discuss miscarriages. That you would draw a different conclusion about the content than either debater (and the source for that matter), doesn't make it a lie that there's different interpretations of it.
An example of a lie would be that said source contained a video of O.J. Simpson killing Nicole, something it most clearly does not contain (and yes, people have done crap like that to cause that line to be in the rules).
> Same with your example of Bible.
If someone is arguing that the bible supports evolution and citing details from Genesis (say God's step by step building of things over time) it would firmly be the job of the other debater to refute that; as opposed to a voter reading the bible and pulling in their own biblical passages to contradict that interpretation when it was unchallenged within the debate. A biblical lie might be the all too common example of people quoting Jesus commanding the murder of homosexuals (which someone /could/ argue Jesus would be in favor or, but they'd cross the line into lying about source content when they make up quotations which are not present within the bible).
For the majority of us who know how to read, we can observe that Bones did not complain about anything.
Bones complained about the last minute nature of my vote but it turns out I was in the earlier half of all voters.
I noticed that myself after i made the comment, there actually is a bug, you're right. I'm unsure why it even let him vote. That being said, his vote was definitely acceptable and if his vote were to be taken down FLRW's ought to be too.
I see one double forfeit and one VOTING in PROGRESS. Rules are 2 finished rated debates with no more than one forfeiture. What's the bug?
Its bugged. He has actually completed two debates.
Regardless, well played. Not upset with a tie.
Well… that was a flurry of votes at the end. I wouldn’t be able to make a call on FLRW’s vote regardless as one of the debaters in this (also traveling for much of the day today), but it looks like it would at least be suspect. Not my call to make. I won’t get a chance to look over either of the last two votes in detail until later.