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).
Ossa does not meet the minimum qualifications for voting.
Yep. I think FLWR's vote probably should have been removed, even though I voted the same as them.
Novice coming in clutch.
FLRW's vote clearly does not meet the voting standards. Unfortunately, not a single moderator is online as of now, surprising absolutely no one. Additionally consider that this person is a troll and has done this many times in the past.
What new argument did he make in round 3? he had already argued that in the same sense there is structural violence against women in his system, there is structural violence against fetus's in whiteflames within round 2. Although this isnt the first time that rule has shot him in the foot, ive seen it happen more than once which is why i advocate for him to get rid of it.
My Conduct vote was based on Bones violation of Rule 2 . No new arguments are to be made in the final round.
Did you read my vote?
Rule 7. A breach of the rules should result in a conduct point deduction for the offender.
Is this vote really going to slide? im skeptical if its not an outright malicious vote to make bones lose, considering its within the last hour. Look at ittttt. How can we let a vote like that ruin such a good debate?
What kind of vote is that? you didnt even go over anything they said and simply made it look like the only thing bones said was an appeal to authority. Better conduct as well?
"Again imagine you're in a biblical debate (of course citing the bible for some point) and a voter does their own research"
Voting policy clearly says voters have full right to deny the relevance of the source should they find that one side lied about what was in their source.
Same with your example of Bible. If you claim how Bible says that humans were once fish and to support this you randomly post link to Bibles Genesis 1 claiming it contains evidence for your claim, I as a voter will 1) look at your link, 2) establish that you obviously lied, 3) reject the relevance of your link to your claim. All according to the voting policy.
Very well done vote, and cool style.
> Laws, after all, have proven to exist morally with no practical purpose e.g. Jaywalking. (I’m not introducing my own argument, but giving an example about why on balance means the default assumption should not lean towards practical effects being prioritised.
There is little to no danger of that being mistaken for your own argument. Pretty much there'd need to be other warning signs of overwhelmingly biased voting, for an analogy to be looked at with suspicion.
> Are you saying sources arent part of the debate?
Per the voting policy, parts of the source not brought up in a debate are not part of the debate.
Again imagine you're in a biblical debate (of course citing the bible for some point) and a voter does their own research on the bible and votes against you based on quotes they found elsewhere in the bible which your opponent did not even allude to. Do you honestly believe that would be optimum fair grading of the debate?
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.
Thank you both for voting! Seems both of you took a different route to your weighing analyses and while I have some issues with them, the analyses are nonetheless well done and appreciated.
"If an argument wasn't made by a debater "
Argument was made by a source presented by a debater.
Are you saying sources arent part of the debate?
If you say they are only part of the debate when mentioned by debaters: Con mentioned that his source contains evidence. If Cons source obviously doesnt contain evidence, I as a voter will treat Cons claim as unsupported.
If there is no evidence in the source, if the source merely repeats the claim, if the source contradicts the claim, then the relevance of the source drops.
This isnt about adding arguments. This is about accepting Cons source as relevant evidence for his claim.
Judgement was made based upon what Con said and the evidence his source presented.
1) Again, you are making the argument that Con should be rewarded for not providing any evidence for his claim.
2) You are making the argument that the obvious lack of evidence for the claim is the evidence for the claim.
3) You are saying I should ignore evidence in Cons source that contradicts Cons claim and instead accept the repetition of a claim as evidence for the claim.
Please tell me, which part of voting policy says that repetition of the claim(circular reasoning) is a relevant evidence for that claim?
You are saying I have no right to question relevance of such claim. Since you probably read the voting policy, you probably read this:
"The one exception where it is acceptable to do this would be a situation in which the voter notices one side blatantly lying about what is present in their source (even if that criticism wasn’t brought up by the opponent)."
This is directly related to what you copied to your argument from the voting policy. Apparently, the voting policy allows me to judge Cons claim of presence of evidence in the source, when there isnt such evidence but actually contradictory evidence present in the source.
There isnt even an implied warrant present in Cons case. Source negates his claim at the very start.
We need your vote, good sir!
Good analysis.
While for me policy proposals should be routed in weighable benefits, I understand the perspective of the moral imperative issue.
I can't seem to get it through you to, but in the most simple terms: The voter's role is to grade the debate as presented by the debaters, not to be a debater themselves. If an argument wasn't made by a debater which they should have made, it's fine to note that; but it is not fine to grade arguments for or against them for things which did not occur in the debate.
> If the source is irrelevant, I cannot treat it as relevant.
Pro did not make the argument that miscarriages are outside the scope; rather he asserted that banning abortion might in some unspecified way cease sending women who suffer miscarriages to prison. Which further seems to accept cons interpretation of the source as factual.
> If Con provides a source that negates his own claim, I will not accept that source as anything else but exactly that.
As I explained to you at the start, the voting policy literally explains that such flaws must be pointed to in the debate if they are to be graded:
"A side with unreliable sources may be penalized, but the voter must specify why the sources were unreliable enough to diminish their own case (such as if the other side called attention to the flaws, thereby engaging with sources in a more effective manner with impacts to arguments; thereby flipping the source and harming the opposing argument).
...
Further, overly studying a source beyond what was presented, risks basing a vote upon the outside content of your own analysis instead of that offered by the debaters. If neither debater even alluded to details from a source a voter mentions, the vote has probably crossed this line."
https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy#sources
When asked where pro caught any flaw in the source, you made wholly new arguments instead of citing the debate. That you can't tell the difference between your opinions and pro's actual case, is highly troubling.
> Again, I did not add the arguments.
Then reread the debate and let me know in which round pro brought up the evidence from the medical examiner to flip the source.
> I already explained this 50 times. Weighting sources and claims is not me adding arguments of my own.
Except when you add your own arguments about them not based on the arguments presented in the debate. The voting policy literally warns on sourcing against basing "a vote upon the outside content of your own analysis instead of that offered by the debaters."
Imagine you're in a biblical debate (of course citing the bible for some point) and a voter does their own research on the bible and votes against you based on quotes they found elsewhere in the bible which your opponent did not even allude to. Do you honestly believe that would be optimum fair grading of the debate?
If the source is irrelevant, I cannot treat it as relevant. That would be a contradiction and a nonsense.
"Sources is how the debaters (not the voter) utilized and analyzed them."
If Con provides a source that negates his own claim, I will not accept that source as anything else but exactly that.
Do you say I should accept the source as it said the opposite of what it said?
That is what you are saying.
Again, I did not add the arguments. Instead I used facts Con provided in his own source to make a judgement.
I already explained this 50 times. Weighting sources and claims is not me adding arguments of my own.
Will you post those same arguments tommorow too? You have been posting same refuted arguments for 3 days now.
> Refuting arguments in debates? No, that is oromagis area.
What does that have to do with the price of tea in China?
...
> I didnt add arguments of my own.
You writing your own arguments about how you wish pro had argued the debate, does not make them eligible for weighing within your vote. This is outlined clearly and repeatedly in the voting policy. Sources is how the debaters (not the voter) utilized and analyzed them. Had pro done any challenge to the notation that the women who were sent to prison for miscarriages were actually sent to prison for other stuff, you'd have a leg to stand on; as is, you're blatantly disregarding pro's analysis and substituting your own.
As should be clear, I'm not even removing your vote (as much as such would be well warranted). I am advising you of an issue to avoid recurrent problems when you cast future votes.
> Yes appeals to emotion are a logical fallacy, but as somebody who argued devil's advocate, I can tell you that several times I have been beaten by appeals to emotion because judges can't see through them.
Appealing to emotions need not be done fallaciously. But yes, they are usually more effective when dumbing everything down to appeal to the lowest common denominator.
When I argue this topic, I use government enforced slavery as a point. That it mentions slavery is instantly pathos, I add ethos when I justify the connection (forcing someone's labors for 9 months against their will; and if arguing against a full abortion ban, occasionally with the end goal of killing the person for the sake of the ectopic pregnancy or the like). Of course, I've since seen forced-birth people declare that somehow the fetus is really the slave, because it's forced to work so long and hard or something (it's still pathos, but manages to be anti-logos if such a thing is possible).
Nice. Glad I can still make history
Dude has a huge dick and likes cocaine and whores. He seems cool
also, this was the 40,000th comment in debates
Only you can turn complimenting a man on his dick, and turn it into something gay.
"Dude has a huge dick!"
Wylted's prime observation but elsewhere he has the nerve to argue that gay is curable.
Because of the way my phone renders some of the debate, it would make it difficult for me to judge fairly and I don't have access to a computer often at the moment.
It looks like you made a couple of mistakes. I would say you seem to have formulated the debate to be about an outright ban, which is tough to defend. No pro life people usually advocate for that.
You seem to also be letting con get away with advocating for pragmatism . Something liberals will often lean on when looking at abstract concepts like abortion, you can probably look at how they debate against capital punishment for some clues on how to handle that.
I think you could have also pushed for considering an unborn fetus a human being . Con would talk about dangers to the mother of the unborn child, but failed to explain why the mother's health should supercede the innocent child's. I think you could have made some very strong appeals to emotion.
Yes appeals to emotion are a logical fallacy, but as somebody who argued devil's advocate, I can tell you that several times I have been beaten by appeals to emotion because judges can't see through them.
I do think whiteflame made several mistakes as well, but you PMed me to see if I wanted to vote, so I thought I would give you some of my opinions. I don't feel like I should vote at the moment and I don't know which way I would vote, if I did have the ability to go carefully through this at the moment.
I actually saw the images on Hunter's laptop. Dude has a huge dick and likes cocaine and whores. He seems cool, too bad he has a piece of shit dad
The first 1v2 in Dart history.
I wouldn't characterize that as an argument so much as an attempt to illustrate the gap you failed to close between unjust killing and good public policy. If that wasn't clear I'll apologize for being way past bedtime when I wrote it. That gap and the way you spent one third of the debate countering that personhood straw man were the two big problems I had with your argument.
When are we going to do Hunter Biden's laptop?
"you personally dislike con's argument so wrote refutations"
I didnt write refutations. I used what was provided in Cons source to make a judgment.
Judgment was based upon using only those facts provided by the Cons source. I didnt add arguments of my own. Merely weighted the existing ones.
Refuting arguments in debates? No, that is oromagis area.
"convicted of manslaughter after having a miscarriage"
This is a contradiction. I already explained this.
"The page goes on explicitly state "miscarriage" like a dozen times."
Sorry, do you know what evidence is? Repeating something a dozen times is not evidence. Otherwise, I would just repeat every claim a dozen times and prove you wrong
The source itself later said:
"Convicted for manslaughter"
"Used illegal drugs"
"Drugs found in unborn sons brain and liver"
This is obviously not miscarriage. Manslaughter means she holds liability to what happened. Miscarriage means holding no liability.
Your denial that the source has anything to do with miscarriages, is proven false literally within the first sentence of the article: "convicted of manslaughter after having a miscarriage" The page goes on explicitly state "miscarriage" like a dozen times.
Your evidence of pro refuting it is that you personally dislike con's argument so wrote refutations pro did not make. Those may have been great refutations but as they were not made in the debate, con could not defend them, so it is entirely unfair to grade the debate based upon how you would have argued pro's case instead of how pro did. And quite frankly, it's demeaning to pro to imply he's so weak to need you to make the case for him instead of grading what he wrote.
Maybe you want me to accept source as valid evidence without even clicking on it? Is that what you usually do?
"Pro did not mention anything from the medical examiner"
"nor did Con"
Medical examiner was presented in Cons source. Do I have to say it 100 times?
Con mentioned that his source contains evidence of punishment for miscarriages.
I clicked on the source.
Right at the start of a source, it says "manslaughter". Hence, not miscarriage.
Notice that when you post a source and you are claiming it contains a fact which it doesnt, you are contradicting yourself and using irrelevant source.
I as a voter have every right to dismiss such irrelevant source.
>Are you saying Con didnt present a source that contains facts? Are you saying Con never alluded to the facts from the source?
Pro did not mention anything from the medical examiner to change the nature of the miscarriage as presented in this debate, nor did con. Yet when asked for a quote from pro you went cherry picking things he didn't write nor do anything to imply.
If you dislike the unchallenged interpretation of the source so much, you should challenge con to the debate on it; rather than base your vote on your opinions of the topic irrelevant to what occurred inside this debate.
You are just repeating the same points I refuted yesterday.
Like, what did you think would happen if you spam same refuted points over and over?
I already responded to those exact arguments multiple times.
"Not presented or alluded"
Are you saying Con didnt present a source that contains facts? Are you saying Con never alluded to the facts from the source?
About the miscarriage:
You didnt make any argument here. Apparently, you didnt bother to read my argument about the difference between manslaughter and miscarriage. By definition, these two are mutually exclusive. This means miscarriage can never be manslaughter.
Also, you are mentioning how I added something not presented by anyone, something that was more than just judgment?
Are you actually claiming Con didnt present his source nor alluded to it?
Poor bones is going to wake up in tears when he sees how the scales have tipped.
never mind, i just noticed you just did.
Will you be voting?
You casted a vote obviously based on your confirmation bias, with massive cherry-picking of facts neither presented nor alluded to by either side in the debate.
You're so far off the deep end in this, that you're insisting a source about women being thrown in prison for having miscarriages, is unrelated to women being thrown in prison for miscarriages. And you try to defend this because pro argued so long as women didn't understand what they are doing, they won't be thrown to prison...
I went to a Catholic university. I know the bible better than the vast majority of Christians. Yet when I read a biblical debate, I don't just vote for whichever side I prefer and add my own biblical quotes to justify it. If you don't see why that would be problematic, you should not be grading debates.
Well, then we disagree.
I disagree.
"This isn’t about adding judgement. It’s about inserting points that weren’t made by the debaters into the debate."
If judgment itself is not the inserted point, then my judgment of your source was not an inserted point in any way. It was judgement.
Thanks for voting!
This isn’t about adding judgement. It’s about inserting points that weren’t made by the debaters into the debate.
After the voting period ends, I can explain to you how this source supports my point if you’re still interested. Until then, I’ll leave off this discussion.
"You’re effectively punishing me for something you did that my opponent neglected to do. "
I could turn this and say that you are being punished for something that you neglected to do when making claims. That something is providing the actual evidence.
Also, every vote is adding its own judgment to the debate. Merely attributing points does that. So if judgment is the same as intervening, then every vote does that. If judgment is not intervening, then I cant be accussed of intervening. All I did was judge based on what was presented.
I didnt need to"dig into a source" to find a contradiction. I simply clicked on it. Right at the start it contradicted the very point you made.
Also, source must contain evidence. If your source doesnt contain evidence right at the start, I have to read more of it to make sure there is evidence in it.
Should I just read the beginning? Beginning contradicts to the point you made.
Should I not click on the source at all? Then I cant know it actually has evidence or not.
So what am I supposed to do? Not read sources? Read just the beginning? Ignore the fact that source doesnt support the claim?
I didn't know how (or if) I would vote, but I did try to be fair to both sides and I do hope there's nothing I missed.
Thats actually just if rules of the debate say so.
What if the debate only has 1 round? Even if thats not the case, what if Con posts 10000 pictures of cats in round 1, demanding rebuttal for every single one picture specifically, then posts another 10000 in round 2, then another 10000 in round 3? Pro cant say they are all irrelevant unless he looked at each one, described what it contained, and provided rebuttal.
Notice the possible trap here. Con can post 10000 cat pictures, and among them having one thats actually not a cat picture but has the evidence.
So Pro says: Those are just cat pictures.
Then in the round before the last, Con says: I provided evidence. Not all are cat pictures. You didnt refute. Its in the picture number 6875. Dropped.
If we have to ignore the rebuttals in the last round, Pro cant respond with rebuttal to the picture number 6875.
So it follows that Pro would be in a very difficult position.
But then again, why would life be fair.
I didn't read ORo's vote or the debate but I believe you. I am the only one on this site who can be completely unbiased so I will try to break this tie
"So for that debate, my vote would be like: "Since Con supported his claim with 10000 cat pictures in the last round, and since Pro couldnt respond to that as it was the last round, Con wins the sources and the debate."
You would actually ignore anything in the last round that is a new argument fact or rebuttal and just look at the impact analysis each side is offering ideally
There’s a lot in there about the specific source and I’m not going to cover that. This also isn’t about your rights as a voter, though you keep bringing it back to that.
I’m arguing that you are intervening in the debate by doing that kind of digging into the source, and that if my opponent had done the same, I would have addressed it. You’re effectively punishing me for something you did that my opponent neglected to do. You can argue that it’s justified because the issue is obvious, but you can’t argue that you’re putting the onus on me to preemptively defend against potential issues with my sources, functionally saying that in any debate the opponent shouldn’t have to do any work addressing sources so long as the voter is willing do so in their stead. Is there a point at which a debater might abuse their sourcing to make it impossible for their opponent to adequately respond? Sure. Did that happen here? No. You’re clearly fine with that, and I’ll stop here because you’ve made that clear, though saying that that is just weighting the arguments is disingenuous. It doesn’t help that this isn’t just a weighting difference, this is an outright dismissal of the point in total.
As a voter, I do have a right to weight the arguments and relevance of sources based on what was presented in them.
How do I weight the arguments? Most importantly, by seeing whether there is a contradiction within them, or to the position they are supposed to support. Then I am weighting that to the other debaters arguments, seeing which one supports the positions in question and which one is negated by some other argument.
Sources are supposed to be the evidence for the argument. If source itself doesnt provide supporting evidence, but merely repeats the claim or contradicts it, then it is the same as if there was no source provided.
You claimed that your source contained the evidence of punishing women for miscarriages. However, when I clicked on the source, it literally said 1)"convicted for manslaughter", 2)"used illegal drugs during pregnancy", 3)"drug found in her unborn sons brain and liver".
Manslaughter and miscarriage are mutually exclusive terms, hence contradicting each other. As there was no evidence of miscarriage, I had to place in question the relevance of the evidence.
Notice that you did not, anywhere in the debate, explain how miscarriage is manslaughter.
Pros source, Mens rea, literally negates the claim that it is possible to be legally prosecuted for miscarriage.