Is abortion murder from the point of conception?
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 1 vote and with 3 points ahead, the winner is...
- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Rated
- Number of rounds
- 5
- Time for argument
- Two days
- Max argument characters
- 4,000
- Voting period
- One month
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
- Minimal rating
- 1,500
This debate will cover all stages of pregnancy but will not cover cases of rape, the removal of ectopic pregnancies, or abortions performed to save the life of the mother. It will also not cover legality. Murder will be defined here in the moral sense. The burden of proof is shared.
Human development begins after the union of male and female gametes or germ cells during a process known as fertilization (conception). Fertilization is a sequence of events that begins with the contact of a sperm (spermatozoon) with a secondary oocyte (ovum) and ends with the fusion of their pronuclei (the haploid nuclei of the sperm and ovum) and the mingling of their chromosomes to form a new cell. This fertilized ovum, known as a zygote, is a large diploid cell that is the beginning, or primordium, of a human being.
The development of a human being begins with fertilization, a process by which two highly specialized cells, the spermatozoon from the male and the oocyte from the female, unite to give rise to a new organism, the zygote.
The more common late-term abortion methods are the classic D&E and induction. [Induction] usually involves injecting digoxin or another substance into the fetal heart to kill it, then dilating the cervix and inducing labor...Classic D&E is accomplished by dismembering the fetus inside the uterus with instruments and removing the pieces through an adequately dilated cervix.
- How does the moral version differ from the legal version?
- Are we extending the moral version to include stepping on an ant-hill as an act of genocide?
- They behave like cells, not like organisms.
Here is where I agree with Pro, that conception is the beginning of life. But it’s not life in the conventional sense. The fetus at this point has more in common with a cell than a fully grown human being or even a newborn. It hasn’t advanced to the point that we can refer to it as a ‘person.’
Sentience doesn’t start until the 18th week of the pregnancy and the abortion time-limit has expired by this point, meaning doctors won’t perform the procedure.
But consciousness is not a good indicator either because grown adults in comas aren't conscious, and killing them is still murder
- If the coma patient demonstrates a possibility for recovery, then terminating their life could be seen as murder. Because the patient was sentient before their unresponsive state and had intended to live for longer, and did not give pre-consent to having their life ended. It’s also likely they weren’t put into a coma voluntarily and after waking up, they will still want to live on.
- If the head trauma for a coma patient makes the damage irreparable and the life beyond saving, then euthanizing them makes no difference anyway.
- Preconscious- Occurring before the existence of a consciousness.
- Unconscious- The part of the mind which is inaccessible to the conscious mind but which affects behavior and emotions. Or not conscious.
- Conscious- Aware of and responding to one's surroundings; awake.
The description also requires that we define murder in the moral sense, so my opponent doesn't have much ground to stand on here.
- Demonstrated that Pro's definition of human is too loose to be of any real meaning and proven that defining murder by morality is too subjective, when morality is too inconsistent to be reliable.
- Demonstrated that fetuses do not have a conscience or sentience.
Reading into R2, and so far it seems to be a copy/paste of another debate...
So definitions: While I find con's to be preferable for seeming like a real definition, for the sake of this debate I am ignoring the explicit legality part (which I am pretty sure their case did not depend on anyways). Very strangely pro gets hung up obsessing over legality...
Con clarifies he is arguing in defense of early abortions, not late abortions. He leverages that an embryo is clearly different from a full grown person, and from a newborn person. That pro is clearly arguing from the point of conception forward, means this is well fitting for this debate (in essence, con concedes abortions from 18 weeks onward). Pro counters with an appeal to ignorance that he doesn't understand that there's any difference.
I do not buy that skin cells are the same as an embryo; however, were we to harm the skin cells of any other organism it would seem to be murder as pro is defining it. They both fell into a habit of repeating themselves on this one. Similar to this, pro says con is wrong and that killing a brainless husk would be full on murder, without expanding upon why. It's basically an appeal to if you wholly agree with them going in, you should continue to, rather than giving reasons to change any minds and offer a convincing argument.
Ok, this gets better near the end with a discussion of consciousness, un-consciousness, and pre-consciousness. Con uses this to pull things back to unintelligent collections of cells (such as skin) not having the morality of murder assigned to their death; he expands with a morality which would make killing a person who is presently unconscious murder whereas scratching skin would not be.
In the end I've got to agree with con, particularly with pro's complete inflexability. When you want to call something literally murder, it's not much to expect to be able to show some level of ill intent. I'm left with an impression that slapping someone else would be murder in pro's world; along with apparently it being ok to kill coma patients who will recover (he got really weird towards to end); that against a consistent morality that we caught to not kill people.
You clearly enjoy hearing yourself talk, so I'm not sure why typing 3500 characters is so hard for you.
Those are great excuses to know in case I ever start losing.
Start your own debate if you want to make the rules
No, I won't delete that one. I just don't think Sir.Lancelot is going to spend more time on it, and I tend to debate the same issues multiple times. I didn't include the rules here because I won't need them to win, they just make things more convenient.
do you want that debate deleted? if not then you could potentially win if voters agree with your character limit
Hoping this one doesn't start a flame war in the comments section