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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!destroyer!ncar!noao!amethyst!organpipe.uug.arizona.edu!news
- From: sfm@manduca.neurobio.arizona.edu (Stephen Matheson)
- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Subject: Re: Spoken Like a True ProLifer
- Message-ID: <1993Jan9.022125.546@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu>
- Date: 9 Jan 93 02:21:25 GMT
- References: <C0KAA4.8w@ra.nrl.navy.mil>
- Sender: news@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: University of Arizona UNIX Users Group
- Lines: 73
-
- From article <C0KAA4.8w@ra.nrl.navy.mil>, by lebow@psl.nrl.navy.mil:
- > In article <1993Jan6.211627.15421@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu> clavazzi@nyx.cs.du.edu
- > (The_Doge) writes:
- >>In article <1993Jan6.182436.1040@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu>
- > sfm@manduca.neurobio.arizona.edu (Stephen Matheson) writes:
- >>>From article <1993Jan6.160656.4107@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>,
- >>>by mcochran@nyx.cs.du.edu (Mark A. Cochran):
- >>>> In article <C0FF9F.En8@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- >>>> vengeanc@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu () writes:
- >>>>>mcochran@nyx.cs.du.edu (Mark A. Cochran) writes:
- >>>>>
- >>>>>>In article <C0CBty.n1y@news.cso.uiuc.edu> vengeanc@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu ()
- >>>>>> writes:
- >>>>>
- >>>>>>>I freely admit that a preborn baby human being is not LEGALLY defined
- >>>>>>>as a "person". The moral and scientific evidence that it SHOULD be
- >>>>>>>defined as such has been beat to death already.
- >>>>>>>
- >>>>>>When? All I've ever seen is medical and scientific evidence that it is
- >>>>>>*not* a person.
- >>>
- >>>You have?!? Don't you mean that you've seen medical and scientific
- >>>evidence that it *may not* be able to *do* certain things (like, e.g.,
- >>>think or possess myelin)? Mark, personhood can be defined in various
- >>>ways by various people, depending not upon "medical and scientific
- >>>evidence" but upon the philosophies of the people making the definitions.
- >>>The most disturbing posts (to me) on t.a are the ones that cite
- >>>"medical and scientific evidence" that is neither medical nor
- >>>scientific, to support a definition of personhood based on purely
- >>>philosophical assumptions.
- >> Bingo! Give that man a cigar. You can't empirically answer the
- >>question "when does human life begin" without first developing an operational
- >>definition of the term "human life" that does *not* include assumptions about
- >>when it begins. That's why (to amplify Mr. Matheson's excellent point)
- >>arguments of the form "science shows that human life begins <insert time
- >>period here>" are a load of Dingo's kidneys by definition. Science can't
- >>answer the question because science can't provide a definition of the term
- >>"human life". The definition is based in belief/values/morals systems which
- >>are usually not subject to empirical examination.
-
- > Just because beliefs/morals/values are often used to define or
- > explain natural phenomena does not mean science has no place in
- > defining that phenomenon.
-
- Pardon? Paul, I don't see how "personhood" can be reasonably
- categorized as a "phenomenon", any more than "liberty", "integrity",
- or even "stupidity" can be considered phenomena. Science can
- certainly add parameters to our definition of personhood, but my
- point is that science itself does not define personhood.
-
- >> This is the core of the pro-choice/pro-life dispute. Persons
- >>of good will can and do have different values systems, from which
- >>it follows that they can and do differ on the moral issues
- >>surrounding abortion.
-
- > Maybe I'm a fluke case in your book, but my moral view against
- > abortion came after my scientific definition of life was formed,
- > not before.
-
- I assume you mean "definition of personhood" when you say "scientific
- definition of life". Unless you mean to suggest that life is a
- sufficient criterion for personhood. In any case, I'm sure that
- at least some (though certainly not all) folks formulate their
- opinions on abortion with their definition of personhood in mind.
- But again, I maintain that science does not define personhood
- (or even life). We first define it, then science tells us when it
- is and isn't present. Or as Mark Cochran put it, we just know it
- when we see it (but we still can't agree on what we see).
-
- --
-
- Steve Matheson Program in Neuroscience University of Arizona
- sfm@neurobio.arizona.edu
-