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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Subject: RE: Why the 5 week sentience point?
- Message-ID: <1992Sep9.151805.2242@brandonu.ca>
- From: mcbeanb@brandonu.ca
- Date: 9 Sep 92 15:18:05 CST
- References: <brandonu.ca mcbeanb.mail.abortion:12>
- Organization: Brandon University, Brandon, Manitoba, Canada
- Lines: 33
-
- Again posted by Peter's request:
-
- In article <brandonu.ca mcbeanb.mail.abortion:12>, nyikos@milo.math.scarolina.edu (Peter Nyikos) writes:
- >>
- >> I forgot to ask why you choose the onset of sentience as
- >> the cutoff point.
- >
- > Well, to use the colorful words I picked up from one of the networkers
- > (Elizabeth Bartley, I think) that's when you can say that "somebody's
- > home."
- >
- >> Plants are sentient, so are animals...
- >
- > The first is sheer speculation. Which part of the plant is the seat
- > of sentience? With humans, you will hear it asserted that sentience
- > is only associated with the neocortex, which is lacking in most
- > animals.
- >
- > Plants often reproduce by budding, and you can graft parts of plants
- > to other plants. Do the grafts possess sentience? (Or, if sentience
- > means something different to you than to me, let me put it this way:
- > is there "anybody home" in the grafts?)
- >
- >> How does sentience set a 5 week old fetus apart from a 4 week?
- >
- > I was safe-siding with my 5 week figure. Somewhere in the 6th week,
- > simple reflexes can be elicited. Whether that is enough for sentience
- > is a deep and abiding mystery, but again, I am giving the embryo the
- > benefit of the doubt.
- >
- >> Brian
- >
- > Peter
-