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- From: briand@anasazi.com (Brian Douglass)
- Newsgroups: alt.rush-limbaugh
- Subject: Re: The Ultimate Hypocrisy
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.223737.23236@anasazi.com>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 22:37:37 GMT
- References: <1gq41jINNniq@matt.ksu.ksu.edu> <BzoCp3.BuC@csugrad.cs.vt.edu>
- Sender: usenet@anasazi.com (Usenet News)
- Organization: Anasazi Inc Phx Az USA
- Lines: 39
-
- In article <BzoCp3.BuC@csugrad.cs.vt.edu> jaitken@csugrad.cs.vt.edu (Jeff Aitken) writes:
- >
- > I promised awhile back to re-enter this discussion when
- >finals were over..... As I mentioned, the abortion debate
- >and the one over euthanasia are similar in many respects.
- >Both involve what some consider "murder" and "live" human
- >beings. I don't remember where I read this (but I could
- >produce a reference, if you really don't believe me - it
- >will take an hour or two at the library) The discussion
- >in this particular book centers on what we mean by "alive".
- >I don't have exact quotes, so the following is (at best) paraphrasing
- >from the book:
- > ... really taking the life of someone? ... They are
- >not 'alive' in the true sense of the word. What do we mean by
- >'alive'? Some consider the mere presence of a heartbeat
- >to signify true life. Some consider meaningless chemical activities
- >that take place in the brain as a sign of life. But is something
- >that has a heartbeat and chemical activity necessarily "alive"?
- >No, being alive means more than that. It means being able to
- >think, to laugh, to relate in some way or another to the world
- >around.
- >
- > This is the general idea I use as a definition of "life"
- >When does a group of cells become a "locus of rights"? In my book
- >it happens when it pops out into the world of its own accord.
-
- How about this one. A life exists when the organism is self-sustaining.
- That is when there exists viabile possibility that the organism can sustain
- life outside it's biological womb.
-
- This is the general definition of a life that the Supreme Court decided on
- in Roe v Wade, which negated the argument of both those that sought
- abortion up until birth, and those that declared life began at conception.
-
- And since its estimated that 30% of all pregnancies end in a miscarriage
- during the first trimester, the enevitablity of life after conception is
- not guaranteed. While medical science can now give fetuses of only 23
- weeks of development a chance outside the womb, the chance of life before full
- term development is also possible.
-