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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!opusc!usceast!nyikos
- From: nyikos@math.scarolina.edu (Peter Nyikos)
- Subject: Re: Pro-choicers must condone infanticide
- Message-ID: <nyikos.724977400@milo.math.scarolina.edu>
- Sender: usenet@usceast.cs.scarolina.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: USC Department of Computer Science
- References: <1992Dec15.025342.12892@ncsu.edu> <BzF13M.9Cx@mentor.cc.purdue.edu>
- Date: 21 Dec 92 22:36:40 GMT
- Lines: 196
-
- In <BzF13M.9Cx@mentor.cc.purdue.edu> smithmc@mentor.cc.purdue.edu (Lost Boy) writes:
-
- >In article <1992Dec15.025342.12892@ncsu.edu> dsholtsi@csl36h.csl.ncsu.edu (Doug Holtsinger) writes:
- >>
- >>Pro-choicers will often argue that even if the child is
- >>considered to be a person, the woman should still have the
- >>right to separate herself from the child, and that this
- >>right stems from the so-called "right to bodily autonomy",
- >>or the "right to bodily privacy".
-
- >True. However, most pro-choicers will argue that a fetus can't be considered
- >a person after only 6-9 weeks of gestation, when most abortions take place.
- >There are many arguments for this, most of them having to do with a lack of
- >higher-level brain activity. Most feti won't start dreaming until 20 weeks
- >after this period!!! I myself do not agree that a fetus should be abortable
- >after REM sleep begins (ie in the third trimester), but I have seen pro-choicers
- >do this.
-
- REM have been recorded at 17 weeks. Source: S. Levi, Brugman University
- of Brussels, _American Medical Association News_, Feb. 1, 1983.
-
- >>This right of separation does not lead to an unrestricted
- >>right to abortion, since most abortion procedures directly
- >>violate the child's "right to bodily autonomy".
-
- >True. Again, however, this right is not there until the fetus has gained
- >personhood, which from all the evidence I can gather isn't until the third
- >trimester!
-
- You've been looking at the wrong evidence.
-
- From my recent attempted post [has anyone seen it on their boards?]
- "Neuroscientist(s) versus the World-Enigma, Part 2":
-
- During the sixth week: reflex responses can be elicited.
- -- James Blake Thomas, _Introduction to Human Embryology_, Lea & Febiger,
- Philadelphia, 1968, pp. 174-176.
-
- At "40-odd days": Brain waves can be detected and recorded.
- - H. Hamlin, "Life or Death by EEG,"
- JAMA, Oct. 12, 1964, p. 113.
-
- At 6-8 weeks: the embryo moves actively in the amniotic fluid. Here is
- a remarkable testimony by P. E. Rockwell, M.D., Director of
- Anesthesiology, Leonard Hospital, Troy, NY, in the U. S. Supreme Court case
- Markle v. Abele, 72-56, 72-730, p. 11, 1972:
- Eleven years ago, while giving an anesthetic for a ruptured
- tubal pregnancy (at two months), I was handed what I believed to
- be the smallest human being ever seen. The embryo sac was intact
- and transparent. Within the sac was a tiny (one-third inch)
- human male swimming extremely vigorously in the amniotic fluid,
- while attached to the wall by the umbilical cord. This tiny
- human was perfectly developed with long, tapering fingers, feet,
- and toes. It was almost transparent as regards the skin, and the
- delicate arteries and veins were prominent to the ends of the
- fingers.
- "The baby was extremely alive and swam about the sac
- approximately one time per second with a natural swimmer's
- stroke. This tiny human did not look at all like the photos and
- drawings of 'embryos' which I have seen, nor did it look like the
- few embryos I have been able to observe since then, obviously
- because this one was alive.
- "When the sac was opened, the tiny human immediately lost its
- life and took on the appearance of an embryo at this stage (blunt
- extremities, etc.)."
-
-
- The end of the eighth week marks the point where embryologists switch
- over from calling it an embryo to calling it a fetus. At this time all the
- organs and bodily systems are in place, including the central nervous
- system. The fetus looks more like one of the aliens in the film _Close
- Encounters of the Third Kind_ than the human beings we see every day, but it
- could not be mistaken for the fetus of any animal except an ape. It is
- about 3 centimeters long and weighs two to three grams; but the small size may
- be deceptive: a newborn red kangaroo, when it crawls unaided into the pouch of
- its adult-human-sized mother, weighs only about three-fourths of a gram and
- is, on the whole, no more highly developed--nor is it any more motile,
- judging from Dr. Rockwell's testimony above.
- [For the information on kangaroos in the preceding paragraph, see
- Hugh Tyndale-Biscoe, Life of Marsupials, American Elsevier, 1973, pp.
- 56-57]
-
- In the ninth week, the fetus "will bend his fingers round an object in the
- palm of his hand." - Valman and Pearson, British Med. J.,
- Jan. 26, 1980.
-
- In the eleventh week, the face and all parts of the upper and lower
- extremities are sensitive to touch.
- - Reinis & Goldman, The Development
- of the Brain, Thomas Publishers,
- 1980, p. 232.
-
- By the end of the 13th week, the entire body surface except for the back and
- the top of the head, are sensitive to touch. [ibid.]
-
-
-
- >>But since both parties are assumed to be "persons", with
- >>presumably an equal right to bodily autonomy,
-
- >Again, this is not the case. See above.
-
- Would you agree this to be the case after viability?
-
- >This is a very difficult argument to make; I doubt many ProChoicers would
- >choose to make it. Most of them have gone the easier, MORE REASONABLE route
- >of saying that a fetus is not really a person until some point during pregnancy
- >or until the time of birth. Most Choicers say a fetus is not a person until
- >birth. I myself say a fetus is not a person until the third trimester. Most
- >AntiChoicers say a fetus is a person at the time of conception. This is where
- >we disagree, fundamentally.
-
- See my previous question. If your answer is Yes, expect to be called
- anti-choice by Keegan, and don't expect me to stick up for you. I did
- stick up for Jammer Jim and Elizabeth Bartley, but that is because they
- did not show the fondness for "AntiChoice" that you are displaying.
-
- >>
- >>Alternatively, pro-choicers might say that the woman should
- >>not bear any risks during the abortion procedure since her
- >>bodily resources are being used by the child, and the child
- >>is endangering the woman's health.
-
- >Nobody is saying this. Nobody can make this the case. Again, abortion is
- >a medical procedure with associated risks. Also, I doubt too many AntiChoicers
- >will want to restrict abortion for women who will suffer massive health
- >problems if they become pregnant. Lastly, I know of very few pregnancies where
- >a fetus poses this sort of burden on a woman. Granted, pregnancy is DIFFICULT,
- >and labor is VERY DIFFICULT AND TRAUMATIC, but in most cases pregnancy is not
- >severly life threatening. Very few ProChoicers use this self-defense argument,
- >because it is (again) easier and more reasonable to argue that a fetus is
- >not morally, ethically speaking, a PERSON until some point well after conception
-
- How many pro-choicers have you read on talk.abortion? The self-defense
- argument keeps coming up all the time.
-
- >>This position implies that newborn infants
- >>are not persons, since there is no difference between a
- >>late-term fetus and an infant, and hence these pro-choicers
- >>must condone infanticide.
-
- > Obviously this is where we disagree most. Firstly, most pro-choicers
- >(as I have stated several times before) say a fetus is not a person until
- >birth, or maybe earlier during the third trimester. Thus, there is a GREAT
- >DEAL of difference between a late-term fetus and an infant, ethically
- >speaking.
-
- I still haven't figured out what the usual definition, or even "Killer"
- Tiller's definition of "late-term" is. I would like to see the term used
- for any fetus past the earliest point of a prematurely born child
- surviving.
-
- > Secondly, for those of us who do not support late-term abortions
- >(such as myself), even if morally and ethically there is no difference
- >between a late-term fetus and an infant for us, there is a great deal of
- >difference between an infant 6-9 weeks old, when most abortions take place,
- >and a fetus 30-40 weeks old, which is what you're talking about.
-
- Not as much as you seem to think. See above. BTW viability has been
- pushed back to 19-20 weeks, with roughly half of those born at 24 weeks
- surviving, and about a quarter showing no long-term disability as a
- result of the premature birth.
-
- > Given these facts, it is not at all inconistent for a ProChoicer
- >to support abortion-on-demand and decry infanticide.
-
- Are you suffering from instant amnesia? What about abortion-on-demand
- for fetuses 30-40 weeks old?
-
- > Doug, I have a feeling that many reasonable people in the ProLife
- >community are getting tired of these attempts on your part to SCARE people
- >into a ProLife stance,
-
- On the other hand, you may be suffering from the mental fatigue involved
- in wearing a Mr. Nice Guy mask. Is this last sentence of yours evidence
- that it is starting to slip?
-
- > through graphic descriptions of abortion and flimsy
- >arguments that the ProChoicers must condone some attrocity in order for
- >their arguments to remain consistent.
-
- BTW, Lost Boy, did my barrage of half-a-dozen or so follow-ups to your
- fetal tissue thread ever make it to your boards?
-
- >***************************************************************
- >* My mother CHOSE to have me. That's how I know she loves me. *
- >* -Karen Uru *
- >***************************************************************
-
- Karen Uru obviously was never told, "Be grateful I had you. I could have
- aborted you, you know." [To the accompaniment of a tale of woe of
- how much easier mom could have had it if she had remained childless.]
-
- Peter Nyikos
-
-
-