Very well put. Actually I see this as a theological argument and our country has separation of Church and State.
Uh-huh.
Since when is defining a "person" a matter of theology, in the U.S.? Seems to me we fought a war over personhood, getting a whole horde of Americans changed from being mere fractions of persons to being full persons. We had a political battle over chidren as persons, rather than effectively the property of their parents. This is just another step in that process of defining just who is covered by that "created equal" statement in the Declaration of Independence, which is to say, just who is a 'who' in the first place, to whom all the rights and liberties of existence and law pertain.
Kuli, while I thank you you for recognizing the terms of the debate and even coming up with a plausible alternative, I'll have to disagree with you about brain activity being the start. Once that sperm and egg join, you have something that meets the scientific criteria of being alive, you have the 46 chromosomes of a human being, the DNA codes for 100% human, and so I say you have a human being, even if it unrecognizable as one.
But without independent thought, how can there be a person?
Some Christians would say that the soul springs into being at the moment of conception, but that's without basis anywhere -- and highly implausible, since (assuming the existence of souls) the 'interface' between soul and body is the brain, and it's stretching reasonability to suggest that the soul sits twiddling its immaterial thumbs (so to speak) waiting for the brain to develop.
But as I recall, you're not a Christian, so I don't see why you'd pin personhood on the moment of conception.
It has long been the practice around the world to determine life in various ways...and most have nothing to do with Christian belief. Some didn't even name a child until it reached 12 months old....others consider life a heartbeat....brain activity etc. This discussion isn't about what is life...that is a ruse. It is about legislation...to suit the Christian belief.
1. You call "B.S.", but you didn't actually respond to anything in the post you quoted. That's a classic example of BS, one a politician would be proud of: don't answer the statement you 'respond' to, answer the one you wish had been made.
2. The practice of not naming a child until it was 12 months old was rooted in practicality, not in matters of who was considered a person: infant mortality was so high that until it was evident there was a good chance of survival, names just weren't given. We've managed to beat that problem, so that's hardly a measuring stick any longer.
3. Which "Christian belief"? If you're alert and reading this board, you'll know that there are three different Christian beliefs about when personhood begins: conception, 'quickening'/brainwaves, and the first breath following birth. Each can be argued to one extent or another from the biblical 'data', and has been since the early years of the church -- and the issue has never been resolved.
and I call double Bullshit. I don't recall citing anything other Republicans say in my post. Addressing them is a convenient way of ignoring what I said. As far as giving business "personhood", exactly what do you mean by that? Need I remind you that John Locke Identified 3 fundemental rights, life, liberty, and property.
This discussion is precisely about what is life. And however other people wish to determine it, I am suggesting we stick to the science.
Corporate personhood is a legal fiction used to shield participants in corporations from various slings and arrows of economic fortune. It's one of the more ridiculous things law has ever done.
WRT Locke on property, BTW, technically property in its proper sense (narrow sense; he uses the term broadly as well) consists only of things made by people; real estate is property only in a secondary sense.
Now, to science: is a brain-dead individual a person? He's definitely a human being. A fertilized egg is in the same position as the brain-dead individual: all the right chromosomes... no seat of intelligence.