I don't believe a fetus is a person, and if a fetus were a person, I don't believe that causes a woman to lose her right to bodily autonomy.
Unless there is a really good reason, it IS murder.
You can't just abort because you forgot prevention.
Also, some people on here are really insane.
First, I don't believe anything you said makes a fetus a person. If anything, your qualifier "almost the same" shows that you don't even think a fetus is actually a person.A fetus is a person
It kicks
It has a brain
It looks like a person
It turns into a baby
Bodily autonomy? The fuck?
Killing a fetus is almost the same as killing a fellow human
If it is almost the same then we have scope to consider whether it is acceptable.A fetus is a person
It kicks
It has a brain
It looks like a person
It turns into a baby
Bodily autonomy? The fuck?
Killing a fetus is almost the same as killing a fellow human
When working on a job site I will try very hard to be safe but should it go wrong I have superglue, stitches, bandages and such.Here's the thing, NOBODY wants an abortion. No little girl plays with her Barbie doll with it's clothes its house... and it's coathanger. Abortions are always a traumatic event that everyone (except for a few sickos) would have preferred to avoid, but feel they can't
First, I don't believe anything you said makes a fetus a person. If anything, your qualifier "almost the same" shows that you don't even think a fetus is actually a person.
Second, hypothetically, if a fetus were a person, that doesn't take away a woman's right to bodily autonomy, even if it results in the death of a person. If you want to argue the fetus is a person and abortion results in the death of the person (I respectfully disagree), okay, but that's not technically murder.
If a person dying from failing kidneys requires you to donate your kidney in order to save his or her life, that doesn't take away your right to bodily autonomy and your ability to decline. If the person dies because you decline and because you were the only compatible match, that's not murder.
Forcing you to die to save those five people is not the objectively right thing to do.Yeah, if we talk about donating organs, it gets interesting.
Imagine this situation: 5 people are injured and they need new organs to survive. Each one of them needs a different organ. You are completely healthy and you are a perfect match for all five. Now, forcing you to "donate" those organs (and actually committing murder by forcibly taking those organs from you) is OBJECTIVELY the right thing to do. After all, they save 5 lives by sacrificing one. (And yeah, I do realize that's fucked up. I am not saying that's the moral thing to do or that I agree it should be done. I'm just trying to be objective here.)

"Is objectively the right thing to do."Yeah, if we talk about donating organs, it gets interesting.
Imagine this situation: 5 people are injured and they need new organs to survive. Each one of them needs a different organ. You are completely healthy and you are a perfect match for all five. Now, forcing you to "donate" those organs (and actually committing murder by forcibly taking those organs from you) is OBJECTIVELY the right thing to do. After all, they save 5 lives by sacrificing one. (And yeah, I do realize that's fucked up. I am not saying that's the moral thing to do or that I agree it should be done. I'm just trying to be objective here.)
Forcing you to die to save those five people is not the objectively right thing to do.
Edit: To explain, forcing you to die is murder. Allowing the five people to die is not murder.
"Is objectively the right thing to do."
There can be no objectivity in morals. There is no way to scientifically prove what is right or wrong.
There is no logically sound reason why it is more right to consider murder evil than good.
As strange as it sounds - it's all relative.

By saying it was objectively "right" you made a moral statement.Not talking about morality. Morality is all subjective. I was just taking the very binary (and flawed) stance of "saving as many lives as possible". I am not saying doing that is the right decision.
By saying it was objectively "right" you made a moral statement.
"Right" is a word which only has value in a moral schema. Right and wrong are inherently moral concepts. Here you chose the moral "to save the most lives". So yes if that is the moral you ascribe to, then killing the one person is objectively the best way to achieve that. However you have to make it clear when you are predicating your statement on a moral idea that is not exactly universal.
If we very specifically define what it means to be moral first, objective morality can exist."Is objectively the right thing to do."
There can be no objectivity in morals. There is no way to scientifically prove what is right or wrong.
There is no logically sound reason why it is more right to consider murder evil than good.
As strange as it sounds - it's all relative.
See here https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_relativism
When you're talking about something being the "right thing to do," you're talking about morality.Not talking about morality. Morality is all subjective. I was just taking the very binary (and flawed) stance of "saving as many lives as possible". I am not saying doing that is the right decision.

Abortion is no more murder than masturbation is.
Some history is required to understand why people think abortion is murder.
back in the day, people weren't very knowledgeable about biology at all. The believed the entirety of the person was in the man's sperm. The woman's womb was just where the baby was grown. They thought it was like crops. Man had the seed, the woman had the ground. This is why we still say women are "barren", which is a agricultural term for ground that can't grow stuff. Also terms like "bear fruit" and "sewing your wild oats/seeds", etc., etc. come from this conceptual understanding.
So, with that established, let's move into religion doctrine. the catholic church took that cultural concept and made masturbation a crime against their god. if the entirety of the person was contained in the sperm, then surely not having it put in a place that could be planted was a crime against god. on a related note, this is also why so many people circumcise in the US. Kellogg (yes that Kellogg) thought circumcision would reduce the evil evil act of masturbation. You can also blame the catholic church and related religions for a large chunk of cultural hangups on masturbation.
Eventually we got to the point we understand genetics and that women contribute half of the genetic material. But even now, we still use those antiquated terms and concepts, so that culture and those concepts are still around in bits and pieces. There's still this concept that the "whole" of the person is contained there, just people adapted it to include the woman's half. So now rather than sperm, it's on the moment of conception. But that's still just an adaptation of that antiquated concept. It is not in line with biology.
What *actually* happens, based in biology, is sperm and eggs contain *~blueprints~*. a fertilized egg is not a person, it does not contain a "whole" person, but rather general instructions for the building of a person. (I say general because it's not exact, and the plans change quite a bit depending on the environment of the mother/fetus. They're adaptive blueprints and are not of a certain final product). They are an instructional code for the body to begin construction of a person. The man has half of the code, the women has the other half. When both are combined, the body begins the process of building based on those blueprints.
BUT it doesn't start out from the beginning with the bits that make a person a person. No, first the mother's body starts by creating a...vessel (to keep in line with the religious talk) for the person. The body. Eventually, after about the third trimester (29-40 weeks), the blueprints ask for the final bits to be installed; the important brain stuff. It is at this point most people agree an actual person has been grown. Pretty much no one thinks abortion should happen at this stage. Only before those stages the blueprints have asked for the "person" bits to be start being added do people think abortion to be viable. The closer to the "planning/conception" stage, the better for most people.
You can add whatever soul or religious context you'd like, but that's the sciency bit of what's happening.

They're English terms, so that may be why. Any native speaker will have heard these terms. usually "seed" or "barren" are the most common for non-native speakers.I have never heard any of those terms.

The terms are biblical in origin. I associate them mainly with the book of Genesis.I have never heard any of those terms.
They're English terms, so that may be why. Any native speaker will have heard these terms. usually "seed" or "barren" are the most common for non-native speakers.

You missed "fruit of my loins," in reference to a father speaking of his offspringAbortion is no more murder than masturbation is.
Some history is required to understand why people think abortion is murder.
back in the day, people weren't very knowledgeable about biology at all. The believed the entirety of the person was in the man's sperm. The woman's womb was just where the baby was grown. They thought it was like crops. Man had the seed, the woman had the ground. This is why we still say women are "barren", which is a agricultural term for ground that can't grow stuff. Also terms like "bear fruit" and "sewing your wild oats/seeds", etc., etc. come from this conceptual understanding.
So, with that established, let's move into religion doctrine. the catholic church took that cultural concept and made masturbation a crime against their god. if the entirety of the person was contained in the sperm, then surely not having it put in a place that could be planted was a crime against god. on a related note, this is also why so many people circumcise in the US. Kellogg (yes that Kellogg) thought circumcision would reduce the evil evil act of masturbation. You can also blame the catholic church and related religions for a large chunk of cultural hangups on masturbation.
Eventually we got to the point we understand genetics and that women contribute half of the genetic material. But even now, we still use those antiquated terms and concepts, so that culture and those concepts are still around in bits and pieces. There's still this concept that the "whole" of the person is contained there, just people adapted it to include the woman's half. So now rather than sperm, it's on the moment of conception. But that's still just an adaptation of that antiquated concept. It is not in line with biology.
What *actually* happens, based in biology, is sperm and eggs contain *~blueprints~*. a fertilized egg is not a person, it does not contain a "whole" person, but rather general instructions for the building of a person. (I say general because it's not exact, and the plans change quite a bit depending on the environment of the mother/fetus. They're adaptive blueprints and are not of a certain final product). They are an instructional code for the body to begin construction of a person. The man has half of the code, the women has the other half. When both are combined, the body begins the process of building based on those blueprints.
BUT it doesn't start out from the beginning with the bits that make a person a person. No, first the mother's body starts by creating a...vessel (to keep in line with the religious talk) for the person. The body. Eventually, after about the third trimester (29-40 weeks), the blueprints ask for the final bits to be installed; the important brain stuff. It is at this point most people agree an actual person has been grown. Pretty much no one thinks abortion should happen at this stage. Only before those stages the blueprints have asked for the "person" bits to be start being added do people think abortion to be viable. The closer to the "planning/conception" stage, the better for most people.
You can add whatever soul or religious context you'd like, but that's the sciency bit of what's happening.


