Re: Fetal separation: Mr. Saletan's logic fails
by
Selene212
07/21/2008, 3:12 PM #
Little pouches start to bulge out of the pharynx, and eventually
they can rupture through to the surface. In aquatic animals, these "pharyngeal
slits" persist to house gills. In air-breathers like us, these slits are
only temporary, but their structures persist in other ways. <link>
And individuals who go on a ventilator or use a feeding tube are separate from all other individuals. A dependent conjoined twin is not separate from his or her twin.
This is not a discussion of losing rights (though, if it were, I would point out that taking rights away from those that have them is a very different matter than granting rights to those who do not). It's a discussion of truth in information.
A person, even an infant, who breathes without the use of another person's lungs and eats without the use of another person's stomach, is a separate individual from that person.
A person who breathes with someone else's lungs and digests with someone else's stomach is not separate from that other person.
So to tell a woman that the clump of cells attached to her uterine wall, filtering nutrients and oxygen out of her blood is a separate human being is inaccurate unless you decide to redefine the word separate and notify the woman of your unusual definition.
I'm obliged to tell, you, ma'am, that this fetus is a "whole, separate, living human being."
By "whole" I don't mean "complete"; I mean in the process of developing all the necessary human body parts with a complete set of genes.
By "separate"; I don't mean that it's not attached; I mean that its genetic makeup is different from yours and that it could one day be physically separate from your uterus.
By "living", I mean that it's heart beats, it is using nutrients and oxygen, and its cells are dividing rapidly to form a human body.
By "human being" I mean that it has human DNA and, under the right circumstances, could possibly become a human infant.