#51
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Raising the price or taxing later abortions would only incentivize them as has been said. As it is, preventive medicine is not reimbursed at anything near the rate that invasive, almost left it too late procedures in all medicine. |
#52
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You mean my idea is more complicated than determining when a human can be called a person? Personhood is a continuum and regulations carved in stone are simplistic and inappropriate. |
#53
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No, NinetyWt is correct. Assuming the goal is to reduce later-term abortions, the correct way to rig the incentives is by a flat-rate reimbursement for all abortions, irrespective of time, trimester, and complexity. This gives doctors every incentive to perform the abortions early, while the profit margins are best. The time and complexity for the procedure are as low as they're ever going to be. The patient already has an incentive to decide as early as possible, because of the cost of prenatal care.
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#54
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#55
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...and I don't think there is. As far as I'm concerned, this is all purely speculation for the sake of fun. I don't think there is an abortion problem that begs an answer to the question of personhood. the goal isn't to stop a single abortion. It's to get them to happen sooner. |
#56
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Not just the cost of prenatal care, but the emotional toll. Very few sadistic women out there who would delay their abortion. More than a few sadistic churches etc that will do all they can to delay the woman's choice. We had a case a many years ago--thank god I was not involved. 12 year old impregnated by her stepfather. "Dad" and "Mom" (quotes there to convey irony) delayed bringing her in so that she couldn't have an AB. She was home-schooled and not out in the public eye much.
Gosh but their sanctity of life principles shone through that. Really walked the walk there. Last edited by eleanorigby; 31st August 2011 at 09:25 AM. Reason: ETA clarity |
#57
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Even more of a reason to not worry about jacking up the cost of superfluously delayed abortions.
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#58
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Aye, there's the rub. It's a philisopical exercise for you, it's my life as a (potentially pregnant) woman for me. |
#59
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I dunno. When did you conceive? We have sex every day. I dunno. What day is day one in this case? |
#60
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Pssssh I dunno. I'm sure professionals can come up with a reasonable estimate. |
#61
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Prenatal care: $0 to $2000 Cesarian: $0 to $9000 Vaginal delivery: $0 to $9000 Raising child for 1 year: up to $12000 Medical care for a sickly infant: astronomical First-tri abortion: $400 Week 13-14: $500 Week 15-16: $600 Some women already have good health insurance, which covers all of the above — the prenatal care, the delivery, or the abortion itself. (Most private insurance actually reimburses better than Medicaid, to the point where some abortion clinics no longer take it. Medicaid, I'm told, doesn't even reimburse many abortions at or above the cost to perform them.) For those women, their cost is roughly equal no matter what they choose; their cost is basically the cost of the insurance premiums. For the insurance company, early abortion is an easy choice; it reduces their overall expenses enormously. For women who depend on charity and public funding, they have virtually no incentive to delay their choice. Every week they wait adds more expense. What need is there to provide even more disincentive? P.S. The "day one" is established by the costly prenatal care we're looking at. An ultrasound gives the doctor an approximate fetal length and estimated weight. He consults a chart and says "statistically, this falls into a confidence interval for X weeks of growth." In other words, scaling abortion costs by trimester means you have to charge the mother money in order to find out how much money to charge her. |
#62
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I'm not aware of any. What need is there to define when personhood begins? Assuming there was a need, for we're addressing this question which will ultimately limit availability of abortions, I'd rather discourage than regulate.
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#63
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As far as I know, there is no "need" to define personhood except that the OP was curious and wished to enter a philosophical debate. If you're not interested in bringing philosophy into a philosophical debate, then I'm not sure what to tell you.
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#64
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"taxing" abortions is an idea I derived from my response to the OP's philosophical question: I have no idea when personhood begins, so I'd rather discourage later abortions than regulate them. I brought my philosophy and attempted to move on because I assumed the underlying topic was abortion.
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#65
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Defining personhood is a philosophical question, but that doesn't mean it's abstruse and academic. Taken seriously, philosophy can and should inform all kinds of practical choices, for individuals and societies. Even if it doesn't amount to a practical difference in the specific case of legal abortion (as I said above, I uphold the right to choose across the range where I think personhood, by reasonable definition, must begin), there are other places where a coherent understanding of what makes us people can be applied. Many of the horrors of history were enabled by one set of humans defining another out of their humanity. It's not an inconsequential question.
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So what does make you a person, in your view? |
#66
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If the debate were framed as, "How should the government define personhood?" we could contemplate the effects this should have upon abortion law and full voting-rights citizenship (and, indeed, upon corporate law and political donations). If we were discussing personhood vis a vis genetic differentiation from ongoing experiments, I'd expect we'd bring up cloning, man-made genetic chimeras, and speciation. As it is, we're just all over the place with "what is personhood?"
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#67
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That's just it. Wouldn't it be nice to have a unified coherent understanding of what a person is, to apply to all those questions?
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#68
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Nice? No, because I doubt we'd like the answer of "we're all too dumb and limited, with a primitive binary concept of personhood, to ever apply a linguistic label to a fluid and variable condition."
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#69
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I don't see why fluidity and variability should shut down the search for understanding. The precise boundaries of the ocean and fluid and variable, but we can still say with confidence that some places are in the ocean and some are not--and the difference between the two is pretty important. And that if, in a particular context, our interest is in not getting wet, we can draw a safe outer boundary of oceanhood to stand beyond.
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#70
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Your analogy is a good one. If the goal is "not to get wet," we first have to define "what is wet?" How many droplets of water make one wet, versus merely moist? Is damp more or less wet than moist? Is soggy more than wet, or equal? Then, in what other locations may we find wetness apart from within the boundaries of the ocean — spray from the surf, for instance — and does that also count as wetness? What about lakes, rivers, or ponds? What about clouds? Fog? What about becoming wet from things other than water?
In linguistic terms, it is the paradox of the heap: at some stage, our language is insufficient to make a fine distinction between "small amount" and "heap," just as we have a hard time differentiating between "wet," "damp," and "dry." How do we define "human" when we know it's damned hard to define anything so indistinct? We're just not smart enough — or we're saddled with a language insufficiently expressive. |
#71
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I haven't the slightest idea except what Fish says: Quote:
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Second, the ocean isn't going to come to me and bomb my office if I get this vague distinction wrong. |
#72
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#73
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Every single one of us is a person yet none of us can pinpoint, or even articulate in anything but the most vague terms, what makes us so. That tells me that it is not terribly meaningful or relevant in our lives. Much smarter people than ourselves have been debating the issue for millenniums. That tells me that we wouldn't do much better of a job than our ancestors, even if it was relevant and meaningful.
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#74
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Real progress has been made on this question, and it has been damned important to a lot of people--for example, the (not quite completed) abolition of slavery is predicated on the recognition that slavery is incompatible with human rights, and that all the categories of humans once relegated to slavery are people fully deserving of those rights. |
#75
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Yes, it will. Ever hear of storm surge? If you guess wrong at the potential limits of the ocean and build your office too close to it, it will bomb you (with water), and may destroy you.
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#76
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What is it specifically about the abolition of slavery that restored personhood to those groups? I'd call it dramatic social, cultural, and political progress. Progress towards a grand unified theory of personhood? Not even close. |
#77
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Here's something timely which appeard in my mailbox. Some organization called Personhood USA is trying to get states to pass amendments which establish personhood at conception.
Not only is this group anti-abortion, they also oppose certain birth control methods. Passage of the amendment would outlaw certain forms of the pill and IUD. Quote:
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#78
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It's foolishness. They forget that some fertilized eggs never attach to the wall of the uterus — by this definition, said George Carlin, every sexually active woman is a serial killer.
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#79
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I just can't believe this has any traction at all around here. The Republican candidate for Governor is (apparently) a supporter of this thing.
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#80
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Yes.
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#81
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* An argument can be made that while these terms are used interchangably by some, there are differences in what they entail and what their success rates are. I'm not interested in that argument. My point is "having sex when you're hopefully not fertile" is the only "acceptable" method of family planning in some circles. ** During the mandatory pre-marital counseling sessions held by my parish priest, a shy, sweet man around the same age as my parents, the issue of "the welcoming of children into the marriage" came up on his checklist. His take on the matter (while blushing furiously): "There are those who say that the Catholic church is against birth control, and that's not strictly true. The church is against any method that interfere's with the body's natural processes of reproduction. If you want to know more about that you can talk to your doctor. Moving on. . . " |
#82
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In actuality, third trimester abortions are extremely rare (less than 1/10 of one percent of all abortions), and are only performed for urgent medical reasons, often when the fetus is already dead. You don't have to do anything to discourage third trimester abortions (though why you think ANY abortion is your business, I have no idea). They don't happen anyway unless they have to. |
#83
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#84
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"God wants you to sleep with me. Who are we to argue?" |
#85
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Ah yes, "God's will," the all-purpose catchphrase for "I get to make up whatever bullshit rules I want, because I can speak for the invisible, omniscient man in the sky." They can't explain why the abortion itself isn't also God's will, can they? Or, as Solfy said, if God hadn't wanted that woman to get an abortion, he wouldn't have allowed her to get pregnant or have sex. |
#86
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I never even defined "late-term" in my head. That pro-lifers/choicers/medical professionals actually do have a real definition for the term never crossed my mind. I mean the phrase exactly as vaguely as "later than society thinks is appropriate".
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#87
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2. Of course we are better able to answer than those who lived 'milennia before' we did. We have better information. It makes no difference whether or not those people were 'much smarter.' They did not have access to the advanced scientific methods and technology we have at our disposal. 3. 'Personhood' is meaningful on many levels, most notably legal and medical. |
#88
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That doesn't address the shades of grey where a human being with very low levels of mental faculties is still treated with greater respect than clever chimps. My gut tells me, as I'm sure it does many people, that a human zygote with no brain at all is more special than a booger I peel out of my nose.
Just because certain factions of society might be more confident in saying what makes a person doesn't mean they are any more accurate. Just because one applies scientific methods to the question of personhood doesn't mean their answer is better. You'd have to convince me that scientists have been working on questions less immune to empiricism than "what makes a person". More importantely "personhood" doesn't even have it's own Wikipedia page. What does that tell you? Hmmmmmmm? |
#89
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#90
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For the purposes of this thread and specifically the OP, 'personhood' begins when higher brain functions engage. People can debate the minutiae as much as they like, but that's the medical and legal definition. I don't understand why I have to convince you of anything. It's your choice if you wish to view medical facts as opinion. |
#91
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As Wens already pointed out, personhood is meaningful on different levels. By a calculation of brain function and DNA alone — a medical definition — a chimp is "more of a person" than a corporation, which has no brain and no DNA. Yet the chimp is not a person from a legal definition, pays no taxes, does not vote, etc. Should we ever reach the point where we develop artificial intelligence or a "braintape" simulation of a real human mind, we'll have to wrestle with a third possibility, that is, potential sentience in the absence of brainwave activity and DNA. We might also deal with cloning and have a fourth possibility — human DNA and brainwave activity, yet no independent mind to speak of.
There is also no Wikipedia for "statehood," but that doesn't preclude our understanding of what makes a state; nor does the Wikipedia page for "neighborhood" identify what a neighbor is. |
#92
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No it doesn't. That's an entirely different line of reasoning besides the brain wave thing. How much human dignity does being a one day old zygote with every bit as 'human' DNA as myself afford one? The difference isn't the DNA. |
#93
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Chimps can have their rights when they speak up and demand them.
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#94
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We can go on for ages: from a legal standpoint, this squiggly bundle of shit is not a person. From a religious standpoint, this squiggly bunch of shit is a person. From a medical standpoint, this squiggly bunch of shit is a person. From a philosophy xyz standpoint, this squiggly bunch of shit is a person. From a culinary standpoint, this squiggly bunch of shit is not a person. I don't get how quoting the legal definition of "person" gets one closer to answering the OP than the religious definition. It's a concept not exclusive to any one particular part of life. |
#95
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Because the OP specifically asked where personhood starts with respect to fetuses. The medical and legal definitions address that.
I specifically said you could debate the minutiae. I'm not moderating, I'm discussing the OP. But I won't allow that opinions informed by superstition, 'gut feelings' and belief are equal to those informed by fact, science and research. They aren't, and we need to stop coddling people who believe they are. As for the dignity question: I'm not sure why you're asking. Why does it matter? Personhood is defined for humans, not for chimps. It seems a bit irrelevant to bring into the discussion how drooling morons are treated better than chimps, but I think it could be a good topic on its own. |
#96
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I don't believe that what I am debating is minutiae. Because medical professionals have decidedly given a 100% unambiguous definition of personhood doesn't make any opinion to the contrary minutiae. Medical professionals didn't invent the idea of personhood. Just because they are the ones who said it doesn't mean they are the ones who answered it.
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Because if one aborts a fetus, one aborts a being with of the same species as myself. You are the one saying the species is an important factor. That's how come I can't say "treat this chimp like you'd treat a moron". Last edited by u wan buy dvd?; 2nd September 2011 at 02:40 PM. |
#97
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DVD, I've already pointed out that this is a Paradox of the Heap — a linguistic conundrum. We are assigning a binary "is a person, is not a person" condition to a distinctly non-binary array of states. It is not an argument that you (or anyone else) can win, similar to arguing whether Obama is "black" or "white."
My basis for beginning with DNA and brainwave activity is that both can be measured; hence, we are grounding the definition in the empirical. That definition is not 100% sufficient, but it's a good starting point. From there we proceed with the presumption of human intellect and competence, until it can be demonstrated otherwise to the satisfaction of a judge. Quote:
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#98
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Ugh. Apologies in advance for the multi quote.
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I'm almost positive I'm missing something in what you're saying, and I do apologize sincerely, but I still am not understanding why we need to involve animals in the discussion. The OP is talking about human fetuses specifically, therefore applying personhood to other species, computers, etc. doesn't really apply. |
#99
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Which is all just fine and dandy, but it's not empirical. |
#100
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My only problem with the brainwaves thing is that it's limited by the abilities of our detection methods, and as such is still somewhat ambiguous. How do we know there aren't brainwaves at X weeks in a developing fetus that we don't have the sensitivity to detect?
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