Instigator / Pro
25
1740
rating
23
debates
100.0%
won
Topic
#5381

THBT: Personhood begins at conception [for @Benjamin]

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
9
6
Better sources
8
8
Better legibility
4
4
Better conduct
4
3

After 4 votes and with 4 points ahead, the winner is...

Savant
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Rated
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
Two weeks
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Minimal rating
1,750
Contender / Con
21
1760
rating
94
debates
77.13%
won
Description

RESOLUTION:
THBT: Personhood begins at conception.

BURDEN OF PROOF:
BoP is shared equally. Pro argues that in human development, personhood begins at conception in the majority of cases. Con argues that personhood begins at some other point in the majority of cases.

DEFINITIONS:
Conception is “the fusion of gametes to give rise to a human zygote”
Moral consideration is “consideration with regards to actions that may affect an individual.”
Personhood is “the point at which a human being should be given moral consideration.”

RULES:
1. All specifications presented in the description are binding to both participants.
2. Only Benjamin may accept.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ppTaynxNwq_BgyoFDJ-iHLcwvzdSUVggXmUFp-2nRiE/edit?usp=sharing

I'll admit, my thoughts on this one got a bit jumbled, took a while to disentangle them. Hope the RFD makes more sense than it initially did in my head.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

Both debaters aren't arguing the resolution. When I read or skim the debate, it is clear they are arguing over whether abortion is murder and therefore wrong or not wrong. That is not the subject of the debate, the subject of the debate is whether personhood begins at conception or not.
We are not here to argue whether abortion is wrong or not wrong. Therefore, whoever stays on topic and argues the resolution the best will get the point for arguments.

Pro starts off appealing to examples of moral consistency and semantics. Personhood begins at conception because the lifeform is already human and will eventually develop to have consciousness, sentience, and emotions. If an action interferes with this potential by stopping it, then this action is defined as a harm. Pro argues that a fetus deserves the same moral consideration as an adult because their value and worth are not different. If killing an adult human or an infant is wrong, then the same is true for fetuses. Pro contends with the idea that abortion is acceptable, but euthanizing coma patients is murder by pointing out that any justification or argument someone applies to not killing a coma patient can also be used to save the life of a fetus. That intelligence and sentience do not determine whether a person is worthy of moral consideration.
(Pro doesn't give a strong justification for why murder is wrong and why humans fall into the category of personhoods, even if I buy that fetuses are human. We could also use a judging criteria for what to consider moral consideration. Proportional harm/benefit, context, and the method is too vaguely defined.)
Con begins very strongly. Con cleverly points out that Pro's own concept he gives for personhood is self-refuting. Specifically, the example where murdering a human is worse than murdering a pig. Con's point here is that pro's version of personhood contains qualities of exceptionalism that give it unfair privilege over other species. Con defines the qualities that constitute personhood.: Sentience, autonomy, and critical thinking. Con reasons that a zygote possesses none of these qualities and therefore has no moral value. Con's arguments also begin to go off-topic and are irrelevant, such as when he mentions that banning abortion harms women. This is outside the scope of the debate because this does nothing to tell me why or why zygotes aren't persons. Con's rebuttal against Pro's Uncertainty Principle does not refute the example. While Pro didn't define what he considers personhood, he did clearly describe an example of harm as something that ends life.) Con also breaks the conduct rule by describing Pro's example as moronic and name-dropping him directly to accuse him of lying.
Pro argues that all humans are persons, regardless of their stage of development. And that according to the social contract, a human killing another human is more immoral than a human killing another pig and that the consensus for moral value is not defined by an intelligence gap. Pro defends that fetuses are worthy of moral consideration by mentioning their potentiality. Con argues there is no reason to give moral consideration to imaginary future people, but Pro has refuted this by explaining that fetuses are already living people.
Given the debate, the victory does seem to be slightly in Pro's favor but only slightly, as this debate could have went any way. Pro didn't need to define killing as wrong, he needed to establish a criteria regarding what makes someone worthy of moral consideration and what doesn't. Con is the only one to do this, and if Pro didn't pushback with counter-examples and inconsistencies in society's morals, Con would have won this.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

Explained in comments.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

There is a clear pattern in PRO's argumentation: bad abductive reasoning. In the case of the "harm principle," what constitutes harm, coma analogy and so on. Each of these share a similarity: they all do not offer other explanations of the principle or reason for a given phenomena. For example, PRO tries to establish what constitutes as harm (explanation) from one example - in which - there could be other explanations. The coma analogy, PRO states only two reasons why killing a person who is in a coma is wrong when there can be other explanations for it being wrong - then - tries to analogize it to a zygote even though the similarities has been essentially forced. The harm principle wasn't even established well; the establishment of the principle was framed as an analogy when truly it was an abductive argument: from a few examples (unborn and questionably dead person) there was a conclusion that in cases where there it is unclear if someone has person-hood they have moral consideration. Which, justifiably, prompted CON to argue against it as if it was an argument in of itself rather than an establishment of a principle. For an abductive argument to be effective it needs to consider other explanations from a few facts and then an demonstration why those some other explanations are not as good, but in this case, it seemed like PRO gave the best explanation that was first thought of or seen and ran with it. Which becomes obvious when CON gives a valid alternative explanation for why someone in a coma has moral consideration while the analogized does not: they would want to live. Essentially, every step to arrive at a conclusion is poisoned by how ill-formed the arguments were.

CON's only sin, when arguing the affirmative case, was using a dictionaries to establish what makes a person have person-hood. The establishment of person-hood, or when a human becomes a person, is a matter of debate that needs to be established - not - something that should be deferred to a dictionary. Which PRO, at the very least, admittedly poorly, attempted to do. However, the only reason why CON's argument is slightly better is due to it being the entire argument being not ill formed. CON essentially "established" the standards of person-hood, zygotes did not fit that criteria, which CON argued that means zygotes do not have moral weight.

The difference here is that PRO's affirmative argument is essentially entirely faulty, while CON's affirmative argument is somewhat faulty.

In terms of rebuttals, no one really does better than another. Firstly, the harm principle was merely a principle - not - an argument in of itself that establishes zygots with person-hood. Which CON seemed to be under the impression of, which is not entirely their fault considering how PRO framed their establishment of the principle. That is to say, CON did not actually dispute the principle and really couldn't due to not knowing that it was a principle that was suppose to support a future argument: the coma argument. In that case, CON did actually attack what was wrong with that argument: another explanation for why it is wrong. PRO, albeit not directly pointed out the flaw of CON's argument, was hinting at the right direction by questioning the definitions in which CON gave for person-hood. The difference here is that CON sometimes aced a rebuttal and at other times completely missed, while PRO was close to giving a valid rebuttal but not quite there.

In terms of reliable sources, both parties seem to give acceptable sources to demonstrate concepts. While PRO's arguments were ill-formed, they are not so ill-formed that is significantly less legible than CON. In terms of conduct, neither side was significantly worse. The only time CON has actually attacked PRO's character is when they have accused them of lying. Every other time has been a characterization of PRO's argument or how PRO has argued. At most, CON is very aggressive with expressing how bad they think PRO's arguments are or how they are arguing, which is not bad conduct as long as they engage with the arguments at those points. The conduct criterion I would tentatively argue for.