THBT: On balance, abortion is immoral [for @Bones]
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 3 votes and with 5 points ahead, the winner is...
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RESOLUTION:
THBT: On balance, abortion is immoral.
BURDEN OF PROOF:
BoP is shared equally. Pro argues that abortion is morally wrong. Con argues that abortion is morally permissible.
DEFINITIONS:
Abortion is “the willful and direct termination of a human pregnancy and of the developing offspring.”
Immoral means “morally wrong.”
On balance means “under usual circumstances.”
RULES:
1. All specifications presented in the description are binding to both participants.
2. Only Bones may accept.
- Direct harm: This action has a direct adverse effect on some other person.
- Neglecting a moral duty: Someone ought to do something (like follow an agreed-on contract) but fails to do so.
- An infant born in a coma with no past conscious experiences is a person, and killing them is wrong.
- Newborns are dependent on their parents and on society, but killing them is wrong.
- Killing a child is as bad as killing an adult, if not worse. Thus, it is clear that the potential to live a long life is morally significant, while a human’s level of biological development is not.
- Missed opportunities (reduction in life years): The comatose individual could have lived a long life
- Lack of choice: No choice was given to the comatose individual
- Violation of a social contract: We would not want someone to kill us or steal our opportunities, so it would be wrong to do so to someone else
- P1: Removing an unborn child’s potential conscious experiences is harmful.
- P2: Abortion is removing an unborn child’s potential conscious experiences.
- C1: Therefore, abortion is harmful.
- P1: Removing bodily support after making someone dependent on oneself is a direct harm.
- P2: Abortion is removing bodily support after making someone dependent on oneself.
- C1: Abortion is a direct harm
- P1: A child’s right to live outweighed their parent’s right not to raise them in ancient times.
- P2: Pregnancy in modern times is less inconvenient than raising a child in ancient times.
- C1: A child’s right to live outweighs their mother’s right to avoid pregnancy in modern times.
- The argument I will be defending takes the following form.
- I suspect there won’t be much debate here as it is trivial that something is wrong if it violates a moral entitlement or it has morally unacceptable consequences, and that if abortion is wrong, it would be for one of these two reasons.
- There are several reasons to believe that entities are persons if and only if they have (i) actualizable interests (ii) or their interests can be indexed to some prior mental state. Minimally, an entity is a person if at one point they have experienced non-trivial sentience. Here, I use non-trivial to convey the primitive difference between a fly’s sentience and a human being's sentience, only the latter of which can be said to be non-trivial. Formally,
- (∀xPx ↔ Nx ∨ Cx) For all x, x is a person if and only if they have interests N at time t or N is in E’s interest at t and B is capable of having an interest in N at t
- Px: x is a person
- Nx: x has an interest N at t
- Cx: x N is in E’s interest at t and B is capable of having an interest in N at t
- Here, I take Korz's (2002) notion of capable, where for E to be capable of having an interest in object O requires that at time t - n (prior to t) through t, E has certain beliefs and desires, and were certain logically possible events to have occurred after t - n but prior to t, E would have desired O at t.
- Because the above can be cumbersome to repeat, it can be simplified for future reference as
- P↔Q
- P: a person
- Q: Nx ∨ Cx (refer to above)
- There is immense explanatory power in favour of this theory of personhood.
- General abductive motivations
- Abduction refers to a type of inference which looks at our domain of knowledge and defers to the best available explanation. It can be said that this theory is abductively virtuous.
- Just look around and you will see that any entity who you think is a person (your parents, yourself, people from five thousand years ago) are people who meet the proposed disjunct. If the person you picked is a person, then they are non-trivially sentient.
- Thus P→Q
- Indeed, you can even think about purely hypothetical individuals (let’s say they’re aliens), stipulate that they meet the disjunct and be comfortable in saying that they are persons.
- For instance, suppose you see an entity which shares absolutely no physical similarity to human beings. At this point, with the given information, it would be pretty difficult to make a moral evaluation about this thing (it could just be a rock). However, let’s stipulate that this being possesses non-trivial sentience (has a non-trivial interest N at t where t is the present). Basically, it has mental contents like you and I. With just this one fact, it seems that we are licensed to make claims about this individual's moral status. Thus, knowing that an entity is non-trivially sentient means that it is a person.
- Thus = Q→P
- Because P→Q and Q→P are equivalent to, P↔Q, we can say that P↔Q has been proven.
- Proof by Contraposition
- In logic, the contrapositive of a statement has its antecedent and consequent negated and swapped. The resulting formula is logically equivalent to the original. Given their equivalence, the reason this is useful is because contrapositives can be (trivially) used as proofs for conditionals.
- Suppose you have what seems to be a human person in front of you. They appear and act as though they are a normal human being. Yet, you find out that this being is merely a highly sophisticated robot with someone controlling it, which itself has never nor is having any sentient experiences.
- Notice here that every physical fact true of a human is true of the robot, yet, upon learning the one fact about this being’s lack of sentience, we are willing to say the entity is not a person.
- Thus ¬Q→¬P
- Think about anything which isn’t a person (chairs, tables, silverware) and upon reflection, none of these things are non-trivially sentient.
- Thus ¬P→¬Q
- Combined with my last argument, we have extremely strong reasons to favour the proposed theory. We know that when the proposed criteria is instantiated, an entity is a person, and when the proposed criteria isn’t instantiated, the entity is not a person.
- Accounting for auxiliary interests
- The second part of the disjunct (N is in E’s interest at t and B is capable of having an interest in N at t) is necessary for preserving the rights of individuals who may not presently cognise them. For instance, suppose that an individual is in a coma, and hence not processing any desires. Clearly, we want to say that this person still has rights. Hence, this theory states that given they have once had interests, it is rational to afford them a full set of human rights.
- Notice how this is not just an ad hoc maneuver. For a right to be, for example, violated, it must first exist ,which means that whatever gives one a right must exist prior to the time it is violated.
- Potential rebuke
- Pre sentient rights violations - I have argued for a biconditional between persons (and their moral entitlements) and sentience. A critic may attempt to point at specific entities which we deem to be persons, but does not have sentience. Suppose that we have a baby who has never been sentient, but will be in five minutes. Since such an entity has never been sentient, it is not protected under the proposed rights theory, and hence killing it is perfectly fine, yet, it is argued that such a killing seems to be highly immoral.
- I argue that this hypothetical is not problematic. Imagine one takes this pre sentient baby and replicates it (including the fact that it will be sentient in 5 minutes). However, they have replicated it in such a way that its biological constitution has been entirely replaced with synthetic materials and fabric. It is, in essence, a doll which is about to be sentient. In this case, is there a person being harmed when the doll is being destroyed? It seems that there is not. We can clearly understand that the doll is not a person, and will only become one after sentience. Given this, it's also recognisable that there is no obligation to bring what could be a person into existence (otherwise we would be obligated into impregnating people all day).
- If we understand that killing a pre sentient doll does not violate a being's moral entitlement, and all the moral predicates true of the doll are also true of the baby, it follows that killing a pre sentient baby also doesn’t involve any rights violations.
- Note how per p1, killing the doll can still be wrong even if the doll is not sentient. For instance, even though my neighbour's doll is not a person (or have moral entitlements), that does not mean I can snatch it out of their hand and rip its head off. Trivially, things can be wrong even if they do not involve rights violations.
- The medical consensus on when a fetus first gains sentience is 22 weeks, with some postulating it to be as late as 30 weeks.
- In addition, a fetal electroencephalogram shows alternation between signs of being asleep and being awake only at or after thirty weeks of gestation.
- Thus, it seems unlikely that the fetus is sentient until at least after twenty weeks of gestation. The fetus satisfies neither disjunct of the proposed theory and is hence not a person.
- Because 93% of abortions happen before 13 weeks gestation, almost every abortion falls clearly outside of the parameter within which the fetus gains sentience. Thus, abortion does not violate the rights of any moral entity.
- Because the argument takes the form of modus ponens and the premises are true, the argument is sound and the conclusion that abortion does not violate the moral entitlements of a person is upheld.
- We now know that the fetus is not a person (where most abortions are concerned) so abortion does not violate the fetus’ rights. But this fact alone doesn’t justify abortions permissibility. Indeed, just because a child’s doll doesn’t have rights does not mean that I can rip it up or steal it (this would violate someone else’s rights, namely the child) These would be morally unacceptable consequences.
- However, I argue that no such consequences exist in the case of abortion.
- The mother is the clearest stakeholder in abortions. Given abortions are only pursued because the mother has sought to undergo such treatment, it cannot be said that her rights are being violated.
- That this decision is free and informed is corroborated by the fact that most people who get abortions do not regret it.
- Countries where abortions are legal tend to have higher GDP than countries with restrictive legislation.
- Furthermore, countries with access to legal abortions is correlated with higher average economic freedom.
- It is widely recognised that the abolition of abortion has deleterious consequences. As Tyrer (1985) found, “if abortions were again made illegal, the number of illegal abortions in the US would probably increase from fewer than 20,000 at present to more than 1,000,000 per year. Because illegal abortion may carry a risk of death as much as 30 times that of legal abortion, deaths to women of reproductive age in the US would be expected to increase”.
- If abortion is banned, the mortality rates would increase by 7% within a year and 21% over subsequent years post-abortion ban.
- Psychological research indicates that abortions are not linked to mental health problems.
- Contrary to common pro-life belief, abortion is not linked to infertility or breast cancer.
- Thus abortion carries neither psychological or physical problems.
- Thus, abortion does not have any morally unacceptable non-rights violation outcomes.
- As abortion neither violates the fetus’ rights nor has unacceptable consequences, abortion is permissible.
- Savant’s criteria for personhood can be inferred as stating “an entity E is a person if and only if they can be harmed”, where harm is defined as “impeding bodily functions”. There are several reasons why this is uncompelling.
- Philosophical zombies
- A P zombie is an entity who is physically identical to human beings but lacks the ability to deploy sentience.
- Under Savants definition, P zombies are persons who can be harmed. They are organisms which go through mitosis and will grow unless impeded, have limbs which can be removed and stomachs that can be starved. Yet, this is clearly absurd. P zombies lack attributability, accountability and answerability and hence neither demand now fulfil moral obligations. To cut the arm off a p zombie is equivalent to cutting the arm off a doll.
- What’s the answer?
- It seems that mere impediment to biological bodies does not unequivocally imply harm. What’s missing is a subject of rights violations. My proposed theory of personhood accounts for this - p zombies aren’t persons because they’ve never been sentient.
- Savant claims that killing is wrong regardless of the stage of development of an entity, therefore, killing the fetus is wrong despite its early stage of development. This argument clearly targets only those who believe that killing can be justified by the stage of development of a person (probably no one intelligent). Under my proposed view, killing the fetus isn’t wrong because of the fetus’ age, rather, it is wrong because the fetus lacks sentience.
- Savant further provides the pre sentient rights violations counterexample. As this has already been addressed, I will only provide two recapitulating remarks. The example demands answers to the following two questions:
- 1. Does killing the baby violate its rights?
- 2. Does killing the baby plausibly entail morally unacceptable outcomes?
- The answer to 1 is clearly no, and the answer to 2 is ambiguous. Given the evidence that killing pre sentient beings in the womb doesn’t have deleterious effects on society (p3) there’s no reason to think that killing pre sentient beings which are a bit older will have any drastically different effect. In any case, this case fails to establish what Savant desires, which is that the baby’s rights are being violated by its killing.
- The FLO account of harm is overly permissive in what it deems to be immoral.
- Robot rights
- Suppose that an engineer assembles a highly complex robot which is capable of having human experiences. However they must charge the robot and let it reach 100% battery before it can deploy its first ever conscious experience. When the robot is 75% charged, the scientists begin having doubts as to the ramifications of their project, so they shut it down and abandon the robot. Is what the scientist did wrong?
- Under the FLO account of harm, it is. There is a being who is already “growing” (or charging), it doesn’t require adding any bodily functions, and it will become a person if it is not impeded. Yet, we would be reluctant to say that the robot has been harmed. Notice how my proposed theory does account for this. The robot has never been sentient, so killing it isn't wrong. Notice further how if we stipulate the robot has gone through the stage of sentience and has developed interests and desires, we would suddenly be weary as to permitting its killing. Whereas FLO ignores this nuance and categorises both these examples as equivalent, the pro-sentience position is furnished with the tools to adjudicate these scenarios.
- Nothing here is important to my argument. Given I deny you can harm non persons, the direct vs indirect harm distinction is meaningless. Furthermore, since I deny that the fetus is a person, I deny that it has any obligations let alone a special one.
- To recall, the argument being defended takes the following form
- The sub argument presented was as follows
- “Disembodied heads and corpses fit the conjunct”
- Two points can be raised here.
- First, the criticism is not true. Given the conjunct, explicated in full in p2.1, corpses are not capable of having interests given death is, by definition, the cessation of bodily functions and sentience. In particular, the qualification that B must have desires from t - n through t excludes dying during this time (because when you’re dead any desire you have is terminated).
- Note that this cannot be said of coma patients because they do retain their beliefs, desires, etc., as evidence by the fact that they have not forgotten them when they wake up.
- Second, even if the criticism were true, the resolution would not hold, for CON could easily explicate that the being will be sentient in the future (note that I’m not making this move, but just demonstrating that nothing is really at stake). In any case, the criticism does not threaten CON's position.
- “Killing a presentient baby is not abductively virtuous”
- Savant mistakes abduction with prima facie justification. Whilst one may “intuitively” think that killing such an entity is wrong, such an evaluation has nothing to do with abduction. E.g., we may intuitively think the Earth is flat, but our cumulative abductive reasons (given to us by science) to believe otherwise prevail.
- As I have extensively discussed in r1, there is nothing one can point to about killing a pre-sentient fetus which is actually wrong. All moral predicates true of the baby are true of a hypothetical pre-sentient plastic doll, which intuitively, we acknowledge is not a person. Given this, we have no basis for treating the entity differently.
- “Babies with artificial limbs are persons”
- Savant offers this verbally loaded biting of the bullet (I say it is loaded because "baby" usually refers to pre-sentient) that we should care about plastic dolls which have never been sentient and yet will in a couple minutes.
- This position is highly unintuitive. To really illustrate it, imagine you have some old barbie doll, and God comes down to tell you that in an hour's time, he will endow this doll with the sentience of a normal human baby. It seems clear that, in this hour, the doll is not a person yet nor has any moral entitlements. In the same way that we have no obligation to have sex to create a person, we have an obligation to protect this barbie to create a person.
- You can think about this reductio in reference to any arbitrary object. Take a grain of sand. If Savant were informed that a grain of sand would in an hour become a sentient human being if it is not crushed (let’s say God ensures this conditional), they would be committed to saying that crushing this grain of sand is as morally bad as killing a grown human being. In fact, under the FLO account, if the grain of sand were to transform into a sentient being with 80 years of valuable experiences, and the grown human in being is an 80 year old man, Savant would think that cracking this grain of sand is worse than killing such a man.
- Contrast this CON’s proposed theory where harm is indexed to sentient entities, where killing the man would be trivially far worse.
- “The reductio also applies to your position”
- Attempting to apply the reductio to the proposed theory fails, given all that is yielded is a fully sentient doll which we would trivially say is a person. We are comfortable saying that if a doll were sentient like you or I, it is a person with moral entitlements. What we are not comfortable with saying is that if a doll were just some normal plastic toy, it has rights if it could become something we care about in the future.
- “Why is it wrong to kill a comatose patient but not a brain dead person ”
- As explicated above, comatose patients are capable of sentience whereas brain dead people are by definition, not able to, hence the moral distinction. Note further that the proposed theory is a substance theoretic view on personhood. It is supposed to articulate who is a person and who is not, and not strictly for assessing who is more valuable and who is not. Certainly, a potential sentence is an important characteristic, but only when it is indexed to a person.
- A really important thing to note here is that I don’t have any objection to worrying about potential harm. The issue comes when Savant tries to index harm to someone who is not a person.
- “Mailing $100 dollars example”
- Clearly, this action would be wrong because it has “morally unacceptable consequences”, a consideration accounted for by p2 (non rights violative immoralities).
- I extend that abortion does not violate any stakeholders rights, and that women do not regret having abortions.
- I claimed that countries with legal abortion tend to have a higher GDP. Savant claims that CON has failed to establish that abortions cause an increase in GDP. This is not my claim. Per the subtitle, I am providing inductive reasons to think that abortion does not harm society at large. Given it is extraordinarily difficult to prove a negative claim of this kind, we have to be complacent with correlative works. The strongest evidence in favour of the is that Savant cannot provide evidence that abortion harms society at large, and this is evidenced by the fact that more often than not, first world, prosperous and free countries seem to have legal access.
- Savant claims that permitting abortions would be deleterious for society, since it kills 630, 000 unborn lives (hence the workforce is reduced, etc). This claim presupposes that the fetus is a person (which is not the subject of p3). Since these lives are not persons, this is completely irrelevant. This would be akin to saying that “the government not mandating adults have sex twice a week means that X number of potential babies are not being born, which correlates to $X loss in GDP and X number of potential workers”.
- I claimed that society would face huge demonstrable risks if abortion is banned. Savant refutes this by claiming that this debate is not about legality. However, this misinterprets the specific argument CON is proposing. The claim being made is that if we assess abortion to be immoral and see it (as Savant proposes) as akin to murder, the entailment of this position is abolition, which itself must be considered when assessing whether abortion has morally unacceptable consequences (per p3).
- Savant also claims that the harm of illegal abortions count in favour of the proposition that abortions are immoral. This claim is akin to saying that being black in the 60’s is bad, because you have a higher chance of getting lynched. Obviously, the wrong maker in both cases lies outside of the intrinsic moral calculation of the individual/action. An abortion wouldn't harmful if not for restrictive laws, and being black wouldn't be bad if it weren't for lynchers.
- Recall that this section pertains to “morally unacceptable consequences”, not whether the fetus is a person. Given there are no deleterious social consequences that have been demonstrated, the premise holds.
- Savant claims that P zombies are not harmed because they will not develop consciousness. Note that consciousness is not mentioned in Savants “Criteria for Personhood”, “Definition of Harm” or “Support for this Definition”. Given this, it cannot be reasonably inferred that developing consciousness is the key determining factor for harm.
- Under this revised interpretation (where a person is that who will develop consciousness), this just seems to be another FLO argument, which has been addressed in the FLO section.
- “Alleged dropped argument”
- A lot (almost every one) of the things Savant alleges CON to have dropped can be responded to in the same way. In this particular case, killing a child is plausibly worse than killing an adult. But the proposed view on personhood is only supposed to get you so far as to say that they are both persons (it is after all just a personhood criterion). There’s no issue with saying that killing the child is worse because they could have potential sentience, because the child is already a person and hence can be subjects of harm
- “Revised Coma Analogy”
- (I recommend reading Savant's analogy before reading my response as I will not pasting it in its entirety here)
- “Presumably we would say that they deprived the child of a long life and that many opportunities were stolen from them”
- In particular, we would say that a person has been deprived of a long life. Indeed, claiming a child has been harmed only makes sense if the child is a person. Thus, CON’s framework still undergirds any claim that such a murderer is wrong.
- “Suppose the murderer revealed that the comatose child was actually not sentient in the past… Con’s view holds that this information alone should absolve the killer of any moral culpability”.
- Per the argument presented in I. Permissibility of abortion actions are wrong if they violate moral entitlements or have morally unacceptable consequences. Just because in this case the child is revealed to not have moral entitlements does not mean the action is morally acceptable.
- For example, suppose there is a sting operation where a man hires a hitman (who is actually a government agent) to kill his wife. Because it is a set up, no one is ever close to being assassinated. Even though there is no rights violation in this situation, the action still has morally unacceptable consequences.
- In the same way, telling the parents of comatose children that their child has been murdered is not a rights violation (because the child isn’t a person by definition), but that does not in any way make it any more permissible. The action is wrong in the same way that hiring a sting hitman is wrong (which is to say, very wrong).
- “Alleged dropped argument”
- Same as above. Missed opportunities are harmful insofar as they are indexed to a person.
- Engineer example
- I recommend voters reread my engineer counterexamples to the FLO before reading Savant's rebuttal and my reply.
- “The robot isn’t growing or doing anything with the energy yet to push itself toward a form capable of having conscious experiences. However, an unborn child has an internal growth process that pushes it toward sentience even though said process must be aided by external nutrients”
- This is a difference without substance. Given this is an analogy, CON can just stipulate into the hypothetical that all these facts are true. Just as how the unborns internal growth is “pushing” itself towards an eventual sentient experience through the aid of external nutrients (the mother umbilical cord) it can be stipulated that the robot is also “pushing” and “developing” itself and using external nutrients (the charger) to fulfil this end.
- “Unplugging the charger doesn’t disrupt any internal processes in the robot”
- This is completely wrong. It can be stipulated in the hypothetical that the robot is using the energy to sustain its internal processes of eventually gaining sentience, and that absent the charging, the robot will not have the “nutrients” to sustain itself, and will eventually become unserviceable.
- Ultimately, Savant tries to circumvent the analogy with odd naturalistic fallacies (like saying that charging isn’t a bodily function, the robot isn’t growing etc). This makes no sense given FLO doesn’t place any restrictions on substrate, and cares about pure potentiality (so the vehicle of the FLO should never matter).
- To challenge Savant on this point, I ask them specifically - what needs to be true of the robot such that killing it becomes immoral? CON has already stipulated that the robot has internal processes (some wires and electricity), is developing (using the energy from the charger to grow) and that it will experience sentience in the near future (like a fetus). Simply, there is no trait left that can be equalised, besides some unconvincing appeal to the moral primacy of biological flesh (which frankly is the only distinction left).
- Voters can recognise that the engineer's robot is, in all philosophically relevant respects, identical to a pre-sentient baby. Because it is clearly absurd to say that such a robot is a person, the FLO account of rights fails.
- “ Hence, voters should accept this premise as given; if a fetus has personhood, the resolution is affirmed”
- This is clearly incorrect, per p1 of the original argument. Things can be wrong even if there is no person who is being violated (recall the hitman example).
- A keen eye may observe that this seems to exclude hypothetical babies who have never been sentient, but will be in a short period of time. Surely it’s wrong to kill these individuals?
- To address this, I (in the first round mind you) presented a symmetrical case in an attempt to show why the analogy is not so absurd. Take this baby which we intuitively think has moral entitlements, by virtue of it almost being sentient (note that it is this trait which the objector maintains is problematic) . Now, let’s say that we replicate this baby, where its skin becomes plastic, its organs become synthetic and its hair becomes thread. It is, in ordinary parlance, a doll, except that it will in the future become sentient (remember this is the trait which is being tested). In this case, would it be wrong to kill such a doll? The answer seems to be no. Why would we care about some plastic doll just because in the future it could become something we care about (note how sperm and egg also could become something we care about, yet most of us don’t consider masturbation a sin.)?
- Savant provides several responses to this defence
- “It’s not abductively virtuous”
- This point was already refuted. Abduction is an inference to the best explanation not the first explanation. Just because something is not immediately intuitive does not count against it as an explanation, just like how the world intuitively seeming to be prima facie flat does not provide abductive justification for this position. Savant attempts to refute this reply by saying that I don’t defend my position with science like the globe earther does but this is obviously a tangential point. This does not challenge the initial rebuttal that immediate intuitions furnish abductive justifications.
- “It’s needlessly complicated”
- First, the example is clearly not complicated - the reason for selecting a doll is to remove the fact that it is a human being in question (an inherently normatively loaded category) with something neutral, to assess whether the trait being questioned is actually problematic.
- Second, complication is no defence. Consider Davidson’s ostensibly ridiculous “swamp man” analogy as a prominent example.
- “Attempted reversal”
- Savant specifically claims “Con also holds that (a) a person who has temporarily transformed into a non sentient doll, and (b) a doll that was sentient in the past and will be in the future, are persons”.
- Both of these points are essentially equivalent to the “corpses fit the conjunct” criticism which Savant has dropped (the response can be read here and stands uncontested). In short
- A standard non sentient doll (without the predicate of “will be sentient”) is not capable of sentience and hence a transformation into it is equivalent to death.
- Even if this were an issue, CON can just stipulate that a person has to be sentient in the future. In any case, the rebuttal has no impact on the resolution.
- “Biting the bullet”
- Savant seems to bite the bullet when stating that given the ability to apply my theory to such an entity, they would say that the entity is a person, but it makes no sense to apply our intuition to dolls since this being is hardly an ordinary doll.
- Savant has gotten it completely backwards. The question being asked is “does it make sense to kill an entity E who is at the stage of pre-sentience”. Savant argues it doesn’t and substitutes E with a pre-sentient baby. I argue it does and substitute E with a doll. Clearly then, the ickiness of pre sentient babies elicited when selecting an E which is normatively loaded (a baby, thereby begging the question), and the ickiness disappears when selecting something normatively neutral (a doll). Given this, we can see the power of Savant's critique exists only when we consider an entity who we already usually think is a person, and not when we consider a normatively neutral entity.
- This analogy was presented here by Savant. Essentially, given my criteria of past and present sentience, Savant argues that someone could hypothetically kill a mothers child and exonerate themself if they reveal that the baby was never actually sentient. I claimed that this is a clear violation of p3 given its unacceptable social consequences.
- Savant's latest rebuttal claims that under my theory, the wrongness of such an action is indexed to the mother, and that absent her negative feelings, the action would be considered heroic. This is clearly incorrect. Suppose a man hires a hitman to kill his wife. Yet, the hitman is actually a government agent, and the wife is in on it. So the man pays the hitman to have his wife “killed”, without knowing that no such action will ever take place. Now suppose that the wife gets cold feet and in a heap of irrationality, pleads for her husband to be free. She is so convincing that even the government agents start sympathising for her. In such a case, it is clear that despite the feelings of the victim or even those around, actions can still be immoral. In Savant's analogy, the wrongness of killing the baby is not indexed to the mothers psychological states.
- The FLO account of harm can be thoroughly dismantled with the engineer example (first presented here). Despite this being my primary criticism of their entire position, Savant unfortunately does not offer much defence in the last round, opting to group this with the doll analogy.
- However, the final remark on the analogy seems to be a bite of the bullet - “with this stipulation, I would hold that a non sentient “robot” in the process of gaining sentience is no less a person than a currently-sentient robot or a robot that used to be sentient and will regain sentience”.
- Voters should recognise how absurd this is. To say that not charging a robot to 100% battery and preventing it from deploying sentience is tantamount to murder is simply ridiculous. The FLO account makes no distinction between preventing this robot from being charged with killing a standard human person. Hence, Savants accounts of rights should be vehemtly rejected.
- Contrast this to CON’s proposed theory, which does respect this critical distinction. Because the doll has never been sentient, there is obviously nothing wrong with not charging it and giving it a sentient experience, and doing so is certainly incomparable to murder.
- To show how absurd Savant's position is, I raised the sand analogy (first presented here). Essentially, because the FLO account only places the FLO as its only predicate for affording personhood (and not any restrictions on what this being may be), a grain of sand can be said to have rights. If we say that an omnipotent deity makes it such that a given grain of sand will in an hour mutate into a sentient being, it will satisfy the criteria of having an FLO and under Savant's view, be a person.
- Savant tries to refute this by saying that the sand requires something to add its bodily function. This can easily be stipulated away in the proposed analogy. It can be said that the omnipotent deity has made it such that every molecule in the grain of sand, upon divine intervention, is slowly acting in such a way that it will become a sentient entity at some future time.
- Voters might think this is absurd, but such an example is simply a consequence of Savants position. Under their theory of harm, all that matters is whether an entity can be deprived of a future. A counter example can be constructed if we just imagine that some arbitrary object (like a grain of sand) is developing in such a way that in some future time, it will become sentient. Under Savant's view, breaking this object is tantamount to murder.
- The issue could be better illuminated when considering CON’s remedy. Given my proposed theory does place restrictions on features which the entity must currently possess (it must currently be sentient or have been sentient), rocks and sand are immediately excluded.
- This has been dropped throughout the debate and should be taken as conceeded.
- In defence of this premise, I presented studies which suggeted that abortion access is correlated with economic freedom. Savant rightly points out the correlation is not causation. However, the burden of proof to substantiate the positive claim is on Savant. Imagine you wanted to prove that legal drug access didn’t harm society. One way could be to show that countries with legal access are generally happier. Even though this is correlative, it still provides prima facie reason for believing in the proposition. However, the strongest evidence for the statement is the absence of any positive justification for the contrary - that is, proof that drug uses causes social disharmony. So whilst causation may be preferenced over correlation, the burden is ultimately on Savant to prove that abortion has negative effects on society.
- I argued that preventing abortions from occuring would harm society. I showed this by pointing at the dangers of illegal abortions. Savant attempted to refute this by saying that the harms of illegal abortions count in favour for the proposition (they actually said this here). I rejoined by pointing out the clear absurdity of this - just like how the badness of being black in the 60’s comes from a racist society, the badness of illegal abortions comes from harmful legislation.
- Savants latest rebuttal is to say that being black is not a choice whereas getting an abortion is. This is a completely tangential rebuttal which fails to capture my response. Instead of being black in the 60’s the example can be substituted with acting out homosexuality (I specify “acting out” so Savant cannot say that it is not a choice). Clearly then, the baddness of being gay in the 60’s come from society, yet it would be absurd to make the argument that “being gay is bad because you’ll get attacked”, when the wrong maker clearly lies in the hands of society.
- I argued that legal abortions are safe, and beneficial to women's mental health. This was never disputed by Savant, hence it stands conceded.
- Savant fails to understand the purpose of this premise . In assessing the social impacts, we are not considering whether the action is a moral violation (that dispute was left in p2). This premise asks whether there are undesirable social consequences. For instance, suppose we apply my syllogism to test whether drug legalisation is moral, and per p2, we find that (strangely) every instance of drug use is so dehabiliting that its users cannot provide informed consent and hence have their rights violated. Having established this, if we then move on the p3 to consider whether there are any deleterious social impacts (does drug use affect communities, GDP, family, etc), we would not go back to pointing at the rights violation that drug use entails. Thus, Savant commits the same category error.
- (Basically all of Savants arguments here commit the same error so keep this point in mind)
- This argument fails for the above reasons. In calculating loss of GDP, the paper begs the question by considering the unborn to be people who are tangible economic stakeholders. Its success hinges on the presupposition that the unborn are people, which is precisely what is not what is up for debate in this section (that would be for p2). As such, this rebuttal simply begs the question in favour of the resolution.
RFD in comments
#92
#93
#94
I apologize in advance for any lack of clarity on this, I didn't do my normal line-by-line and tried to summarize bigger thoughts about how things played out and why. The tl;dr is that both sides framed this debate very well, but Con's framing undercut Pro's in some key ways that were never fully addressed.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1do48hk65SzxYNUTnwekObxq1S0kiy99SyDqVYQRNBTI/edit?usp=sharing
you can skip to last 20 minutes of video maybe last 10 minutes for a summary of the RFD i will say the video will take another 10 minutes to display on youtube after i leave this comment
https://youtu.be/Zlw5vZ5277E
Yes, you were. Muhammad had IQ of 50. Thats why he made brilliant statements such as:
"The Prophet said "If a house fly falls in the drink of anyone of you, he should dip it (in the drink) and take it out, for one of its wings has a disease and the other has the cure for the disease."
So I have been victim blaming this whole time?
> marry 12 year olds?
You mean 9 year olds, at least in Iraq where they take Muhammad seriously… Granted, at least they don’t allow old dudes to marry 6 year olds and groom them until they’re 9 before raping them, as Muhammad did.
But in fairness, I’ve seen it argued that she was a prodigy, and he was mentally handicapped, resulting in an inversion of who raped who.
Lets get this straight I don't blaspheme Allah, you do when you claim obvious frauds or pedophiles are his prophets
Child assault is more common in western countries even though you guys marry 12 year olds?
"when i curse someone they call me magician"
Great liars are great magicians, yes.
I am out of here.
i do not want to mention your name at all, it is going to be blasphemy. i even do not want to chat with you because you are mocking Allah. but there is going to be punishment for it if i call for it. this has been the case on DDO as well.
even atheist were called me magician then lol
when i curse someone they call me magician and they even do not believe in magic.
it was funny
its like funny moment, when we shared some food or touched the tip of lips to, how can i explain the gesture. its its taken as funny gesture. when you are in mood of teasing each other with kids. though i stopped doing it when my child was 1 and half as i get to know that its harmful because of germs. but its possible. we do not put our children in crib on another room. they sleeps with us and we awake for at least 5 years for them. almost 5 times my kid let me awake in night, sometime for toilet sometime water sometime feeling itching, like that. its full time duty. just like right now she is plucking my my beard so hard so that i can listen her nasheed. my kid is more attached to me then her mother. we are so much possessive for them. and always keep eyes on them. I know its very different in west. even she now 3 and half still i feed her with my own hands. simply its all about minds. our minds are not dirty. its proven here that western minds are very much twisted.
its like funny moment, when we shared some food or touched the tip of lips to, how can i explain the gesture. its its taken as funny gesture. when you are in mood of teasing each other with kids. though i stopped doing it when my child was 1 and half as i get to know that its harmful because of germs. but its possible. we do not put our children in crib on another room. they sleeps with us and we awake for at least 5 years for them. almost 5 times my kid let me awake in night, sometime for toilet sometime water sometime feeling itching, like that. its full time duty. just like right now she is plucking my my beard so hard so that i can listen her nasheed. my kid is more attached to me then her mother. we are so much possessive for them. and always keep eyes on them. I know its very different in west. even she now 3 and half still i feed her with my own hands. simply its all about minds. our minds are not dirty. its proven here that western minds are very much twisted.
And stop sending me threats in private messages lol
Maybe on lips is more common, but most people dont do that. As for tongue, who does that?
https://www.parents.com/i-kiss-my-daughter-on-the-lips-regularly-but-is-that-weird-parents-are-divided-11721254?utm_source=chatgpt.com
2. Psychological and Parenting Research:
Dr. Charlotte Reznick, a child psychologist at UCLA, stirred controversy by saying lip-kissing could be confusing for children. However, many psychologists disagreed with her.
Dr. Paul Hokemeyer, a family therapist, said:
"In the vast majority of cases, it's a healthy expression of love."
According to an article published in Psychology Today, physical affection like kissing, hugging, and cuddling builds emotional security and attachment in children. The exact form (cheek, lip, forehead) is secondary to the emotional intent and cultural context.
🔹 3. Surveys & Forums:
Parenting forums like Mumsnet, Reddit, and BabyCenter show that many Western parents say:
“I kiss my kids on the lips. It’s completely normal in our family.”
A 2015 poll in the UK (via YouGov) found that **around
You said:
give me links
ChatGPT said:
Here are several reputable articles and sources that discuss whether Western parents kiss their children on the lips—and explore the debates around this practice:
📂 1. News Coverage & Personal Experiences
Parents.com (April 2025) — “I Kiss My Daughter on the Lips Regularly—But Is That ‘Weird’?" A Reddit-fueled discussion. Many parents sharing photos validated lip-kissing, while others—including abuse survivors—said they'd avoid it. Cultural context was seen as key. The article concludes that parents should follow their values and not judge others.
BollywoodShaadis+13Parents+13Global News+13
Glamour (2017) — Olivia Wilde was criticized online after posting herself kissing her son on the lips, similar to Hilary Duff facing backlash. These incidents highlight how Western celebs sometimes spark debate even when acting within their family culture.
Glamour
🧠 2. Health & Psychology Perspectives
Parents Canada — Affirms that in many Western families it’s a platonic, non-sexual gesture. Dr. Alan Manevitz notes that intimacy (hugging, tickling, kissing) has positive developmental effects. Ultimately it comes down to cultural and family norms.
Parents Canada+1The Times of India+1
Neurolaunch (Sept 2024) — Discusses cultural differences and psychological implications. Points out many psychologists believe affectionate gestures build attachment, while some (like Dr. Charlotte Reznick) caution it could blur boundary distinctions.
The Times of India+2NeuroLaunch.com+2Littleremedies+2
ScienceTimes — Highlights that physical affection—including lip kisses—can boost emotional bonding and self-esteem in children. But experts also warn it should be coupled with clear boundaries and sensitivity to the child’s comfort level.
Science Times
🌍 3. Cultural Examples & Celebrity Cases
Global News / Today — Reports on David Beckham posting photos kissing his daughter Harper on the lips, which drew both praise and criticism. Parenting experts note such behavior reflects cultural upbringing and family norms.
The Times of India+2Global News+2People.com+2
Little Remedies / People/Yahoo lifestyle sections — Feature numerous celebrities (Hilary Duff, Victoria Beckham, David Beckham, Jessica Alba) who unapologetically kiss their children on the lips—despite public backlash. Many have defended the practice as perfectly natural and loving.
Littleremedies
📊 4. Public Opinion & Forum Discussions
Reddit threads (e.g. /r/TrueUnpopularOpinion) — Although some users strongly object to lip-kissing their children (citing concerns over association with romantic context and health risks), the majority argue it’s a harmless and affectionate gesture—and that objections are often projecting adult connotations onto innocent behavior.
Reddit
✅ Summary Table
Claim Evidence/Sources
Many Western parents kiss children on the lips Parenting stories and surveys in Parents.com, Parents Canada
Celebrities practice it and defend it publicly Multiple press reports on Beckham, Duff, Wilde, etc.
Psychological support exists—but with caveats Experts highlight benefits for bonding, but stress boundaries and child comfort.
Debate reflects cultural norms and personal preferences Articles and forums show strong division based on upbringing and values.
🧭 Final Thoughts
Yes—there is solid evidence from news articles, psychological experts, personal anecdotes, and public discourse that many Western parents—including high-profile figures—do kiss their children on the lips. Commonly, it's viewed as a non-sexual, affectionate gesture within the private family setting. However, opinions differ widely: some experts and commenters warn about potential boundary confusion or cultural discomfort, while others see no harm when done sensitively and age-appropriately.
Ultimately, it remains a personal and cultural choice—acceptable and meaningful for some families, uncomfortable or inappropriate for others.
1. Public Examples (Cultural Evidence):
David Beckham (UK) has shared photos kissing his daughter on the lips. This sparked public debate, but he defended it as a normal loving act.
Tom Brady (USA), an American football quarterback, also kissed his son on the lips in a documentary, which sparked online discussion, again showing how normal it is in many families.
Celebrities like Hilary Duff, Jessica Alba, and Victoria Beckham have also shared similar moments, receiving both support and criticism.
These examples reflect what many families do, but also show it's not universally accepted—even in the West.
chatgpt response.
Yes, many Western people do kiss their children on the lips as a way of showing affection, especially when the children are young. It is considered normal and innocent in many families, particularly in countries like the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and parts of Europe.
However:
It varies by culture, family tradition, and personal comfort.
As kids grow older, most families naturally stop lip-kissing and shift to hugs, forehead kisses, or cheek kisses.
Some people, even in the West, find it inappropriate and prefer other ways to show love, like cuddling or saying "I love you."
So it’s not universal, but very common and usually not seen as sexual or inappropriate—just a tender, loving gesture from parent to child.
because you got herpes probably that's why or because do oral sex maybe that is why and also lick dogs. we keep our mouth clean and it helps develop their immune system with normal food related bacteria.
you are fucked up man, I have seen myself even western people kissing kids on lips. your brains are so fucked up that even you have disgusting feelings while kissing your own children?
while I have never felt that way for any child no matter what.
that is why child abuser and sexual assault are most in western countries. you think I am dumb? if you dare debate with me about this topic or any topic. your brain already fucked and not even single plausible argument comes out from you. I am just wasting my time and efforts. you are not only piece of shit but also disgusting man. you never come up with evidence.
its just my last reply to you just like i was ignoring your other account brotherDthomson.
"I have a kid too whom I kiss on lips and sometime we play where we touch each others tongue too"
People in west or in most world generally dont do that to their kids.
Congrats on the win, btw. I'm gonna archive this before the site goes down.
Looking forward to a third debate, but unfortunately it will have to wait until the new site becomes usable. I think DART is going down at any moment, and we got lucky that this debate made it to the end of the voting period before that happened.
"I have a kid too whom I kiss on lips and sometime we play where we touch each others tongue too. "
What the fuck lol. You are either a troll or deranged. You absolutely should not be french kissing your son. You should hug them or maybe a kiss on the cheek not lips WTF
one more thing which I forget, Hassan (RA) was the grandson of prophet Muhammad saw. I have a kid too whom I kiss on lips and sometime we play where we touch each others tongue too. Its parents children bond.
If you did not see this in your childhood then you have lived in retarded shit environment.
This is normal for parents to show love for their children.
you deserve only licking of dogs, their favorite food is poop.
but we have kids to whom we love and cherish.
if you had sound mind you would have dig into the matter. But a retard brain only think negative about anything.
i think you are brotherDthomson.
people like you are burning by your own rage, you need some therapy.
If you do not back down, then be ready for punishment. what is your purpose on earth? I pray to Allah to take you away if there is no chance for you but if their is little hope then give you hadaya ameen.
this is my last message for you.
you are cursed.
that is why i said you are lost cause.
look his profile
I believe in the right to speak dangerously.
Not to provoke for ego — but to carve truth from noise.
When the censors tighten their grip, the only answer is to build.
I'm helping forge something new — a sovereign platform where speech is free, minds are sharp, and censorship is not a threat but a weakness.
It’s called The Arena.
It’s in development now — a place where debates are unfiltered, contributions are anonymous, and only strength of argument determines your worth.
If you're a:
Developer who wants to contribute without doxxing yourself
Thinker tired of being muzzled
Or someone who’s ready to help build a free speech machine
We speak loudest when they hope we go silent.
And we’re just getting started.
this retard dog mentioned this in his profile.
I'm helping forge something new — a sovereign platform where speech is free, minds are sharp, and censorship is not a threat but a weakness.
As president I command you to ban tigerlord( the guy who wears dresses and is an open pedophile apologist) from voting. he admits he only votes when he agrees with a position and his RFDs are crafted to justify a win for the side he agrees with.
We should probably just ban muslims from voting at all. you see every other group willing to engage with logic and vote against positions they believe in and this is absent from those. plus these people are both pedophiles with the highest regions of child marraiges in the world. https://www.girlsnotbrides.org/learning-resources/child-marriage-atlas/atlas/
they are also likely intellectually incapable of being logical due to the high rate of inbreeding. ilhan omer married her brother for god sake but the whole incest thing is common among muslims, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cousin_marriage_in_the_Middle_East
plus they are intellectually dishonest as they simultaneously ban being a fag while also wearing dresses and worshipping a guy who admits to sucking the tongue of young boys..
Musnad Ahmad 16245—[Mua’wiya said]: "I saw the prophet sucking on the tongue or the lips of Al-Hassan son of Ali, may the prayers of Allah be upon him. For no tongue or lips that the prophet sucked on will be tormented
"conservatism is childish and feminine for your societies"
I stopped reading here. the fact you think its childish to oppose kids transitioning and promote border security is retarded.
It seems that when Bones and Savant debate, whoever gets last word wins, mainly because both know how to use the most out of last word. I predict that 3rd debate likewise will be won by whoever gets to be contender.
and, if I would have little time, I would have given vote to savant and you could not do anything about it.
TBH for me he won it, but I am very lazy and I deep dive into everything and leave no room for any accusation for any one, so it was enough for me to vote while reading even 60 to 80 percent of debate and analyzing it not completely.
you piece of garbage shut up and mind your own business, I do not have any time for the person whom value is nothing more then a piece of shit.
conservatism is childish and feminine for your societies in fact it has become norms of people of this time. your brains are so rotten even getting little emotional feels like feminine. that is why you retard support israel for killing little babies. you are simple a piece of shit on face of earth.
if I become toxic then you complain when i become emotional and respectful you call it feminine? by the way everybody has his feminine % in it, can you tell me what is purpose of nipples on your chest? and why men has prolactin? in fact their is time in womb of mother you cannot determine your gender. tell me why men has progesterone?
men has male hormones and female has male hormones, we are born from mothers. kids has feminine voice when they are children and they cry like girls. but you will find strange those times for me were absent or very short because i was precocious puberty. your women wear geans and men too, they wear shorts and men too. we have a lot of things common two legs two arms one nose and two eyes even women have short hairs and men long. so only difference is two reproductive organs. we are not much different that is why we are same specie.
you guys have retarded brains and have complex.
in fact its more of misogynistic, because you make it sound like having emotions is not manly things and its something of low value thing. if that is so then why you are pissed when women left you? why you feel like lost dogs and even commit suicide when dumped by women? is it the extreme level of famine attribute where you could not digest it? I have faced it and faced it like man. the way you are provoking me is more feminine and more of childish. I am a father and i lost my two kids because of miscarriage of my wife so i can understand when a wanted pregnancy is that much painful then if people abort it by themselves its strange. but how can a retard understand it who back fcking zionist who killed thousands of kids in gaza. you are indeed a piece of shit on face of earth.
now fck off retard.
I need to grow up but you literally can't remove the emotional and feminine part of your brain that forces you to be logical? It's all
"that side won but their conclusion hurts my feelings so I can't vote for them"
Literally stop being a female. I should expect this though given you worship somebody who wrote of sucking on the tongue of a little boy and you literally wear a dress.
you are lost cause.
son grow up.
40 minutes was not enough time for me to read.
Pro Round 1
"but suppose there’s only a 2% chance that is the case." - Pro
"a human being is formed at conception."
Earlier argued sperm always be sperm, but not so with sperm 'and egg.
Argues human rights,
Expected flaw though, is human body not always person. Brain dead, missing head, not yet 'having brain.
. . . Counterargument, something being immoral, does not mean it 'can'not be done.
Pros arguments value human and person chance.
They don't need argue abortion 'can'not be taken, abortion can be lesser evil, but abortion still wrong.
. . .
I'm not sure killing a person without memories is murder, nor that killing dementia patients is wrong. As without memories I'm not sure one 'is a person. And dementia is pretty horrible, some people would prefer death. Course one could argue that it is only moral to kill people who requested they be killed.
Operation thought experiment only applies to 'expectation of a person. If there was to be no person, then blinding something that is not a person/animal would not be immoral so long as you destroy it before it can become person or animal.
Though there is still argument for immoral, just less so. Leaving gum on the bottom of a dining table, seems to me immoral.
Con Round 1
Argues we don't abort people.
"non-trivial sentience"
General abductive motivations
. . . Eh, what 'is non-trivial sentience, 'technically, I'm not sure that newborn babies have more than trivial sentience, but backlash against killing them would be huge.
Because of what they are/will be, as Pro argued earlier.
"p1. An action is morally impermissible if it violates the moral entitlements of a person or it has morally unacceptable consequences. "
Argues morality 'only applies to people, eh, what a person 'does effects them. So even destroying a flag can be an immoral act, due to effect it has on the destroyer.
"doll"
I think the human has more value by being 'human. Normative values.
Still. . . It's a good argument by Con.
Uses sources on sentience, asleep/awake,
Makes more obvious I 'think that Con argues for far earlier abortions than 'late abortions.
Sliding scale/Spectrum, often issue with Abortion debates.
Argues most abortions take place before source defined sentience.
"Does it violate other people’s rights?"
Argues GDP and economic freedom.
Sources,
Robot.
Round 1 Thoughts
Though my 'personal opinion is with Pro,
I've 'currently have to vote Con,
They focus argument on personhood, and 'specify 'time of abortion, very well.
Pro Round 2
"risking"
Where does the 2% 'come from?
"unborn child will “develop the capacity for consciousness unless directly harmed,” similarly to a coma patient. This is not true of a philosophical zombie."
"reduction in life years"
There is 'still problem of there being no person deprived.
“There are several reasons to believe that entities are persons if and only if they have (i) actualizable interests (ii) or [had] interests [at] some prior mental state”
Corpses and human bits.
Surely we must decide one is person at some point, and no longer at some point?
Course one can argue fetus is such a stage.
8 minutes. Curse word.
Babies are babies and dolls are dolls.
Synthetic magic doll.
Potential experiences brain dead vs coma.
Correlation does not imply causation.
Legality of abortion and social consequentialism
Con Round 2
Coma retain.
4 minutes.
Doll argument not convincing, though, if we prevent meeting X not exist.
Sources regret
Con provides more evidence 'for even if Correlation does not imply causation.
1:30
Abortion 'still bad even with permissive laws.
Just because law 'allows slavery doesn't make it right.
Just because greater good, not mean small action not wrong.
"claiming a child has been harmed only makes sense if the child is a person. "+
"external nutrients (the charger)"+
Round 2 Thoughts
I don't think Pro manages enough proof of sentience, or value of potential sentience.
Pro Round 3
Where does the 2% chance come from?
"Con’s case largely does not even attempt to establish certainty"
If you could bring the chance up to 2% I think I'd agree with Pro, but they need something to 'argue that 2% exists.
"The Un intuitiveness of considering robots and dolls to be persons is due to the fact that they are robots and dolls, entities that do not develop consciousness and are neither sentient nor presentient." +
How do you hyperlink to a portion of the text in the debate?
Con concedes that “killing a child is plausibly worse than killing an adult,”
I'm not sure it is. Objectively. Subjectively sure according to 'some cultures.
"The effects of banning abortion are irrelevant to the morality of abortion itself."
Eh, societies with 'no contraceptives or abortions have been harmed in some nations histories.
Con Round 3
"when does an entity become a person with moral entitlements, and does abortion have deleterious social consequences? "
I'm not sure debate 'does boil down to that, Pro takes a different direction on moral than consequences on society as whole.
And I'm not sure on the person argument.
"Why would we care about some plastic doll just because in the future it could become something we care about (note how sperm and egg also could become something we care about"
Well, there's expectation and 'what they are.
A fetus 'is a 'new human of sorts. A sperm isn't.
"Savant argues that someone could hypothetically kill a mothers child and exonerate themself if they reveal that the baby was never actually sentient. I claimed that this is a clear violation of p3 given its unacceptable social consequences. "
'What social consequences, if everyone agrees with your logic?
At 'most they get a fine.
If the charging robot is as 'real as the fetus, then it 'would be as wrong as killing the fetus.
It 'can't be a 'normal robot charging to 100% if it's gaining sentience.
Mutating is different than 'could mutate.
Final Thoughts
At a 'skim, I couldn't say who I'd vote for.
I 'suspect I'd vote arguments tie, as both focused on different angles.
I suspect sources Con, but I'd have to read through them all to be sure.
Legibility and conduct, probably a tie.
" My nature is I do not give vote against my moral values.
So its better to give Tie then unjust vote."
SO how debates work is you vote fir which side won, not which side agrees with you. You aren't voting on if the person is correct so kind of retarded take.
"TBH it would not be unjust vote if I could put more time in the debate there was good room to vote against bones"
Admitting you wouldn't vote for the side that won if you had more time but instead would use the time to try and justify a vote for the side you agree with. I wish this wasn't typical but you guys crash planes into civilian buildings and as we saw with hamas, you also literally will go into countries and rape and torture random civilians including little boys. SO it doesn't surprise me that given the choice of an evil vs non evil action you would choose evil.
We are one and one, the only right way to resolve this is a third debate ;)
Bones
Bones ( Con): Abortion is Permissible
Core Principle: An action is morally impermissible only if it violates the moral entitlements of a person or leads to morally unacceptable consequences.
Personhood: Defined strictly based on "non-trivial interest" (sentience), either present or past. Argued that a fetus, particularly in the early stages (before 13 weeks, when 93% of abortions occur), does not meet this criterion and therefore is not a "person" with moral entitlements.
Consequences: Asserted that abortion does not have morally unacceptable consequences, as it's a voluntary choice for the mother (who typically doesn't regret it), and legal abortion is associated with positive societal indicators like higher GDP.
Legality vs. Morality: Distinguished between the act of abortion itself and the harmful consequences of making it illegal (e.g., increased maternal mortality from unsafe procedures).
conclusion:
If this would have been my debate I could add more, TBH three rounds are way too short for this kind of debate. If it would have been five round savant would have done even more.
As I am inclined toward the pro's stance so I just given suggestion, what would have good for me to make better decision. My nature is I do not give vote against my moral values.
So its better to give Tie then unjust vote.
while TBH it would not be unjust vote if I could put more time in the debate there was good room to vote against bones.
But at this point I think it would be unreasonable to vote against him. Also it was more of emotional appeal from savant side even he had invested very good arguments.
overall it was very hard debate for debating as well as voting.
It would have been even more solid from bones if he would have not presented robot and doll and also zombie analogy.
A fetus is a human being and end up as human being neither a robot nor a zombie.
If you have disable child it does not mean he is entitles to less personhood.
Parents abort most of time economical issues and pregnancy become unwanted when they are enjoying sex for their bodily pleasure and end up being pregnant. They say they are not ready, and it was a mistake.
there is a lot I can say about debate. but as its a tie so I think its enough.
A good debate.
savant:
Duty: Posited a moral duty to save and support the fetus, especially since dependency is created through consensual acts.
Bones:
Mother has right to abort and most of them do not feel regret.
Suggestion:
I have see the sources and it says after 5 years, I think any murderer would feel at ease after 5 years. How much a guilt can be measure sometimes people even themselves are not aware of it yet they subconsciously feeling it. That is because of norms of society and even articles mentioned that sometime people feel it more because of society.
so this criteria is not good to judge and declare that they are relieved from their duty to up bring the unwanted pregnancy while they morn when a wanted pregnancy is aborted because of inevitable consequences. We have seen cases where parent wanted to abort but they cannot whether the pregnancy is late or because of some other reason, later when their children know about that they feel very much hurt and sad that their parents wanted to kill them. So if a person already have a child he or she will feel more regretful when aborting. While a young one who has their first child may not feel that much its very much subjective.
Savant:
Societal Impact: Claimed abortion has negative societal consequences, such as reducing GDP and shrinking the labor force.
Bones:
No Violation of Rights most women do it with consent and have no regret.
GDP Argument Presupposes Personhood.
Correlation vs. Causation
Harm from Illegality, Not Abortion Itself
suggestion:
I already discussed that, the study shows the regret after 5 years, its natural a person would move on in life for any kind of bad action after that long.
This is universal truth that every person is born through this way, so its not supposition that a fetus will not become a person. A fetus is a person while at microscopic level and size should not matter here. Its same argument a small child has no rights as compare to adult person. Its scientific fact that every fetus no matter at what will end up as grown up human being if there is anomalies or sickness and pregnancy goes smoothly. Aborting a pregnancy is aborting a process which produce human. On the other hand its totally unnatural, no animal has this tendency its Human invented procedure which use cutting of limbs of babies if the gestation is older.
We can see china and japan are at crisis and soon will face it even more dramatically, because young are very less compare to retired. It look like its helping economy for one or two generation but eventually its can lead to disasters to societies. Ask bestkorea about it, I have seen whining him about it. LOL.
No matter what you say abortion causes medical issues and pain to even mother, they may induce anesthesia at the time of procedure but when the effects goes away there is some pain later. abortion during early pregnancy are induced by medication, and they are very harmful to women. Even prevention pills are harmful.
whether legal or illegal both involves spending money, while natural birth cost nothing and a child, if grow up put some value to economy and its up to society to utilize it.
It was good option in DDO that you say I agree before the debate or I agree after debate.
here I agree with Pro before and after the debate.
This debate is very hard to vote for each side.
Savant:
Core Principle: Introduced the "Uncertainty Principle," arguing that even a small chance (e.g., 2%) of an unborn child being a rights-bearing person makes abortion immoral due to the immense potential harm (loss of an entire life) compared to the burden of pregnancy.
Bones:
Bones stated that 93% of abortions occur before 13 weeks gestation, which gives 7% more then 2% from even his side to be able to feel sentience. Which was his criteria to make a baby person.
Suggestion:
It would have been good argument from savant that, a sperm is living organism, but being microscopic it would not be consider as a person because no matter what it will remain that way while a fertilized egg which is effort and consent of two individual mother and father through sacred act of sexual intercourse and always end up as a human child should be considered a human life even being at the stage of microscopic level. For example a person who inject a deadly virus into someone even being microscopic organism is crime and punishable. So the depth of consequences which is universal truth that a egg is fertilized by sperm end up as a human child and then a human being should be considered as human being no matter at what level. One could not say a one year child do not have equal rights as compare to 50 year old especially the right to live.
savant:
Harm: Argued that abortion constitutes direct harm by "impeding existing bodily functions" and depriving a potential person of future conscious experiences and "life years."
Bones:
Bones stated that in 93% cases abortion is done before 13 week of gestation and at this stage fetus is not sentience.
Suggestion:
There are people in the world who do not feel pain, we can go and kill them? If a person is under anesthesia, we can kill them too?
the basis is not very good to justify abortion.
Pro starts off by building the groundwork of his case, namely explaining his use of analogy (re: if A is sufficiently equivalent to B, and A is immoral, then B is also immoral). And he defines harm as the deprivation of utility which would otherwise be enjoyed in the present or future. This definition doesn't seem to cover pain but I guess that's fine for an abortion debate. His intent is to force Con to accept the full implications of whatever points Con might concede in this debate.
With this out of the way, he opens with a heavy hitting offensive arguing how abortion deprives unborn humans of their expected lifespan, how fatal abandonment of a dependent unborn human by medical means is equivalent to deprivation, etc. While Savant is a much better debater than I am/was, it does give me a hint of pride to point out that I've come up with some of the same arguments he uses here, namely relating to the comatose patient who will wake up in 9 months. His attempt to distinguish sperm from zygotes, I think, hinged too heavily on language of "adding bodily functions" when he could've more plainly said that a sperm in itself has no future development to speak of. But whatever.
He also cites a survey where 96% of biologists agreed that life begins at personhood; while this more supports his position than doesn't, I'll raise the same objection that I did in Savant's previous abortion debate that I voted on, which is that it's "outside their purview to empirically answer a philosophical question when the facts that give rise to the question are undisputed." Admittedly in that instance, the question was future consciousness, whereas here it's the question of "human life". But nobody would dispute that a zygote which will develop into a fully formed human is already a zygote of the human species, so the inferred meaning of life here seems to be more philosophical than technical.
He establishes that roughly 98.5% of unwanted pregnancies which go on to be aborted were caused by consensual (for the sake of argument we'll assume that all incestuous acts are nonconsensual) acts, which establishes that the mother consented, by virtue of her act of creating the child and its dependency upon her, to assume the crucial caregiver role during the gestational period. This is open to questions about the remaining 1.5%.
Finally, the risk exposure argument is powerful, but can be challenged by a thought experiment about a "risk monster", analogous to the so-called utility monster. If one simply claimed the possibility of an infinitely bad outcome, and if the risk could not be proven to be zero, then risk mitigation would be automatically justified over all other concerns. So for example, suppose that I were to wake up tomorrow and claim that I received a telepathic vision from Ganondorf the intergalactic wizard instructing humanity to establish a worldwide theocracy that'd tightly monitor and control everyone's behavior, and to sacrifice 100 newborns on a bloody altar every day, or else he'd banish every human who'd ever lived to an infinitely painful hell of infinitely long duration. You couldn't prove for a fact that there was a zero percent chance I was telling the truth, and yet I think you'd agree that the obvious course of action would be to ignore my delusional ravings. This is obviously extreme, but I think it does lay bare the limits of risk-based morality.
^That being said, I can't argue for Con, and I'll have to wait and see what holes he manages to poke in Pro's case.
Overall, Pro's Round 1 very much so seems to already assume the personhood of unborn persons on grounds of their future lives, and gives little beyond one survey to support this assumption.
Now it's Con's turn. And I have to say, he's hard to follow, because his understanding of logic seems to be far more advanced than a layperson's. He frames morality not from a harm perspective but one of "moral entitlement". If a person lacks a moral entitlement to live, or if only persons have such a right and fetuses aren't persons, then it isn't wrong to deprive them of life.
He begins by arguing that fetuses have no "actualizable interests" that are "indexed to some prior mental state", and are incapable of experiencing such interests. It seems to me that this definition of personhood could be readily contested as an incomplete definition of personhood, but I'm still early into Con's Round 1 so I'll give him the chance to strengthen his case.
He proceeds to argue that his definition is a good one because generally speaking it can tell you whether a born entity is a person. In other words, it's unlikely to give you a false positive. Next, he argues it's a good definition because generally speaking it can correctly tell you that an object lacking these qualities is not a person. But given the quality that distinguishes a zygote from a chair or table (high likelihood of future experiences), this approach doesn't strike me as being immune to false negatives.
Next, he argues that for a right to exist, that which confers the right must also already or have already in the past existed, which according to Con would exclude future facts from the equation. As a rebuttal to future personhood, Con raises an analogy about a synthetic baby, assuming that the reader will reject the personhood of the synthetic baby. But I do not; if, upon gaining sentience in 5 minutes, it would truly (not merely simulating such as a p-zombie) enjoy a gamut of experiences qualitatively similar to those of a regular human, then I would regard the question of its synthetic nature as mostly irrelevant.
^But on second glance, I might be misunderstanding Con; perhaps its synthetic nature pertains to the fact that it's not currently sentient. In other words, it'd be akin to choosing not to turn on a computer that would immediately acquire newfound sentience. Is it immoral to create life that would come alive but for someone to flip the switch, and then elect not to do so? This might be what Con is asking, and if so, I don't know how to answer it. But this specific example that he posed has a rather straightforward solution, in that the synthetic baby will come to life on its own in 5 minutes. As such, its future trajectory without further action is near-perfectly analogous to that of a regular unborn human, so the right answer is that to destroy the synthetic baby during said 5 minutes would be immoral.
Next, Con appeals to medical literature as to when most experts believe the average fetus gains sentience, and shows that the vast majority of abortions take place before that point. As with Pro's point about the vast majority of pregnancies happening through consensual sex, Con's argument is faced with a few glaring exceptions; while he cites 22 weeks, New York allows elective abortion at weeks 23 and 24, and we can presume there've been at least a handful of New York women who came to regret their pregnancies at such a late enough time that their final decision to abort happened at this point. But again, it's not my place as a voter to argue after the fact in Pro's place.
Next, Con moves on to the social consequences of abortion. Countries that allow abortion tend to be richer, and countries that allow abortion tend to enjoy higher levels of economic freedom (hmm...) Then, he points to negative social consequences of banning abortion; I should take a second to note that the legality and morality of abortion are two separate questions. But in any case, all of the statistics he cites are probably valid, save for the one from 1985. These consequences include the deaths of large numbers of women seeking illegal abortions.
Con rips into Pro's arguments about "bodily functions" by pointing out that the bodily functions of a p-zombie could be obstructed, or indeed its limbs could be torn off, without doing true moral harm, since a p-zombie, assuming that the existence of onesuch is truly possible, is not a person. He then doubles back to the sentient machine analogy raised earlier, but this time sees its development by human engineers stopped 25% short of the electrical charge needed to attain sentience. This is a very strong analogy because it sufficiently mirrors the process of fetal development but in a way that many people would dispute the immorality of, and I think it should compel Pro to consider teleological arguments in Round 2.
It would be good to see what you had in mind anyways, even if it is incomplete.
I can share what I wrote for Round 1 if you want.
Frick, I can't do this. I've been chipping away at it, and I'm just now at the end of Round 1. And there's still other stuff I need to get done tonight. Considering I was probably going to make it a tie anyway for lack of confidence in my ability to weigh who did a better job, I don't see any harm done from leaving this unfinished.
Thanks for voting!
True,
Though, I think it's kind of cool to see such a lengthy and densely packed debate.
Voting on debates like this is difficult. You must set up goalposts, see who objectively wins on what goalpost, and then weigh and compare which goalposts are more important to topic. It is much more than just reading a debate, and when debate has this much characters and winner isnt clear, it takes a lot of time. Also easy to make a mistake in vote and forget to include some crucial claim/argument.
I think according to a word counter,
This debate has roughly 14,829 words 88,243 characters.
I've heard a typical book page has,
1,500 to 1,800 characters
So, 49 to 58 pages.
Though, when I press print on my computer, it says 33 pages.
I've heard it can take about an hour to read 33 pages.
Then there's the problem of weighing and thinking everything one has read.
I've heard an average read time can be 183 words per minute.
14,829 words divided by 183 = 81.03