Instigator / Pro
7
1756
rating
25
debates
100.0%
won
Topic
#6267

THBT: On balance, abortion is immoral [for @Bones]

Status
Voting

The participant that receives the most points from the voters is declared a winner.

Voting will end in:

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Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Rated
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
15,000
Voting period
Two weeks
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Minimal rating
1,761
Contender / Con
4
1761
rating
31
debates
95.16%
won
Description

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.

@everyone
Since you want to support your very dear friend then show it by vote and not by whinning

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@Novice_II

What concern is this to you idiot? Keep to your place idiot.

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@Novice_II

Maybe talk to mods to support it. When you have judges, its standard debate, not rated.

I have tried something like this to prevent another idiot from voting, but it didn't work.

You can't make rules that prevent people from voting.

Or just make rule in description that only top 20 people on leaderboard can vote. No offense, but someone with 1500 rating has no place in voting on 1700+ debate.

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@Bones
@Novice_II
@Savant

I agree with novice II, for debates like this, you should have judges, the public might not understand the topic enough to make a clear vote

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@Bones

Yes that was indeed a lapsus due to the pace of the conflict. Your accusations are just dishonest. Just because i do not quote your entire 5 minute read argument does not mean you can just refute what it clearly states. At least stick to you words.

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@Umbrellacorp

We can agree that when you said -

"You repeatedly implied there is no obligation to sustain another life, which is a bodily autonomy defense by definition. For example:
-“Even with uncertainty, we do not require people to sustain others’ lives at serious cost.”

" you said:
“Even with uncertainty, we do not require people to sustain others’ lives at serious cost.”
Both are in your text, word for word. That is not fabrication"

You were either blatantly wrong or lying. That's all I'm going to say about this situation.

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@Bones

That is a paraphrasing of:

"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)."

And further:

"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."

And of course i could go further.

"the direct vs indirect harm distinction is meaningless"- dismissive as i said.
" it's also recognisable that there is no obligation"- how is that an argument for "not immoral"?
I do not intend to go through the debate again.

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@Umbrellacorp

Could you tell me which round and under which I typed what you call “word for word” the sentence “Even with uncertainty, we do not require people to sustain others’ lives at serious cost”

Last time responding to this absolute crybaby:
Quotes: nothing made up. You did state:
“Until sentience develops, there is no subject of harm.”
And you said:
“Even with uncertainty, we do not require people to sustain others’ lives at serious cost.”
Both are in your text, word for word. That is not fabrication.

Jumbled summary?
You wrote tens of thousands of characters repeating largely the same premise - no sentience, no rights - and did not dismantle the uncertainty principle or the FLO argument beyond declarative denials. Summarizing this accurately does not invalidate the vote.

If you believe a vote will be “thrown out” simply because you contest the judgment, you are misunderstanding how moderation works. The site shall not annul votes because you dislike their conclusions.

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@Bones

Nothing made up. Did you even read it. I stay to my position.
I took time to read at your debate so at least read my reasoning.
Would consider analysing your contest again but to be honest it's not even close.

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@Umbrellacorp

Great so the jumbled summary and made up quotes should be enough to get the vote thrown out.

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@Bones

"The issue arises only when someone who is clearly unable to adjudicate a debate tries their hand at it and fumbles."
Assertion does not mean you are right or logical. This sums up your debate skills.
Are you are an appealer to average biased readers? This is what i derive from your comments and arguments.

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@Barney
@Bones

Your reaction here is more emotional than logical, and ironically you are proving quite well why the vote stood as it did.

Your arguments were often ‘overworded’ (just for the sake of making a long argument) and totally failed to displace pro’s core premises.

-“Voter ignored my moral framework.”

You spent thousands of words to denying fetal personhood and discussing moral consideration thresholds.
But, popular debater, volume does not equal logic or effectiveness. The moral framework you proposed amounted to this combination:
-The fetus lacks sentience (hence no moral standing), and
-The absence of positive obligations to sustain life.
Which i recognized and weighed. I explicitly cited your position that:
-“Until sentience develops, there is no subject of harm.”

Your framework, however, never neutralized Pro’s uncertainty argument. Specifically, that even the risk of personhood imposes significant restricting moral weight. So no, I didn’t ignore it. I evaluated it and found it less persuasive. (Logically) (Not to my personal opinion on the topic).

-“I never argued bodily autonomy.”
You repeatedly implied there is no obligation to sustain another life, which is a bodily autonomy defense by definition. For example:
-“Even with uncertainty, we do not require people to sustain others’ lives at serious cost.”
That is a bodily autonomy justification. Whether you dislike it personally is irrelevant. It was central to your attempt to offer something more comfortable to the average reader than the uncertainty principle. If you think it’s a different framework, perhaps clarify that next time coherently, but it reads as bodily autonomy to any unbiased reader.

-“My rebuttal to FLO was not dismissive.”
Your rebuttal to FLO Indirectly asserts that potential futures don’t generate rights. Here’s what you actually said:
-“A potential person is not an actual person.”
This is indeed a biased claim to such an important and considerable principle, but it did not engage with the core philosophical content that preventing a future itself grounds moral wrongness. Just declaring it insufficient is a dismissive approach unless you show why potential futures lack moral weight even under uncertainty. You did not, good sir!

Finally, your claim that my RFD contained “nothing substance related” is a lie.
It was structured to explain why Pro’s arguments: uncertainty, special obligations, FLO.
were more interesting and respectable under a shared burden of proof. That is the definition of substance.
If you wish to contest votes, it would be better to do the reasoning calmly rather than with disappointment to your loss, and accusing reasonable voters.

Ps: Barney, this is the most intellectual i have been in this platform. Perhaps consider that your friends do not always win debates. I would hate to think that there is biased moderation here.

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@Umbrellacorp

I’ve had half a dozen votes casted against me and none of them warranted any moderation. The issue arises only when someone who is clearly unable to adjudicate a debate tries their hand at it and fumbles.

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@Bones

The only one agitated here is you. For losing a vote. That is a baby behaviour. Considering your popularity among the community, it is a moderation matter to be adressed. My vote explanation incoming.

At this point given umbrellas clear agitation and insulting demeanour it’s clear they are just now going to find ad hoc justification for why their vote is correct so there might not be any point of engaging.

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@Bones

I will in a moment

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@Barney
@Umbrellacorp

Thanks Barney. Umbrella would you like to give some clarifications on the points I raised in my below comment?

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@Bones

We'll review it in greater detail. I know for a fact that whiteflame is currently reading this debate (or was, there's some drama which likely pulled him away). I suspect after he finishes reading it, he'll be able to give a more informed opinion of the vote. The previous ruling on arguments, was made without any of us having yet read the debate.

That said, please try not to jump to the worst conclusions about voters (especially new ones). This debate in particular is extremely complicated, so a voter is more likely confused than intentionally rage baiting.

A far better tactic is to request they clarify a key point or two, such as what gave them the impression you argued from bodily autonomy? Answers (or lack thereof) may inform moderation decisions, or even result in someone requesting to re-vote on their own.

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@Barney

Really unfortunate but this vote isn’t up to standard either.

1. Voter claimed I didn’t develop a moral framework thereby ignoring the first 7552 characters of the first round (not to mention subsequent rounds)

2. Usually pro choicers either argue from personhood (the fetus is not a person) or bodily autonomy (it doesn’t matter if the fetus is a person because the mother has bodily autonomy). Voter claimed I argued from bodily autonomy (an argument I detest and never put forth) thereby showing they merely took a guess at what my pro choice argument might have been and was unfortunately mistaken.

3. Voter claimed my rebuttal to FLO was dismissive (suggesting a response was not made) rather than substantive. This ignores a further 7000 characters worth of argumentation.

Note how none of these criticisms pertain to anything substance related (because the voter didn’t provide much in that respect). Instead it regards completely ignoring key sections of the debate (point 1 and 3) and straw manning arguments that were never made in the debate (points 2)

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@Bones

You're right. My mistake.
I can understand your frustration since it is the second time this guy beats you.
I am sure you will get better.

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@Umbrellacorp

Seeing as you don’t know the difference between subjective and objective I’m not sure you’re the best candidate to vote here.

This debate would destroy many of my neuro cells to vote lol.
I wish I had time and relaxation to deep dive into and read at full.
Sorry guys could not vote.

Seems nice debate, voting would need to read at full strength which needs time, you should have at least 1 month voting period.

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@Bones
@Savant
@Umbrellacorp

**************************************************
>Reported Vote: Umbrellacorp // Mod action: Removed
>Voting Policy: info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy
>Points Awarded: 4 to pro
>Reason for Decision: See Comments Tab.
>Reason for Mod Action:
The argument award is fine, but the legibility should be a tie.
In gist, conduct and legibility are only for extreme poor performance by the other side, rather than just being marginally better. On a debate with two extremely talented debates like this, everything other than arguments is almost certainly within the tied range.

And boilerplate explanation...
Legibility is an optional award as a penalty for excessive abuse committed by the other side, wherein sections of the debate become illegible or at least comparatively burdensome to decipher.
Examples:
• Unbroken walls of text, or similar formatting attempts to make an argument hard to follow.
• Terrible punctuation throughout.
• Overwhelming word confusion, or regularly distracting misspellings.
• Jarring font and/or formatting changes.
**************************************************

--- Umbrellacorp's original vote ---
My vote: Pro
Pro: Consistently maintained a clear line of moral reasoning.
Con: Good direct rebuttals but less precise about why uncertainty is not sufficient.
Reasons:

Pro's “uncertainty principle” was never fully dismantled. Con challenged it but didn’t show it was unreasonable.
The autonomy defense was strong from con but relied on 'asserting' that bodily autonomy beats potential personhood without fully showing why that moral perspective outweighs the
precautionary harm.

Pro suggested and maintained a layered ethical framework (FLO, special obligations, uncertainty) throughout the debate.
Whereas con primarily offered counter-assertions and did not develop a comparable alternative moral framework.

I think Pro’s arguments were more compelling on balance. Pro demonstrated that even under uncertainty about personhood, the moral risk of abortion equates to potentially committing severe harm (comparable to homicide).
Con did effectively argue for autonomy, but he did not sufficiently counter the moral weight of the 'precautionary principle' or establish why bodily autonomy rejects that moral uncertainty.
Plus, con’s engagement with the 'Future-Like-Ours' argument was more dismissive than refutative.
Thus in my opinion, pro stood to their burden more convincingly.

Further reason for decision of best legibility: pro’s writing was clearer, better structured, and easier to follow.
Plus: Arguments were numbered and labeled (“1. Uncertainty,” “2. FLO,” etc.). I don't know how much this counts.

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@LucyStarfire

Do i even care?

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@Umbrellacorp

Do you even know who you are talking to?

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@Bones

You weren't even close idioty i was just trying to be nice and subjective.

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@Bones
@Novice_II

"Rage bait votes use to be believable"
The grammar in this sentence is exactly the reason why your opponent won legibility.
"Don't use open voting for something like this, you will always get the idiots"
What is the point of having a voting system if an idiot calls everyone who does not vote on his favour an idiot?
Keep to your place and learn some grammar idiots.

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@Novice_II

Yeah that’s right. You should definitely look into voting.

Don't use open voting for something like this, you will always get the idiots

Rage bait votes use to be believable

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@Bones

Looking forward to it!

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@whiteflame

All wrapped up - I think you'll enjoy this one a lot.

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@Bones
@Savant

Probably don’t need me to say this, but when this is done, definitely hit me up for a vote. I know you both are excellent on this topic.

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@Savant

I realise that in the conclusion and else where, I used "pre sentient" to describe my criteria (to describe previously sentient). This is obviously confusing given I use "pre sentient" to also describe beings who have never been sentient. Hopefully this isn't too boggling but I'm sure you'll be able to tell which usage refers to what.

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@LucyStarfire

Oops

Wait, isnt Bones Pro for this topic?

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@Bones

One week is fine

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@Savant

Actually, would one week argument time be possible? If not that should be alright but I would prefer it.

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@Bones

Should I leave it up until then or take it down and repost in a week or so?

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@Savant

My schedule is a bit up in the air right now but I should be able to accept this at latest within two weeks. The definitions and burden are both good.

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@Bones

Lmk if these specifications work for you