stem-cell research |
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stem-cell research |
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#1
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![]() E! Online ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Member Posts: 302 Joined: Sep 2004 Member No: 47,082 ![]() |
do you support stem-cell researching? why or why not?
should federal funding be given to these researchers? do you support embryonic or adult stem cells (or both)? |
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#2
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![]() WWMD?! - i am from the age of BM 2 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Member Posts: 5,308 Joined: Mar 2004 Member No: 8,848 ![]() |
i don't think anyone has the right to decide what is morally acceptable for other people to do. each and every person has their own set of morals, different from anyone else's and people have the right to make their own choices. not everyone is going to bow down to one person's set of morals. if a person thinks it's morally acceptable for them to use a lab to create a kid because they want their DNA to be in their child, then so be it. you may not like it, and wouldn't do it yourself, and that's fine. but you don't have the right to tell them it's not right and to stop the couple from doing so.
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#3
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Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Member Posts: 70 Joined: Jun 2005 Member No: 151,633 ![]() |
QUOTE(touch my monkey @ Jun 12 2005, 4:10 PM) i don't think anyone has the right to decide what is morally acceptable for other people to do. each and every person has their own set of morals, different from anyone else's and people have the right to make their own choices. not everyone is going to bow down to one person's set of morals. if a person thinks it's morally acceptable for them to use a lab to create a kid because they want their DNA to be in their child, then so be it. you may not like it, and wouldn't do it yourself, and that's fine. but you don't have the right to tell them it's not right and to stop the couple from doing so. O.K, for that up there^^ thats true, we can;t make ppl choose the right thing to do, but that doesnt change thew fact that it is bad, and if every1 had their own set of morals to live by, that means that one person can think its "moral" to commit murder, so you can't tell him he's wrong b/c he has his own set of morals now doesnt he? hence, there has to be some sort of moral order, it isn't moral to kill someone with no just cause. Don't you see how your reasoning would bring the world into complete chaos!? QUOTE(mipadi @ Jun 12 2005, 5:11 PM) Ah, my other favorite debate tactic--when you can't make a legitimate point, put words in someone else's mouth to make it look like he is unable to make a point. I do not agree that all eleven are "alive," nor did I ever say that--certainly not less than "10 sentances [sic]" above. You misunderstood my point about nurturing, so let me clarify for you. I do not consider a fertilized egg to be a "person." A person is a human who has been born, who has been introduced into an environment outside a womb and is nurtured in some way with the goal of turning that person into an adult. A fertilized egg is not "alive." It cannot exist outside of a womb. It is not living. as for that, don;t you see, he's not saying you deliberately said you considered those life, but that you end up contradicting yourself when first you say, these embryos have no potential to live (they are not alive, they cannot live, etc, anyway you want to put it) but in saying that "So one fertilized egg is implanted into the woman's uterus to develop into a baby" you disprove your your first statement, by showing that the embryo does have the potential to live! and henceforth is alive. Just because something cannot survive, outside of a certain environment, doesnt mean it isn't living... that's like saying, "oh, there's a baby crying in a trash can, it cant survive there, so it must not be living anymore" and by the statement "do not consider a fertilized egg to be a "person." A person is a human who has been born, who has been introduced into an environment outside a womb and is nurtured in some way with the goal of turning that person into an adult." that a 8 month year old baby, still in a mother's womb, who can feel and react to pain, and has all the characteristics of a normal human being, is not a person? as i said before, you cannot decide when someone gets a soul, or becomes a person. Oh, and by the way, for that same person with the smiley big mouthed face avatar (no offense, this is a friendly debate of course) for your information, any possible theory for evolution has been proven wrong, and I'm not saying i don't believe that we evolved, I actually do, however I also believe in something called an "ultimate designer" (a.k.a: God) so saying we are just more advanced forms of life, and the fact that we are smarter than other animals by chance, is completely bogus. |
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*mipadi* |
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#4
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QUOTE(gotblog4me? @ Jun 12 2005, 5:44 PM) as for that, don;t you see, he's not saying you deliberately said you considered those life, but that you end up contradicting yourself when first you say, these embryos have no potential to live (they are not alive, they cannot live, etc, anyway you want to put it) but in saying that "So one fertilized egg is implanted into the woman's uterus to develop into a baby" you disprove your your first statement, by showing that the embryo does have the potential to live! and henceforth is alive. No, no; just because you say I contradict myself, does not mean I did. Potential to be something, and being something, is completely different. Say I hold up a bowling ball. It has the potential to be in motion--indeed, a bowling ball has a lot of kinetic energy. Is that to say the bowling ball is in motion? No. It would take some action--in this case, dropping it--to make it so. Being something, and potentially being something, are different. Very different. QUOTE(gotblog4me? @ Jun 12 2005, 5:44 PM) Just because something cannot survive, outside of a certain environment, doesnt mean it isn't living... that's like saying, "oh, there's a baby crying in a trash can, it cant survive there, so it must not be living anymore" I believe this is an over-generalization of a concept applied to a specific case. QUOTE(gotblog4me? @ Jun 12 2005, 5:44 PM) and by the statement "do not consider a fertilized egg to be a "person." A person is a human who has been born, who has been introduced into an environment outside a womb and is nurtured in some way with the goal of turning that person into an adult." that a 8 month year old baby, still in a mother's womb, who can feel and react to pain, and has all the characteristics of a normal human being, is not a person? as i said before, you cannot decide when someone gets a soul, or becomes a person. Nor can you. A baby in a womb is arguably a person, yes, but we're getting way, way off the subject of stem cells here. A baby and a fertilized egg in a petri dish are completely different things. You can't make a connection to a baby in the womb, and a person, and expect the leap from fertilized egg to person to come naturally. You're bringing up issues with abortion, which is a concept far removed from that of stem cell research. QUOTE(gotblog4me? @ Jun 12 2005, 5:44 PM) Oh, and by the way, for that same person with the smiley big mouthed face avatar (no offense, this is a friendly debate of course) for your information, any possible theory for evolution has been proven wrong, and I'm not saying i don't believe that we evolved, I actually do, however I also believe in something called an "ultimate designer" (a.k.a: God) so saying we are just more advanced forms of life, and the fact that we are smarter than other animals by chance, is completely bogus. Wondeful! Can you show me some evidence that evolution has been completely debunked, because I missed the headlines on that report. QUOTE(ghetosmurph @ June 12 2005, 5:44 PM) so just b/c you don't want the baby, it is ok to cut it to peices while it's halfway out, such as in partial birth abortion??? or to be cut to pieces 2 month's earlier when it has the full apperance of a human, all the fingers and toes, and could survive outside the mother's womb?, with the help of prenadle care tht is.... it has happened many times before. Therefore, unless the mother wants it, the baby is not alive yet..... hmmmm aren't we posing our moraity on someone else in the this situation too??? how about the baby??? aren't we posing our morality on the baby by deciding that it is ok to kill it just b/c we dont want it??? The fetus get's it's food and waterthrought the womb, it gets what it need to continue growing (and living) in that environment. You need air, water, food..... If we took away what you needed to survive you would die too..... you cannot therefore say that if we take what it needs to survive away from it and it dies, it is not human.... I am not talking about abortion. I am not talking about a person. I am not talking about a baby. I am not talking about a fetus. I am not talking about anything that has been implanted in the womb. I am talking about an embryo in a petri dish. If you have to bring issues of fetuses, babies, and partial-birth abortion into this debate, than your argument is clearly much weaker than you thought. Points about abortion, fetuses, and babies are non-sequiturs, and are politically-charged topics that deviate from the real issue at hand: the use of stem cells to help cure various diseases. We're not talking about abortion, or harvesting fetuses. That is just ridiculous. |
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#5
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![]() Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Member Posts: 142 Joined: Jan 2005 Member No: 82,183 ![]() |
QUOTE(mipadi @ Jun 12 2005, 4:57 PM) Potential to be something, and being something, is completely different. Say I hold up a bowling ball. It has the potential to be in motion--indeed, a bowling ball has a lot of kinetic energy. Is that to say the bowling ball is in motion? No. It would take some action--in this case, dropping it--to make it so. Being something, and potentially being something, are different. Very different. which is only proving my main point 2 posts ago, the ASC research is doing actual good for actual people, actually, right now!!!! ESC research is no longer needed, you can achieve everything you wanted from ESC research with ASC research!!!! Please go back and read it!!! QUOTE(mipadi @ Jun 12 2005, 4:57 PM) Thank you, but now i am not saying you contridicted yourself, i proved it QUOTE(mipadi @ Jun 12 2005, 4:57 PM) but we're getting way, way off the subject of stem cells here. A baby and a fertilized egg in a petri dish are completely different things. You can't make a connection to a baby in the womb, and a person, and expect the leap from fertilized egg to person to come naturally. Unfortunately we can, the connection between the fertilized egg and the baby was made earlier, you have 12 fertlilized eggs, you stick one in the mother and it becomes a baby. all 12 others are known by the doctors to have that exacy same potential (if given the environment and nourishment which they get in the mothers womb) to live.... wait potential isn't the right word..... it will ACUTALLY become a baby if you let it... therefor by the law of transitive properties (a=b and b=c therfore a=c) we can expect you to make the "leap" QUOTE(mipadi @ Jun 12 2005, 4:57 PM) You're bringing up issues with abortion, which is a concept far removed from that of stem cell research. I am not talking about abortion. I am not talking about a person. I am not talking about a baby. I am not talking about a fetus. I am not talking about anything that has been implanted in the womb. I am talking about an embryo in a petri dish. If you have to bring issues of fetuses, babies, and partial-birth abortion into this debate, than your argument is clearly much weaker than you thought. Points about abortion, fetuses, and babies are non-sequiturs, and are politically-charged topics that deviate from the real issue at hand: the use of stem cells to help cure various diseases. We're not talking about abortion, or harvesting fetuses. That is just ridiculous. Abortion and stem Cell research go hand and hand, seeing as stem cell research is being fuled by the acceptance of the concept of abortion!!!!!!!! The concept that it is morally acceptable to kill a person, as you said earlier, befor they are fully developed. the concept that is is ok to kill a child while it is halfway out the mother. The concept that you can fertlize egges in a petri dish and then thak the other living parts which ar given no chance for survival and throw them away or cut them up to experiment with!!!!! It is all part of the same concept that deals with the same argument, on different levels...... and yes they are politically charged topics and so is this!!!! Tis is the deviation from the real issue at hand. You cant kill a weed by snipping off the top, you havee to go for the roots, and the root of this matter is te moral acceptance of abrtion, contreception, birth controll nd everything else!!!! My argument is clearly much stonger than you believe it is, not vise versa. Whether a fetus is a baby is a huge abortion argument that would determine the morality of abortion, and also the morality of stem cell research. if it is immoral to abot a baby b/c a fetus is seen as a human, than it would be immoral to cut apart a fetus for scientific purposes..... One issue is in direct varitation to the other... |
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*mipadi* |
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#6
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QUOTE(ghetosmurph @ Jun 12 2005, 6:32 PM) which is only proving my main point 2 posts ago, the ASC research is doing actual good for actual people, actually, right now!!!! ESC research is no longer needed, you can achieve everything you wanted from ESC research with ASC research!!!! Please go back and read it!!! That doesn't prove your main point at all. It's not even related to the different between adult stem cells and embryonic stem cells--it's an analogy to physics that shows the different between life and the potential for life. I'm not even sure how you are using that as evidence to make your point about the differences between adult stem cells and embyronic stem cells, aside from the fact that you hoped you could say that, and that no one would notice that your statement makes no sense. Secondly, as someone else noted, your "facts" are hard to swallow, primarily because you have not provided evidence of one of your core claims: that adult stem cells are more useful in research than embryonic stem cells. Provide evidence to support that claim, and I'll listen. Unless you are an authority in the field, you can't make a claim such as that without at least linking to relevant evidence. QUOTE(ghetosmurph @ Jun 12 2005, 6:32 PM) Thank you, but now i am not saying you contridicted yourself, i proved it How have you proven it? You can't simply claim you have proven something; you have to show how. What you did is take a statement out of context and hope that, once again, no one would read up a bit and see the point I was making. Let me put it out there simply for you: A baby in the womb could arguably be a person. A fertilized egg is not a baby. Therefore, you cannot use those two statements to support your claim that a fertilized egg is a person. You are, once again, not making any sense, and merely claiming to have made a point. I do not follow at all your argument here. QUOTE(ghetosmurph @ Jun 12 2005, 6:32 PM) Unfortunately we can, the connection between the fertilized egg and the baby was made earlier, you have 12 fertlilized eggs, you stick one in the mother and it becomes a baby. all 12 others are known by the doctors to have that exacy same potential (if given the environment and nourishment which they get in the mothers womb) to live.... wait potential isn't the right word..... it will ACUTALLY become a baby if you let it... therefor by the law of transitive properties (a=b and b=c therfore a=c) we can expect you to make the "leap" I am, once again, not following you. If you wish to use the transitive property and express this in mathematical terms, we can do so; unfortunately, I fail to see what a, b, and c are equal to. I see that a = a fertilized egg; I presume b = a baby. I'm not sure what c equals; perhaps a person? Even if I fill that in for you, it still doesn't go to say that a = b and b = c, so therefore a = c, because you have not yet shown that a = b. That is, of course, if I correctly judged a, b, and c to be what you intended. QUOTE(ghetosmurph @ Jun 12 2005, 6:32 PM) Abortion and stem Cell research go hand and hand, seeing as stem cell research is being fuled by the acceptance of the concept of abortion!!!!!!!! The concept that it is morally acceptable to kill a person, as you said earlier, befor they are fully developed. the concept that is is ok to kill a child while it is halfway out the mother. The concept that you can fertlize egges in a petri dish and then thak the other living parts which ar given no chance for survival and throw them away or cut them up to experiment with!!!!! It is all part of the same concept that deals with the same argument, on different levels...... and yes they are politically charged topics and so is this!!!! Tis is the deviation from the real issue at hand. You cant kill a weed by snipping off the top, you havee to go for the roots, and the root of this matter is te moral acceptance of abrtion, contreception, birth controll nd everything else!!!! My argument is clearly much stonger than you believe it is, not vise versa. Whether a fetus is a baby is a huge abortion argument that would determine the morality of abortion, and also the morality of stem cell research. if it is immoral to abot a baby b/c a fetus is seen as a human, than it would be immoral to cut apart a fetus for scientific purposes..... One issue is in direct varitation to the other... No, no, no. You are, once again, trying to use politically-charged innuendo to deviate from the point of this debate. Let me address several points you bring up:
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