Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

When does life begin?

#1
Magical Realist Online
Great article outlining the various arguments for when life begins. A good predebate review of the issues..

http://brainblogger.com/2009/05/10/medic...ife-begin/

"One of the most contested questions in history is a seemingly simple one: When does life begin? Different cultures and societies have battled to answer this question, and to date no consensus has been reached. Of course, the answer to this question has profound ethical, legal, moral, and philosophical implications. As the United States debates the merits and pitfalls of topics like embryonic stem cell research and abortion, the arguments for the beginnings of life have found themselves renewed. Along the timeline from preconception through birth and beyond, there are several stops where one group or another has drawn a line in the sand and proclaimed that life has officially begun. In the interest of providing some clarity on this issue, let us examine the rationale behind why these groups picked their points. As a reference, a textbook on developmental biology will provide some framework.

Preconception

The earliest stopping point is held by many members of the Catholic Church, with their proclamation that “every sperm is sacred.” The held rationale is that every sperm has the possibility to fertilize an egg, become implanted, and eventually grow into a human being. Since God’s charge is to go forth and procreate, any type of hindrance to that process such as the use of condoms or birth control pills are interfering with God’s plan and therefore not allowed.

Conception

The greater religious community generally view the “moment of conception” as the standard for when life begins. However, the definition of conception is subject to variability. Some take the word conception to actually mean the act of ejaculation. Others consider conception to be the process of fertilization. Still others consider the fusion of genetic material into a new set of chromosomes to be meant by conception. The problem with any of these definitions is that the process is not instantaneous. From the time of ejaculation, sperm take 7 hours before they become active and able to fertilize an egg. Once the sperm meets the egg, a chemical cascade begins and the sperm begins to bore its way through the egg, which may take up to an hour. Once the sperm actually enters the egg, it’s another 12 hours before the sperm DNA makes its way to the egg’s DNA, and then another 24 hours for the restructuring and packaging process of new chromosomes. All told, the “moment of conception” could take anywhere from 2-3 days to complete.

Gastrulation

Another argument that is raised against the “moment of conception” line of thinking is the twinning argument. Once the genetic material is completely packaged together, a new individual is created. However, for as long as 12-14 days afterward, the embryo can split into twins or more multiples. That process would create more than one individual with identical genetic material from the same moment of conception. To account for this discrepancy, some argue that life begins at gastrulation, which is when the window has closed, the embryo has implanted in the uterus, and is now committed to grow into one human being. Supporters of this theory would therefore support stem cell research, which harvests embryos that have neither the intention nor ability to be implanted into a uterus.

Week 8

The eighth week of pregnancy is a special one, because at this point the precursors to all organs have been formed. Philosophers therefore argue that with the beginnings of a brain, the fetus now has the ability to think and react, and that marks the onset of life. Opponents argue that the rudimentary nervous system is not functional at 8 weeks, and the fetus cannot process information or move in response to a stimulus, therefore not making the fetus alive.

Quickening

Those same groups which argue against the week 8 model suggest that life begins with the “quickening,” which is when the fetus begins to exhibit voluntary movement inside the womb, usually around 14-16 weeks. At this point the fetus is able to react to external stimuli, which is held as the standard for life.

Week 20

Although the fetus can move at week 14, the movements are little more than jerky reflexes. They are not driven by higher cortical functioning. Therefore, another school of thought is that life begins at week 20, when the thalamus is completely formed. The thalamus is the relay center of the brain, and helps to connect the cerebral cortex to the spinal cord and peripheral nerves.

Week 25

A sizable contingent would assert that life begins at 25 weeks. The rationale for this starting point is based on our definition of death. The definition of death is not disputed, and is considered the time when electroencephalography (EEG) activity ceases. EEG measures brain activity and must demonstrate regular wave patterns to be considered valid. Therefore, by this rule the onset of life would be the time when fetal brain activity begins to exhibit regular wave patterns, which occurs fairly consistently around week 25. Previous to that time, the EEG only shows small bursts of activity without sustained firing of neurons.


Birth

Perhaps the second-most frequently held conviction is that life begins at the time of child birth. In Jewish Talmudic Law, for example, the writing states that once the head of the child is delivered it cannot be touched and is granted equal rights to life as the mother. Other religious groups maintain that the soul is delivered to the newborn with their first breath of air.

Self-consciousness

A minor group of philosophers maintain that the criterion for human life is self-consciousness, or self-awareness, which does not occur until well into childhood. This group believes that abortion is morally equivalent to infanticide, and that both are condonable under certain circumstances. Their viewpoint is extreme, and has generally been rejected by mainstream ethicists and theologians.

While this accounting is by no means comprehensive, and perhaps oversimplifies some concepts for the purpose of clarity, let it serve as a starting point for obtaining more information. With debate on this topic wide open, and no clear answers in sight, the best hope is to understand all viewpoints and draw an informed conclusion as to when life begins."
Reply
#2
Syne Offline
Biology clearly defines human life as an organism with its own unique human DNA (2-3 days). Just because twinning could occur doesn't magically reclassify what human life is.

All other arguments are purely philosophical (note where they start talking about "philosophers"), with no basis in objective science. They are just when various people *think* the human life becomes sentient or capable of sensing pain...IOW arbitrary opinions. Notice that there is zero debate over when bovine life begins. That's because people conflate the "life" they experience, as sentient organisms, with the scientific definition of human life.

There is no debate, and 100% consensus, on the scientific view of when life begins. Anyone that tells you otherwise doesn't understand science or has an intentionally dishonest agenda.
Reply
#3
Magical Realist Online
Quote:Biology clearly defines human life as an organism with its own unique human DNA (2-3 days).

I've never heard of human life defined as having unique DNA. All animals and bacteria have their own DNA. And having DNA doesn't mean you're alive. A corpse still has DNA. Your blood and saliva has DNA.
Reply
#4
Syne Offline
(Sep 25, 2018 11:45 PM)Magical Realist Wrote:
Quote:Biology clearly defines human life as an organism with its own unique human DNA (2-3 days).

I've never heard of human life defined as having unique DNA. All animals and bacteria have their own DNA. And having DNA doesn't mean you're alive. A corpse still has DNA.

or·gan·ism
an individual animal, plant, or single-celled life form.
synonyms: living thing

Your finger doesn't have unique DNA from you (the organism), so you would not be tempted to call it human life. Conversely, an embryo, having unique DNA from the mother, is a different organism. When we have ignorant people arguing that an embryo is part of a woman's body, it's an important scientific distinction.
Reply
#5
Magical Realist Online
Quote:Your finger doesn't have unique DNA from you (the organism),

A bacteria is an organism with its own unique DNA. It is not a human life. A cell is an organism with its own unique DNA. It is not a human life.
Reply
#6
stryder Offline
Technically human life doesn't start until after birth, until that point the organism is on life support (plugged into the mothers system) any complications could mean it's death pre-birth.
Reply
#7
Syne Offline
(Sep 26, 2018 12:35 AM)Magical Realist Wrote:
Quote:Your finger doesn't have unique DNA from you (the organism),

A bacteria is an organism with its own unique DNA. It is not a human life. A cell is an organism with its own unique DNA. It is not a human life.
That's why I said "unique human DNA", not just "unique DNA".
(Sep 26, 2018 01:14 AM)stryder Wrote: Technically human life doesn't start until after birth, until that point the organism is on life support (plugged into the mothers system) any complications could mean it's death pre-birth.
No, the organism is human and alive in the womb. As I said, you're conflating "life", as you perceive it as a sentient being (or as we count it in years), with the scientific definition. Otherwise, we'd call ANYONE on life support "not alive", which is obviously stupid, if not immoral, as we could then justify letting anyone on life support die, regardless of the prognosis for recovery. Just because someone could die doesn't mean their life has less value.
Reply
#8
Magical Realist Online
A human body that is brain dead but still on life support is not alive. The definition of being alive is a functioning brain via brain waves. When those stop, that is death. When it starts, as in the 25th week, that is the beginning of being alive. Being a brain dead fetus or embryo is not being alive. It isn't anything.
Reply
#9
Yazata Offline
(Sep 25, 2018 05:15 PM)Magical Realist Wrote: When does life begin?

The article seems to leave out what I believe is the correct answer.

Life apparently began in some unknown events here on Earth close to 4 billion years ago. (Only a few hundred million years after the Earth formed.) Either that, or it began much earlier somewhere else in the universe and spread here by some unknown means.

Ever since that origin of life, life has continuously existed. There's a continuous chain of life connecting you to your parents (sperm and egg cells are alive), to your grandparents, to your great grandparents, to prehuman hominids a million years ago, to the first chordates that hauled themselves out of the sea, to the first protozoa-like single-celled eukaryotic organisms, and to bacteria and archaea before that.

There were never any gaps in that chain, there was never a moment when life didn't exist.

While life is constantly changing and elaborating, it seems to me to at least potentially be immortal (provided that conditions remain suitable). It's already 4 billion years old and doing just fine.
Reply
#10
Syne Offline
(Sep 26, 2018 02:05 AM)Magical Realist Wrote: A human body that is brain dead but still on life support is not alive. The definition of being alive is a functioning brain via brain waves. When those stop, that is death. When it starts, as in the 25th week, that is the beginning of being alive. Being a brain dead fetus or embryo is not being alive. It isn't anything.

Brain death is a clinical indication of death. It's judged by doctors as a practical matter, and only indicates when a life ends. It does not change the scientific definition of what life is or when it begins.

clin·i·cal death
death as judged by the medical observation of cessation of vital functions. It is typically identified with the cessation of heartbeat and respiration, though modern resuscitation methods and life-support systems have required the introduction of the alternative concept of brain death.

"Cessation of vital functions" is not the same as undeveloped function. An unformed brain is not an indication of anything but developing and existing human life.
Biology does not define life by the existence of brain waves, and defines death as the lack thereof only once established. An unformed brain is simply not a dead brain. Something cannot possibly die or cease until it has lived or existed.

death
the end of the life of a person or organism.
the permanent ending of vital processes in a cell or tissue.

Lack of brain waves in an embryo is neither permanent nor an ending of existing vital processes, person, or organism. So the term "brain dead" applied to an embryo is conflating two very different and unrelated things. It's like calling an embryo a parasite, when no known parasite, as defined by science, lives off its own species. IOW, words mean stuff.
Reply




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)