A Fetus is Not a Person

Tori, there is no “potential” because it is a human being from conception. The fusion of the egg and sperm create a human being with its own unique set of DNA — separate from that of its mother or father. For something as irreplaceable as a human life, an objective criteria, such as genetics, should determine humanity.

Furthermore, the fetus shows many other signs of life long before birth: a detectable heartbeat and brainwaves by 6 weeks, pain receptors by 7.5 weeks, fully formed organs by 10 weeks, REM sleep by 23 weeks, all five senses by the third trimester, etc.

Blake, the distinction between “human” and “person” is merely semantics. There is an axiom in logic – Don’t ignore the obvious.  Here is the obvious.  Genetically each human life begins at conception. Also, here is the definition for “person” from Merriam-Webster dictionary – “human. individual”.  Scientifically and as a matter of common usage a person is a human and a human is a person.  

Bob, cute but your meme misses the mark. Science and logic are the basis of the claim that a fetus as a human should be given the basic HUMAN right to life.  From the moment of conception, genetics identifies the beginning organism not only as a human but as a particular unique human separate from its mother.  Nothing further will be added genetically.  So that beginning human is as genetically human as those born. The science is clear. 

Turning to logic – are you aware of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act?  The protection extends to the eggs.  Our laws regarding the protection of birds recognize the truth that the eggs are the beginning of the birds’ lives.  This is despite the fact that the contents of an egg consist of a formless, indistinguishable substance.  It is logically inconsistent not to recognize this same beginning with a human life. 

Brendan, you stated “Yes, human life begins at conception.”  You then try to make a differentiation between a “human” and a “person”.  On what basis do you do so?  For something as irreplaceable as a human life, an objective criterion – such as genetics – should determine humanity.  Please note the obvious:  Merriam-Webster dictionary defines “person” as “human”.  Very accurate!  A person is a human and a human is a person.  Our “human rights” should be based upon our CORE human, genetic identity.  

Please also consider this quote from Professor Micheline Matthews-Roth, Harvard University Medical School: “It is incorrect to say that biological data cannot be decisive…. It is scientifically correct to say that an individual human life begins at conception…. Our laws, one function of which is to help preserve the lives of our people, should be based on accurate scientific data.”    

Peter, just because some fetuses die at an early age before being born does not negate their core humanity. Would we say that a 1-year-old toddler who dies young was somehow less human than an individual who lives to be 100? The toddler certainly did not fulfill their “potential”.

You state your own opinion that life begins at birth by stating that it is birthdays we celebrate – not conception dates. That is an incredibly weak argument. Most women don’t know the date of conception.

Also, we do celebrate babies’ existence prior to birth. It is now the cultural norm that an ultrasound photo is the baby’s first photo – passed along excitedly among family and friends. Gender reveal parties are hosted to again celebrate the baby and already make their existence a focal point of social gatherings.

Peter, the change toward recognizing conception as the beginning of each human life has been driven by emerging science – not politics and not religion. The field of genetics and the understanding of DNA exploded during the 80s and 90s. We now know – which we did not know when Roe was decided in 1973 – that at conception a unique human being is formed. Sex, hair color, eye color, even some personality traits, etc are all determined at that point. Nothing more genetically will be added. The beginning human being only needs time and nourishment.

That DNA – different from the mother and father – will identify that human being not simply as a member of the human species, but as that UNIQUE, SPECIFIC human being from conception forward. The science is clear. The biologists are in agreement. It is the politics of the abortion industry that has duped people.

Carolyn, the truth is so obvious that you just stated it yourself.  The fetus is in your words, “a developing human”. Our civil rights are accorded to us based on our HUMAN rights – our core identity. Again, on what basis other than your own opinion do you try to separate “human” from “person”? Please provide evidence for your assertion. Here is a quote for you to please consider.  

Dr. Jerome LeJeune, professor of genetics at the University of Descartes in Paris, was the discoverer of the chromosome pattern of Down syndrome. Dr. LeJeune testified to the United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee, “After fertilization has taken place a new human being has come into being.” He stated that this “is no longer a matter of taste or opinion,” and “not a metaphysical contention, it is plain experimental evidence.” He added, “Each individual has a very neat beginning, at conception.” 

Samantha, the “person” vs. “human” argument is often used to devalue human life. A person is a human and a human is a person. Every human being has the Constitutional Right to Life. Therefore, a better question might be, “What is your definition of a human being?” For something as irreplaceable as a human life, an objective criteria — such as genetics — should determine humanity. Scientifically, human life begins at conception. DNA is the scientific identifier of plants, animals and humans. At conception a new human being with its own unique set of DNA — separate from that of its mother or father, begins life.

Jennifer, from conception until death, a human being will continue to grow, change, and age. A human is a human regardless of the stage of growth. At conception, the egg and sperm fuse to create a human being with its own unique set of DNA, separate from that of its mother and father. From conception, the embryo is genetically human and that does not change.

We should not punish women who find themselves in an unintended pregnancy. We should provide a full generous spectrum of resources. Neither should we punish the unborn human by ending its life.

Kurt, there is no “potential” because it is a human being from conception. The fusion of the egg and sperm creates a human being with its own unique set of DNA — separate from that of its mother or father. DNA is the scientific identifier for plants, animals and humans.

A human is a human. The position of valuing one human life over another is the very basis of oppression throughout the world. When we start to put people in categories, we all eventually are put at risk.

Peggy, you make a subjective differentiation between being human and a “person”. Please provide evidence as to what suddenly makes a baby a human as they pass through the birth canal. 

A human is a person, and a person is a human.

Michael, “fetus” simply designates that particular time frame in a person’s continuum of life – just like “toddler” or “adolescent”. A human is a human regardless of the stage of growth. From conception, the embryo is genetically human and that does not change. In fact, our DNA from the moment of conception will not only identify us scientifically as “human”, but it identifies us personally from that moment until our death. A human being and a person are one and the same. There is no distinction. If it’s a human being, it’s a “person.” 

Jed, it is very dangerous to use your shifting, subjective criteria of “importance to the family or society”. Some societies do not value women – they treat them as sub humans. Under your criteria that is permissible. Some families do not value children at any stage – as evidenced by cases of child abuse. Does that abusive family have the right to determine that child’s value? 

Your argument to consider “investment of money or energy” or “achievements” is very utilitarian. What about the handicapped or elderly individual who no longer are contributing much to their family or society? Do they lose some of their humanity? With your subjective criteria who gets to decide the threshold for protected humanity? Again, for something as irreplaceable and valuable as a human life, we need an objective, scientific, static criteria.