Here we go again with the "unbuilt house" nonsense. It does matter whether or not it contains the necessary chromosomes/genes/whatever and we don't know that, at that stage, when it's currently inside a woman.
If conception took place, a living human organism is produced. Whether it contains the necessary stuff to eventually be born and function as a "normal" human being, remains to be seen, but the moment it is conceived, it becomes what it will always be until termination.
It's like looking at a pile of lumber and saying there's an unbuilt house. We don't know that. Maybe the beams that support the house are missing so a house will never be built with just the current material.
It's not the same thing at all. A human being at conception, already is a "built house" it is just not finished out. All the necessary stuff is there to complete the job, it only requires time. Furthermore, analogies comparing anything less than a human being, cheapen the meaning of a human being. You are comparing a pile of lumber to the remarkable creature known as the human being.
Sure nature causes it to be something other than a human life. In many cases nature causes the defective, fertilized cell to abort.
IF the cell aborted, it had to abort from something, correct???? Now think real hard with that limp noodle of yours! I know you can comprehend what the cell could have possibly "aborted" from!
LIFE! DING!DING!DING!
If the "cell" (which is now actually multi-celled, after conception) aborts, it logically has to be in the process of something to abort. It aborts from the process began at conception, the life process. Thank you for making my point for me in such an excellent way!
Human life can only be determined by examining the fertilized cell. Does it have the necessary material to be considered a human life? It is reasonable to conclude that in some cases it does not. If all fertilized cells were human life all fertilized cells in the laboratory would grow but they do not. Why?
Again, you are wrong. Human life begins at the moment of conception. We do not have to "consider" it, we know this to be a biological fact. YOU continue to assert that it must be "considered" a human life, but that is non-scientific and subjective. Once the female egg cell is fertilized, a radical transformation happens almost immediately, and the cell is no longer a single cell organism. You continue to falsely assert there is a "fertilized cell" and that is an oxymoron. There is what once was an unfertilized egg cell, but now it is a multi-cell living organism called a human being. Nothing further has to be concluded, nothing has to be determined, it already IS what it IS!
We're back to square one. Just because all human life begins with a fertilized cell that does not mean all fertilized cells are human life. As for evidence a preponderance of the facts support my position. Over 50% of fertilized cells do not make it past that stage.
If the cells "do not make it" this can only mean they were living and died. Thanks once again for making my point that a "fertilized female egg" is a human life.
What evidence do you have that every fertilized cell has the necessary ingredients to become a human being? Do you have any? Can you direct me to a site where one fertilized cell that stopped growing at that point was examined and the reason determined?
Because there is no other point in time where any other ingredients are obtained during the pregnancy. If the cell stopped growing, it was alive. If it was living, it must be some kind of living organism. If it is living inside a female human, and is the result of a conception between a male human sperm cell and female human egg cell, it is most likely a human organism, nothing in science leads us to believe any other alternative on that. If it is a human organism in the state of being, it is a human being.
Give me something to support your absurd beliefs.
Biology 101, Science 101. There is nothing absurd about my knowledge of facts.
Science has not determined that every fertilized cell is a human being because science has not examined every fertilized cell that never grew past that point.
*sigh* If it "didn't grow past that point" it had to be living before that point. Science has already determined what form of living organism it is at that point. Once it dies, it is no longer a living human organism.
If six cells are extracted from a woman and fertilized in the lab and two do not grow past that stage, why is that? All six have been subjected to the same procedure. All six were living under the same conditions. Why do two cease to grow?
It doesn't matter why something dies, that doesn't mean it wasn't ever alive. If the critter was alive at any point, it was a HUMAN LIFE, it can't be anything else, science doesn't support it being anything else. Either present some fucking evidence or stop trying to argue this absurd point. You have already admitted, in numerous places, that what you keep erroneously calling a "fertilized cell" is alive at some point, therefore, it
MUST be some form of living organism. Despite what we KNOW from science and biology, you want to try to insist this living organism is NOT human! You can't define what it is, you just don't want to say it is human life. You want to argue that men have to "determine" it is human life, and that is ludicrous!
Until science can determine the cause it's reasonable to conclude the problem might rest with the cell. Might rest with the cell. Maybe, maybe not. However, until it it can be determined for sure it cheapens all human beings to say every fertilized cell is a human being. It's nothing short of an outrage to have the lives of human beings, in any way, interfered with by what the consequences of designating something a human being, which is not a human being, will result in.
Until YOU can stop pretending that science hasn't determined when human life begins, we can't really have any debate on the issue of abortion. You have adopted an anti-science viewpoint regarding biological facts, and you refuse to acknowledge them, so there is no point in arguing further.