Maurile Tremblay said:
Christo said:
There's no judgment in my statement. Before conception, we do not exist. Afterwards, we do--whatever form that may be.
That's a heck of a judgment. The ovum that turned into you was every bit as alive and real an hour before it met a sperm as an hour after. Conception is comparable, in physical terms, to an adult human receiving a vaccine -- the ovum is injected with a bit of foreign DNA from a dead sperm representing less than a thousandth of its biomass. That bit of DNA is just one of a great many essential elements the ovum must take in on the way to becoming an infant.You might subjectively argue that conception has more ethical or metaphysical importance than, say, the birth event or, I don't know,
the development of a functioning brain, but that is most certainly a judgment rather than a factual observation.
Maurile, I believe you are minimizing the impact of fertilization in a manner that does not fit your intellect. While
"The ovum that turned into you was every bit as alive and real an hour before it met a sperm as an hour after"is factually correct, it is not factually complete. I believe you know about the reproductive cycle of humans, (sexual reproduction) as opposed to the other reproductive method (asexual reproduction)...if not you can read about it
Here.The natural lifespan of an ovum is limited and,
barring any unnatural interactions, is either going to die on its own, as nothing more than an ovum, or it will be fertilized, and no longer be an ovum. It is, in fact, the first of many stages of a complete human being.
Using your own logic: "That bit of DNA is just one of a great many essential elements the ovum must take in
on the way to becoming an infant." ... That infant is just one of a great many essential stages on the way to becoming a

toddler/child/adolescent/young adult/middle aged adult/old adult etc... None of these, or any other descriptors, can make any of these things less than human. However,
I believe that if you choose any point other than conception (Human conception) as to when you grant the 'human', personhood, it is arbitrary.