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I hold the belief about a lot of things - this is at the core of how I engage with concepts. Concepts are not (rarely?) binary; they are clusters. It's a pretty common thing in ratspace with a lot of writing about it, and I've discussed it before in not-abortion contexts.
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Fish and humans are real categories though. There are important things that distinguish whales from fish. What distinguishes babies from humans? I think any argument used to justify abortion could also be used to justify other kinds of homicide, because babies are humans.
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Replying to and
There's a lot of concepts that I perceive as mixed together in this your tweet. If you *assume* babies are humans in the way that we ascribe moral personhood to humans, then I agree that argument could be used to justify homicide. But the debate here *is the assumption itself*.
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Replying to and
We're using the word 'babies,' which evokes to mind something I'm not talking about, to be clear. In the interest of conceptual clarity I'd rather use words that evoke to mind exactly what it is I'm talking about. We can make up a fully neutral word for this if you like.
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The lack of clairty comes from something like, if I go around saying 'I think we should kill babies,' people will grab their 3-month old in fear, even if I don't think we should kill their 3-month old. I'd like to use a word that is not incongruous with my intent.
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Okay, we can call them subjects of abortion. At first I wanted to say victims of abortion, but that’s not very neutral. Can you explain how to justify killing a subject of abortion in a way that wouldn’t justify any other kind of homicide that we agree is unjustifiable?
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Replying to and
This is a big fractal rabbithole of stuff like morality and rights, which I'm saying to acknowledge that I'm doing some 'smoothing over the edges' of things that have a lot more depth nuance to them. That being said,
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"why is it different from other homicide" feels like the same question as "why is removing cysts different from homicide" or "why is poisoning invasive rats different from homicide" - the answer being these things don't strike at our vague shitty concept of 'personhood'
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This is why it feels to me that the important question here is not "how is this different from homicide", but rather "are we in a world where SOAs should tickle our intuitions around personhood/humanness, or are we in a world where they shouldn't?"
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