Forgot about this thread.
Anyway....
You continue to assert this definition without giving me any reasons to believe that it is relevant or correct.
Reason? It's a definition. Either you agree with it or you're divorcing yourself from reality. A human being is a person.
Why should I consider all human beings to necessarily be persons?
Because it's defined that way
human being
 
noun
1. any individual of the genus Homo, especially a member of the species Homo sapiens.
2. a person, especially as distinguished from other animals or as representing the human species: living conditions not fit for human beings; a very generous human being.
You haven't answered my question. You've shown me an example of where a biological definition of person has been used; you haven't given me a single reason why I should agree with such a definition.
Like I said before: a human being is defined as being a person.
It's not withing people's control to have sex without potentially getting pregnant. But you are telling them they must deal with the consequences of their actions. I am doing the exact same thing.
Hysterectomy? Vasectomy? These are guaranteed ways to have sex and not have a baby.
Having a baby without passing along a hereditary disease? Now that's a real head scratcher......
Besides, there are some genetic disorders that 1) that cannot be cured by harvesting organs (like color blindness) and 2) do not cause deadly situations...like color blindness. In ALL cases, a fetus is using the mother to survive. Such is not the case with all hereditary diseases.
Why should one have to use the internals of their body to deal with the consequences of their actions in one case, but not the other?
BECAUSE THE TWO ARE INCOMPARABLE (falsely equated)
How? Do I have to go through it AGAIN?
1) Because "using the internals" of her body is the ONLY way to sustain the life of the baby. Organ harvesting from one individual is NOT the only way to help keep a person alive. We don't do it because, unlike the mother, there are other methods to keep people alive (thanks to modern-day technology).
Then you went: "What if it's a the only option (shortage of donors, etc)?"
Give me a plausible scenario where helping to SAVE THE LIFE of an individual (in this instance) would not kill the donor. Like you said:
1. You're using your body to save some one who is in immediate "mortal danger" (like the mother is "saving" the fetus)
2. It's the only option (like how the mother is the only option)
3. Nobody dies* (just like how the mother doesn't die)
*the statistics have to match. If the person has a chance of dying then it has to be at a comparable rate of maternal deaths.
Provide an example and we'll go with it. If it's valid, of course. I'm trying to see even if this scenario even exists.
2) Under most circumstances (let me say that again....
UNDER MOST CIRCUMSTANCES), the mother's body goes back to normal (or what a doctor would consider normal or perfectly OK) after 9 months. This does not hold up for the scenario in which someone is helping to save someone's life with their own body. Again, if you believe it can happen, then provide an example.
It's something to think about, okay, I thought it originally was a hole in my argument? But using your example, a woman wouldn't be able to carry 50 babies without dying, some of the 50 children inside of her would have to die in order to save the mother and some of the children. Some of the 50 people that got injured/poisoned/whatever in your example would have to die too, if all of them needed new internals from a single person to survive.
1) That's not realistic
2) Even if it were, do you really think that it 50 people are going to let themselves DIE simply because one man doesn't have enough organs to go around?
The 50 babies don't have a choice. That is the important distinction that I think you keep missing.
You are forcing a woman to use the internals of her body to sustain the life of another in a situation that she caused. I am asking men and women to use the internals of their bodies to sustain the life of another in situations that they cause. It's not exactly rocket science, dude.
Like I've continuously shown, it just isn't that simple.
EDIT: BTW, I haven't read beyond any of these posts yet.
No consideration for how that logic makes miscarriages manslaughter and no care for the consequences that mindset would have towards back alley and self performed abortions except to say that they should just have the kid. In his defense, however, he does believe in universal health care. So, that should help with the uptick in pregnant mothers needing care. Not everything afterwards or the additional food required when pregnant, mind you, but the medical bills.
Ummm....what? A miscarriage is not intentional. Nobody did anything to cause a miscarriage. By definition, a miscarriage is spontaneous. Your description of my argument highlighted the fact that I was all about INTENT. How you arrived at such a conclusion....I have no idea.