If this man is going to convince me the he alone knows when the soul enters the body, I’m gonna need a miracle as proof.
How about joining in on the forum you started, instead of posting and running?
1. If it isn't human, what is it?
2. If it isn't alive, what is it?
And before we get sidetracked into a fruitless discussion of soul, I'd like to point out that those two questions were asked by a prominent atheist who came to his own inescapable and rather uncomfortable (to him) conclusion about abortion. You must either redefine "murder" as something other than the taking of a human life or you must concede the point.
Regarding your statement about when a fetus is a person (based upon your religious beliefs regarding souls) does this mean that the atheists among us have freedom to murder anyone at all since they don’t believe in the concept of a soul?
10. America is the last superpower and runs the world.He gets 7 out of 10 but misses on the big ones.9. America is a Christian country.
3. Abortion is murder.
Sorry, abortion is murder—the killing of an innocent human person.
Killing a baby is not murder. You are a sick man.
Not that so much a rational as it is a rationalist review. Libertarians do have such a bug up their keisters when it comes to Christianity. Human life begins before the young humans exit the womb yet abortion has special politicized exemptions for it that no other surgeries have. Hmm, wonder why? Perhaps the might of the big humans trumps the rights of the little ones.
America was indeed a Christian country and it took the anti-Christians many decades to accomplish their goal of stripping the country of her religious heritage. It was Christianity that gave rise to America, no other faith. Others came here because of the tolerance afforded by a Christian nation, else why bother coming?
I wish I could argue with you...
Your right your not superior.
But you are the most stiff necked stubborn and thick headed.
Look at the philosophers that influenced the climate in which the constitution was written. Concepts of justice were founded in divine law, written law, common law. Divine law drew from Christian principles. Ask yourself, what is justice and where does it come from during that time? Forget about your diagrams. Who created the concept of inalienable rights? What is a right? Where did such rights come from?