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When Is There A Functioning Integrated Whole Human Being?
FreeRepublic ^ | 6/13/2003 | Marvin Galloway

Posted on 06/13/2003 9:59:38 AM PDT by MHGinTN

In a previous essay we addressed the notion that with an alive human organism, the forms (sub-units) of the organism must be found to be functioning as an integrated whole. With an older individual human, the whole organism is working through a feedback system involving the most rudimentary portion of the organ called the brain. The older individual human being has a complement of organs that have been built and tied into a central processor in order to function as an integrated whole.

The organ harvesting industry uses a protocol that measures this integrated functioning by subjecting the body to various stimuli; noting the non-responses to these stimuli (no completed feedback loop of stimulus, primitive brain registering the nerve message, message returning for a response at the location of the stimulus) verifies that the individual who inhabited the body is no longer with the body; the organism is defined as dead when the feedback system is no longer working.

While the older individual has a central processor through which to measure the feedback loop of an alive individual, the ‘integrated whole’ status of the individual was not always dependent upon the primitive brain. Indeed, even before there is an organ called brain, it can be demonstrated that the integrated whole is operating coherently.

There is a time during the earliest age of an individual’s lifetime when just having a central processor working the nerve feedback loop is not sufficient to define the organism as alive in the air world because until approximately 20 to 22 weeks following the beginning of the individual’s lifetime, the organs called lungs are not complete enough to sustain respiration, even with the central processor working perfectly. That’s what is meant by an integrated whole, each organ is tied into an interdependent system of forms tasked to do special jobs for the functioning of the organism, and once born and into the air world the primitive brain is the director. But prior to birth some other central director achieves the integrated whole.

The transition from one directing system to a later one is gradual, with portions of the tasking transferred little by little, to achieve a seamless transition. It is because of this gradual transfer that a baby may be born alive very prematurely, at perhaps 21 weeks, yet that alive individual will remain alive as the body finishes building and completing the forms that will be integrated into the whole organism’s aliveness for the continued survival of the organism in the air world. It is the already alive individual that builds the sub-units necessary for survival as the environment changes. Going backward along the timeline, we will see how this transition is accomplished.

At 18 weeks from the beginning of a lifetime (for instance), the organism is clearly alive, the central processor of brain stem is functioning to maintain the feedback loop, but the organism has not completely transitioned from some other director for the integrated whole, to the primitive brain as director of the integrated whole.

For a human organism to be defined as alive, the parts will be functioning as a coherent whole organism, with the purpose to maintain the life of the organism, not just the organs of the organism. The brain is sufficiently developed by week three to four that some electromagnetic waves may be detected, generated by the connected feedback loop of body nerves and central primitive brain. But the organism is not yet in the air world so the additional form of lung is not yet vital to the functioning of the integrated whole, yet the individual is clearly alive and functioning as an integrated whole. At first, that may sound contradictory, but it’s not, because coherent functioning of the integrated whole shifts as the organism grows older.

Throughout an individual human lifetime, the parts of the organism will be functioning to accomplish in a coherent fashion the survival of the individual. Before direction of the integrated whole shifts to primarily the central processor (almost exclusively, but never entirely), the genes are controlling the form and function of the individual’s life begun at conception.

During the most active development age, as organs are being formed and integrated into the whole, to spread out the life functioning tasks across a more complex system, the individual’s DNA is a blueprint for forms to be built, and the special characteristic of a ‘surviving organism in action’ directs the integrated whole. At molecular and cellular level, the ‘design’ functions as the central coherency for the forming sub-units as they are built and integrated into the whole. Even when the organism grows old enough to live in the air world and enough organs are integrated into the whole system, there remains that original molecular driven design, functioning within the organ systems of the alive individual. As the organism grew, the cells being built became more specialized, to take on the function of specialized tasks within the organs of the integrated whole organism.

The already alive organism builds the organs that will accomplish viability in the next environment in which the organism will exist. Every alive individual human being began their human existence at the embryo age as evidenced by their first act of cell division. New cells were tasked to build the increasingly complex form for the already alive individual, to survive while in the womb and when exiting that realm. As the organism spreads its functioning out over a more complex integrated whole, the forms to support that complexity must be made up of more and more specialized cells, more differentiated cells.

At the age of embryo, the individual has stem cells that are less differentiated, and as the being builds organs, the newest cells are more differentiated, more specialized, but the organism is not ‘more alive’ just because cells it is making are more specialized. The argument can be made that the first cell of conception is the most alive cell of an entire lifetime, and that the organism spreads this ‘aliveness’ out over more and more forms, to accomplish more complex functioning as the organism ages.

During pro-life/pro-choice discussions, the notion arises that the early individual human being (at embryo age, for instance) is not yet fully an individual human being, that somehow there is a moment or time period when ‘a pre-human awakens’ to become a full human being. When pressed to defend this, the pro-choice advocate cannot name a specific moment as the time slot in which this magical ‘awakening’ occurs.

In the past, the notion of quickening (when the preborn individual could be felt moving) was used to define when an alive individual was present in the womb. As science has progressed, we’ve found that the only reason the woman begins to feel the movement is because the individual within her body has become large enough for its actions to be recognized. The little one has been moving and active for a long stretch prior to being felt.

There is no moment or window of development when the individual begun at conception is more alive. The functions of integrated whole organism (the definition of alive) change gradually, as forms are built to take on specialized tasks for maintenance and functioning of the whole organism. The individual human being is alive from the first time following conception, even before the first evidence of the individual’s survival actions occurs. Survival is begun with the first cell dividing to begin the specialization process, whereby necessary complex survival tasks, first in the water world of a placental bag, and then in the future air world, will be handled by organs that may have only limited functional necessity, dependent upon location of the individual being.

Many believe that the development of internal body organs is the first construction project the newly alive individual accomplishes, but it is actually the construction of its own ‘space capsule’ to be filled with fluid that is the first major building project the individual human being undertakes. It is this space capsule--the placenta--that acts to protect the new, separate individual being from tissue rejection assault by the woman’s body (tricking her immune system to identify the growing life as non-alien), and acts as the means for nourishment to arrive from the woman’s life supporting more specialized organ filled body. As soon as conception occurs, there is a separate, alive, new individual existing in time and space, no matter where that new individual is located, whether in a woman’s body or in a lab dish where in vitro fertilization was accomplished.

Even if the new individual is conceived in a dish, by bringing sperm and ovum together artificially, the new, alive individual builds its own organs for survival. The embryonic individuals an in vitro technician tries to insert into a woman’s uterus have already begun building their own sub-units necessary for survival. The technicians look for embryonic individuals who have built the first form of the placenta they will occupy during pregnancy, the outer barrier that will be necessary for attachment to the woman’s uterus. The placental sac is actually a very special first organ for survival, built by the tiny embryonic individual, as the tiny human being makes new, more and more specialized cells that work as a coherent whole of separate but integrated parts working to accomplish continuing survival of a new human being.

When the issue of ‘viability’ arises, it should be noted that to be viable in the air world requires functioning lungs, a blood circulator, and a central nerve processor of at least primitive brain. To be viable in a water world of the placental sac doesn’t require functioning lungs (for instance) but does require a different set of functioning parts, yet the whole organism is coherent, acting as an integrated whole.


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Free Republic
KEYWORDS: embryo; humanbeing; intergatedwhole; prenataldevelopment
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To: supercat
unable to implant and consequently die?

Some people die before they implant, some die before they're born, some die shortly after birth, some die before kindergarden, some before they turn 21, some before age 30.... natural death is just part of life but doesn't justify killing someone.

41 posted on 06/14/2003 11:05:47 AM PDT by FITZ
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To: FITZ
Well said ... I've been pondering how to say that to my friend, supercat. Your response was not clumsy the way mine would have been.
42 posted on 06/14/2003 12:19:56 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote Life Support for others.)
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To: supercat
I didn't think anywhere near 90% of fertilized eggs implanted successfully, even in healthy women. Certainly there are some women who, because of natural conditions, have much lower implantation rates. Should such women be forbidden from having sex, on the basis that it might fertilize an egg which might be unable to implant and consequently die?

Although I cannot offer a citation for the 90% number, I believe it is essentially correct. Chemical birth control, the pill, and surgical birth control, abortion, are human interventions that destroy the embryonic person. By your rhetorical question, do you mean to equate human action to conceive a child with human intervention to prevent a live birth just so long as the outcome is same? If so, we are not having a serious discussion.

43 posted on 06/14/2003 12:56:44 PM PDT by Havisham
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To: MHGinTN
Yes, it is the central connundrum to agree upon when an individual human being is worthy of protection, hence the effort to expose the biological realities of prenatal life. The issue bears also upon how our society will deal with embryonic exploitation and cloning.

Thank you for your affirmative comment. Would you agree that requiring a life to be fully functional and whole has obvious implications for protection of the infirm and elderly?

44 posted on 06/14/2003 1:04:31 PM PDT by Havisham
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To: Havisham
Please go to the first repsonse on this thread and click on the link to the essay that preceeded this one (more depth on the organ harvesting 'death protocol'). The elderly and infirm fit the clear protocol definition of functioning integrated whole for the title of human being. It is the author's contention that the same is fitting for the embryonic indiividual.
45 posted on 06/14/2003 1:08:02 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote Life Support for others.)
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To: MHGinTN
Thank you for the tip. I did read the article, however, I recoiled at its complicating of the issue. Essays of this type are often overlong and wordy, which I believe repels the average person, whom I count myself among. Complexification of the truth of life only makes a rapidly approaching utilitarian future more likely.
46 posted on 06/14/2003 1:30:05 PM PDT by Havisham
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^
47 posted on 06/14/2003 6:02:54 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote Life Support for others.)
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To: FITZ
A newborn is only slightly more self-reliant than a pre-born.

I agree with that. A human candidate does not really become a fully functional being until around the age of 32 years.

48 posted on 06/15/2003 1:40:51 AM PDT by Jeff Gordon
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To: supercat
When my wife was attending medical school 5-7 years ago the implantation rate was only 75 percent.

As far as integration of the entire organism, I am convinced that most Liberal Democrats are not there yet. Accordingly it would be legal to perform abortion upon demand at any time after their participation in their first election.
49 posted on 06/15/2003 10:49:49 PM PDT by donmeaker (Safety is NO Accident!)
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To: afraidfortherepublic; AlbionGirl; anniegetyourgun; Aquinasfan; arasina; Archangelsk; A-teamMom; ...
ping...
50 posted on 06/16/2003 2:01:59 PM PDT by cgk (Bob Geldof: "President Bush is radical, in a positive sense. Clinton did f*&% all.")
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To: cgk
When Is There A Functioning Integrated Whole Human Being?

When it is wanted.

:-(

51 posted on 06/16/2003 2:04:12 PM PDT by Terriergal ("You slaughtered my children and sacrificed them to the idols...." Ez 16:21)
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To: Terriergal
And that, Terriergal, is why the mebryonic and early fetal individual human beings will be exploited for their valuable body parts, killing them off in the process of cannibalizing them ... the notion of 'if it's wanted' at once dehumanizes the unwanted and denegrates the species to cannibalism.
52 posted on 06/16/2003 3:55:32 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote Life Support for others.)
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To: FITZ
The first necessity for survival by the embryo when it implants via its personally constructed placental encapsulation is oxygen ... the placenta functions as the 'lungs' for the embryo, from one perspective. The oxygen doesn't start getting to the embryo right away, but it is soon after implantation arriving through the blood supply the embryo has chemically induced to be delivered to the encapsulating placental barrier.
53 posted on 06/16/2003 8:33:42 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote Life Support for others.)
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To: MHGinTN
There is a time during the earliest age of an individual’s lifetime when just having a central processor working the nerve feedback loop is not sufficient to define the organism as alive in the air world because until approximately 20 to 22 weeks following the beginning of the individual’s lifetime, the organs called lungs are not complete enough to sustain respiration, even with the central processor working perfectly.

This, of course, is nonsense on its face since it's making "alive" depend on "alive means being able to breath air". There is no such definition that is not merely ad hoc for argument's sake.

Here is something that puts it all into the perspective you apparently wanted in many fewer words:
Genetically speaking, there is a time before which an individual of a sexually reproducing species does not exist and after which it does, be it ever so humble. From that moment to the moment of its dissolution it passes through definable stages of development and degeneration. Here are some that apply to us: zygote, embryo, fetus, newborn, infant, toddler, child, pre-adolescent, young adult, mature adult, old-aged. Upon this continuum of development place an asterisk where “it” becomes “human” and perhaps another where its humanity ceases as far as the empirical world is concerned. Many would place the asterisks at conception and death (death defined as the irreversible disruption of the continuum). I do. For us, it is this creature appearing at conception and disappearing at death that is human. Against this, talk about seeds not being trees and fertilized eggs not being chickens shows itself for the silly ontogenocentrism that it is-- the full-grown chicken is not a fertilized egg, but both are developmental stages of the same being. An acorn is not a tree, but both are equally oak.

If “human being” is a later stage of an individual’s existence, then what is the name for the being started at conception and ended at death? On the individual level, the pro-life group calls it human whether conscious or not, crippled, retarded, senile, diseased, sinful, intelligent, female, or male. The pro-abortion group uses “quality of life and “value to society” to define the parameters of being human and those who have the power to do so to define those terms, whether a woman and her physician, N.A.R.A.L, or Big Brother.

54 posted on 06/16/2003 9:02:20 PM PDT by aruanan
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To: aruanan
I guess I'm just not capable of writing that succinctly. ... And I wanted to focus upon the essentials of the protocol used when organ harvesting is anticipated with older human beings, to determine when there is no longer an integrated whole functioning human organism 'there' or here, or ... well, see, I just can't be so succinct, aruanan. [My 'hidden agenda' is to define the reason, biologically, for protecting individual human embryonic life from exploitative measures.]
55 posted on 06/16/2003 9:17:10 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote Life Support for others.)
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