Table of Contents

PBA205H: Personhood and Human Rights

FIXME formerly “Functionalism” - now modifying to do a personhood 2.0 following from PBA100Y

COVER

We know that science has established that the pre-born are human beings. The question we must now ask is a philosophical one: Do all humans have human rights? Do we have human rights and personhood by virtue of our existence as humans, or by virtue of our features and abilities?

Human vs. Person: What's the difference?

The first question we need to ask is, What is a person? Why should anyone accept the idea that there can be such a thing as a human being that is not a human person? What’s the difference?

Who gets human rights?

“… the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world” - Universal Declaration of Human Rights1)
“…the child, by reason of his physical and mental immaturity, needs special safeguards and care, including appropriate legal protection, before as well as after birth” - UN Declaration of the Rights of the Child2)

FIXME human rights documents - why do they not say “person”? Because of historical discrimination, WWII.

We know the history of legal personhood. We know that denying “personhood” to some human beings has always been a catastrophic moral error.

Functionalism

“I consider this claim to be so obvious that I think anyone who denied it, and claimed that a being which satisfied none of [the criteria] was a person all the same, would thereby demonstrate that he had no notion at all of what a person is”3)

In other words, she merely asserts that these traits are necessary for personhood but never says why these alleged value-giving properties are value-giving in the first place. Warren employs functionalist arguments in order to deny the personhood of the pre-born.

Consciousness and Sentience

FIXME distinctions between terms: sentience vs. rationality vs. self-awareness…they are all different things, but in typical conversations get lumped under the same vague umbrella

FIXME brief intro to Peter Singer

Suffering

Argument: the pre-born won't suffer when we kill them :. not “harming” them “ :. abortion is OK

  1. Wrongness of killing isn't based simply on pain. Is it OK to kill a toddler as long as you give her anaesthetic first?
  2. Kianna's story re: is it wrong to rape a comatose woman if she can't feel it, won't remember it?
    1. wrongness of rape isn't just about suffering, it's about violating another person's bodily autonomy
    2. similarly, wrongness of killing isn't just about suffering for the victim or others; it's about depriving the victim of their life and their future

Ageism and Other Forms of Discrimination

FIXME https://www.instagram.com/reel/C5jSIx6vJLr/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link pretty good example of talking about personhood/ “human + X”

Insert Oriyana's testimony about sentience - amoeba vs. embryo
“You say A. is white, and B. is black. It is color, then; the lighter, having the right to enslave the darker? Take care. By this rule, you are to be slave to the first man you meet, with a fairer skin than your own. You do not mean color exactly? You mean the whites are intellectually the superiors of the blacks, and, therefore have the right to enslave them? Take care again. By this rule, you are to be slave to the first man you meet, with an intellect superior to your own.”5)
Dialogue about Personhood: “Who gets human rights?” FIXME condense this? Or does someone else have a better one?

Me: Do you believe in human rights?

Him: Yeah.

M: And who gets human rights?

H: Hmm…I think that humans who are rational and self-aware should get human rights.

M: I’d agree that our rationality is one of the things that makes humans special. I’m not sure though that it’s the reason we get human rights. Think of it this way: imagine there’s a man who’s in a temporary coma—for, say, 9 months. The doctor tells you that for those 9 months the man will be totally unconscious, but he’ll regain consciousness afterwards. Would it be OK to kill him during those 9 months, since he’s not self-aware?

H: No, that’s a good point. I guess it’s more about whether or not we a person is going to be happy and functional.

M: Well, imagine that tomorrow, you got into a car crash with some family members. Some of them die, and you become a paraplegic. You wouldn’t be very happy or functional, right? But wouldn’t you still get human rights?

H: Yeah, I don’t like that definition [of who gets HRs] either.

M: Isn’t it most philosophically consistent to say that all humans should get human rights?

H: Yeah, I guess so. [Pause] So why are you here showing pictures of aborted fetuses?

M: I’m here because throughout history, humans have been denied human rights and personhood for so many reasons. People have been discriminated against because of their race, or gender, or their sexual orientation. Today, in Canada, an entire class of human beings are denied rights and personhood because of their age. Because they’re living in the first 9 months of life.

H: Yeah—all the arguments go back to their age. [Pause] Well, if your goal was to get me thinking, you’ve definitely succeeded.

- Maria at UTM

Human Beings--Not Human Doings

What kind of world do you want to live in?

Once we draw the line anywhere later than fertilization, there is nothing that grounds our views regarding rights. Because if humans only have rights due to some acquired property rather than by virtue of being members of the human family, all we are left with is arbitrary definitions of personhood that always leave some humans out. In the past, and in Canada currently, the strong deny personhood to the weak in order to victimize those individuals. A civil society should protect all humans and not discriminate against the youngest and most vulnerable humans.

FIXME What grounds human rights and human equality? “It can’t be that all of us look human, because some have been disfigured. It can’t be that all of us have functional brains, because some are in reversible comas. It can’t be one’s ability to think or feel pain, for some think better than others and some don’t feel any pain. It can’t be something we can gain or lose, or something of which we can have more or less. If something like that grounds rights, equal rights don’t exist…There is only one quality we all have equally—we’re all human.” - Steve Wagner

https://www.endthekilling.ca/blog/2015/04/15/bad-ideas-and-bloody-consequences –> re: Maaike's debate with Sumner

FIXME sort through these remaining notes

FIXME https://blog.equalrightsinstitute.com/