WAB
Contributor
This is a twig from the Roe vs Wade thread, wherein the discussion of personhood came up. To me, it's not controversial or extremely difficult. A human individual is a person. Automatically, at least once they are outside the womb (I don't want this to veer into an abortion thread), a human being is a person . There are no requirements beyond that. One does not have to earn or deserve personhood, rather it is a thing granted at birth. This means that one does not have to do anything to be considered a person . In fact, they are allowed to be antisocial, allowed to be rather nasty, allowed to be mean and inconsiderate, etc. This does NOT mean that they are granted absolute liberty to do anything they want without reprisals. We have laws, and law enforcement, and things like arrest and incarceration, jails and prisons, whereby those individuals who break laws face consequences for their actions.
It could very well come down to a matter of definitions. Perhaps what some people mean by person should be called citizen. One does consent to being a citizen, if that means willing to abide by the laws of the land in order to reap the rewards of being a law abiding citizen and comport oneself in a manner which will be a benefit to oneself and possibly, hopefully, to others.
Or perhaps we need qualifiers. There is a difference after all, between a good person and a bad person. We do not remove the attribute of person from someone who behaves badly. Even hardened criminals are afforded recognition of fundamental rights. Even the abject killer, the rapist or child molestor, is treated with rudimentary human dignity: they are clothed, fed, housed, and are at least provisionally kept from cruel and unusual punishment.
If we decide that we can determine that a particular individual is being an asshole, a complete dick, does that therefore give us liberty to treat that someone as a non-person, and allow us to willfully NOT recognize their basic rights as people?
It could very well come down to a matter of definitions. Perhaps what some people mean by person should be called citizen. One does consent to being a citizen, if that means willing to abide by the laws of the land in order to reap the rewards of being a law abiding citizen and comport oneself in a manner which will be a benefit to oneself and possibly, hopefully, to others.
Or perhaps we need qualifiers. There is a difference after all, between a good person and a bad person. We do not remove the attribute of person from someone who behaves badly. Even hardened criminals are afforded recognition of fundamental rights. Even the abject killer, the rapist or child molestor, is treated with rudimentary human dignity: they are clothed, fed, housed, and are at least provisionally kept from cruel and unusual punishment.
If we decide that we can determine that a particular individual is being an asshole, a complete dick, does that therefore give us liberty to treat that someone as a non-person, and allow us to willfully NOT recognize their basic rights as people?