Biology? When the haploid sperm and egg meet, the end result is the offspring of the two, the full chromosome number, and the DNA is all the information required to build a human from that humble beginning. It's Homo sapien DNA. It's a growing human. You started out that way too.
Again that begs the question. How does that make the product of conception a human being? Product of conception is just that, product of conception. By whose definition is that a human being? By your definition?
Can you give me another comparable example of a distinct life form that has human DNA, and is not a human? It's entirely logical.
No I cannot. But that doesn't mean that just because a fetus has human DNA it is a human being. Human DNA is necessary, but not sufficient condition to humanity.
I gave a number of criteria. You're just digging in your heels.
Sure you did. You pointed out a number of similarities between a fetus and a newborn baby. That doesn't mean that you have proved that they are one and the same thing.
You're conveniently ignoring all of the other factors. Of course human DNA is not enough. You have to consider the rest of what I said as well.
But again, by whose definition? You point out a few similarities between a fetus and a baby and then claim that it proves that fetus is the same as a newborn baby. That is a logical fallacy.
Who cares about human being? That is being arbitrary. It's a human, Homo sapien. I defy you to show otherwise.
I am glad you realize that this definition of a human being is arbitrary. As to
homo sapien, sure the DNA belongs to
homo sapien. If allowed to grow to maturity, it will grow into a
homo sapien. But that is a far cry from saying that it is a
homo sapien.
It is a very difficult, profound philosophical and scientific question, what constitutes a human being. You are giving a simplistic answer, if something has a human DNA (and is growing, shows some of the attributes of a human being), it is human. It is not that simple.