Originally posted by James Flagg:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Gina L:
Well, I don't. LOL I know just the basics of each. According to that link, a true molar pregnancy happens when an EMPTY egg is fertilized. No fetus is started or formed, simply an abnormal placenta.
Ok, about a tubal pregnancy. Why would you say it isn't a pregnancy, or question it? Was a 10 year old child who died in a car accident still a human, even though he never fully developed into an adult?
What about an infant with an uncureable heart defect who never reached being a toddler?
What about a zygote who never reaches infancy?
The ability to continue to grow or mature doesn't change what the thing is. Humans start out tiny and get big, but if they die before they get to a certain size, it doesn't mean you work backwards and take away their humanity, no matter what the method of death was.
We're getting over my head, and that isn't hard to do.
I think there is more than one type of molar pregnancy. A "complete mole" is entirely from the father (the "empty egg" you mentioned), and there are "triploid moles" which carry half (actually 1/4) of the mother's genes, and they can be exceptionally disturbing to see. They sometimes have hair and teeth, but are in no way human.
A tubal pregnancy is indeed a pregnancy. There is no other word for it. The only point I was making is that there is absolutely no way a tubal pregnancy will ever become a one-day old infant. A tubal pregnancy is a zygote/embryo, but is doomed never to reach the fetus stage.
Is a tubal any less "alive" than a 10-year-old? The tubal never had a chance to become 10y/o. Beyond that I think we would just be debating semantics. </font>[/QUOTE]Where are you getting your information about molar pregnancies? What follows is taken from the website -
http://www.obgyn.net/women/articles/molarpreg_dah.htm
and is by D. Ashley Hill, MD. Associate Director - Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology:
"Types of Molar Pregnancy
There are two types of molar pregnancy, complete and partial. Complete molar pregnancies have only placental parts (
there is no baby ), and form when the sperm fertilizes an
empty egg .
Because the egg is empty, no baby is formed . The placenta grows and produces the pregnancy hormone, called HCG, so the patient thinks she is pregnant. Unfortunately, an ultrasound (sometimes called a sonogram) will show that there is no baby, only placenta.
A partial mole occurs when 2 sperm fertilize an egg . Instead of forming twins, something goes wrong, leading to a pregnancy with an abnormal fetus and an abnormal placenta.
The baby has too many chromosomes and almost always dies in the uterus."
You said, "there are 'triploid moles'...They sometimes have hair and teeth, but are in no way human."
From what I have read, a "triploid mole" is the most common type of partial molar pregnancy. Not all babies that are the result of this type of pregnancy die in uterus (although most die by the first or second trimester). The ones that are born usually die within a few hours from what I have read. It is true that these babies are usually abnormal and deformed in some way, but how does that make them any less human? Many people are born with disabilities and deformities of some kind and live full lives. Are they any less human?
You said, "Is a tubal any less 'alive' than a 10-year-old? The tubal never had a chance to become 10y/o."
First of all, it is not a "tubal". It is a baby. You said, "The only point I was making is that there is absolutely no way a tubal pregnancy will ever become a one-day old infant."
To this I would have to say...what is the point? Are you trying to say that because the baby does not have a chance to be born and be a "one-day old infant" that it is somehow not a living human being? Does "level of development" or the "potential level of development" determine if a life is present or not? I have a step-sister that has a son that has a rare disorder that will not allow him to live much longer. What he has is 100% fatal (without a miracle). He will most likely not live beyond 8 - 10 years old. Does this make him somehow less human because he will never develop into a 18-year-old adult? If you try to say that this situation is different because he has already been born, then you would be saying that an unborn baby is somehow less than human.
By everything I have read about this, there is no reason to think that babies that are the result of partial molar pregancies are somehow not alive. As for complete molar pregnancies, this always involves an "empty egg" which means there was never a baby to begin with.