No, life does not begin at implantation. For the sake of discussion, our terms should be accurate. Life begins when a sperm enters the egg and a new genetic code is created. That life will continue to old age and end unless interrupted. Various things can interrupt that life en utero, as you suggested, or afterwards. But when that life began is at conception.
The question was when life begins. Life begins at conception. Did you know that at the moment of conception, there is a flash of light? It's a biological fact, not subject to how we feel about it. How we value that new life that has come into existence is where the argument is.
It's a chemical reaction. Light (and heat) are often given off in any chemical reaction. The light in this case is billions of zinc atoms being released from the egg at the moment the sperm penetrates the eggs.
No, life does not begin at implantation. For the sake of discussion, our terms should be accurate. Life begins when a sperm enters the egg and a new genetic code is created. That life will continue to old age and end unless interrupted. Various things can interrupt that life en utero, as you suggested, or afterwards. But when that life began is at conception.
I respectfully disagree. A blueprint does not make a house.
The question was when life begins. Life begins at conception. Did you know that at the moment of conception, there is a flash of light? It's a biological fact, not subject to how we feel about it. How we value that new life that has come into existence is where the argument is.
It's a chemical reaction. Light (and heat) are often given off in any chemical reaction. The light in this case is billions of zinc atoms being released from the egg at the moment the sperm penetrates the eggs.
Right, at the moment of conception, light is released, announcing the advent of a new human being.