User:NCartmell

University student, English major, sociology minor, Bible minor. Favourite literary movement: British Romantic poets.

Consider: I'm sure you can extrapolate this point to a raging debate in our society about life and choice.
 * I have personhood. You have personhood.  We are both persons.
 * Because of this personhood, we have certain natural rights--not granted by the government, not derived from society; they are intrinsic to personhood, and all persons have them.
 * I lose my arm to surgery, but I--my personhood--has not been changed or negated. I am still a person, exactly like you.
 * Therefore, there is something about personhood that is not dependent upon the physical. What makes me a person is not my form or shape.  I could have no limbs and still be a person, I could have an extra limb and still be a person.  (This is, roughly, Plato's argument from The Republic.)