Eturnalshift wrote:
I know this may be a shock to someone who has been completely dependent and coddled by others their entire life, but people can survive on their own if they're developed enough. Infants aren't afforded that developmental luxury, but children, teens and adults could survive in the wild if they have the physical capacity, and will, to survive.

Until recent times, despite men and women marrying early and having as many children as possible - ten or more - the overwhelming majority of people (~90%) did not survive to reproduce. Even factoring out stillborns and deaths in infancy, mortality was staggering. The objective reality is that most people
can't survive without modern society, and certainly not without any society at all.
When you say "physical capacity" what you mean is physical strength and vitality. What you overlook is that your physical strength, as you know it, is dependent on a modern high-calorie diet, sleeping well each night in a bed, easy access to water, and a sanitary environment so you do not have to spend excess resources on immune function. Without access to those things your physical strength would quickly wane. The closest thing you will ever see to humans in their "natural state" are homeless people and rodents.
You say I have been dependent on others or coddled my entire life, yet I am not so out of touch with reality or myself to lose sight of the reality of human frailty. You, on the other hand, are apparently so mired in what society has done for you that you've completely lost sight of it.
Eturnalshift wrote:
You're talking out your ass now. An infant can't survive on his or her own until they develop further. Biologically, until their digestive systems and reflexes have matured, infants are incapable of eating solid food so they need nourishment from a mother. To survive on their own they'd need the motor skills necessary to find food, pick up food, put it in their mouth, chew, etc. What that means is a child would die long before they developed the skills necessary to be 'independently viable.'
As I already said, there are many people and creatures which never gain the ability to survive independently but are considered examples of their species nonetheless.
Eturnalshift wrote:
As you know, because of their inability to survive on their own, the Romans would leave their infants to the exposure of the elements as a means of death.
Not exactly. The Romans (and almost all other traditional societies, with the sole exception of the Hebrews) exposed infants that were unwanted or defective in some way. To this day, Roman brothels can be easily identified by piles of infant skeletons in the sewers below.
It was legal for a Roman father to kill not only unwanted infants but his children of any age - even into adulthood - because of
patrias potestas. So in reality you are completely debunking your own point: the Roman world view was based on the premise that no man is an island, everyone is first and foremost a member of the community, the family and the state.
Eturnalshift wrote:
Embryo - Human life, reliant on its mother for nourishment and incapable of surviving on its own due to lack of development... Abortable.
Infant - Human life, reliant on its mother (or another) for nourishment and incapable of surviving on its own due to lack of development... Not abortable... well unless you're Aestu, then Infantcide would be legalized.
Yes. I think my stance is more logical.
Eturnalshift wrote:
Would you have made the cut? Weren't you born with a cleft lip/palate?
This is an interesting question but not for the reasons you might think.
The short answer is no, I wouldn't have, for the reason you identify - and I am fine with this. I wasn't me when I was a newborn infant, I was a newborn infant struggling to breathe.
I freely admit (and my father can occasionally be provoked into saying something along the same lines although he will never coolly admit it) that a lot of my personal unhappiness and generally maladjusted nature stems from the complex developmental impact of a cleft palate, even one that has been fully corrected.
What makes your question interesting is the ironic reality that sometimes, simply being "a little off" - like Bernard Marx in
Brave New World - can help someone see the world more clearly, or bring a different perspective to it. Many of history's greatest minds were people who suffered physical defects or other inadequacies that somehow impacted their behavior and ability to relate to the world.
Alexander the Great, for example, is typically portrayed in art craning his neck in an odd way. This is typically recast as a graceful or dramatic gesture, but in reality, his family suffered from a congenital spinal deformity (which may also have been why he died young). Julius Caesar suffered from epilepsy. Napoleon got picked on for being short. The trauma of losing one of his testicles may have been the decisive factor in Adolf Hitler deciding to take over the world.
The real question about eugenics is not whether any one person is fit to live or die but the possible ramifications of removing outliers from human society. Self-loathing is a deceptively influential social force.