13472099:the.hellion. said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			I have already articulated this position in previous posts, but I'll highlight it again for your benefit.
Abortion has been around for centuries; the classic case against abortion can trace it's roots back to the 1800s, a time of severe social conservatism (you couldn't even show table legs!). According to history and legal precedent, as early as 1115 in England, human personhood was described as a 'formed fetus', "a reasonable creature in rerum natura" (as formulated by Sir Edward Coke in his Institutes of the Lawes of England.) Further in this post are various other perceptions of personhood, as pulled from a cursory wikipedia search.
"Aristotle, in his treatise on government Politics (350 BCE), condemns infanticide as a means of population control. He preferred abortion in such cases, with the restriction[119] "[that it] must be practised on it before it has developed sensation and life; for the line between lawful and unlawful abortion will be marked by the fact of having sensation and being alive."[120] In Christianity, Pope Sixtus V (1585–90) was the first Pope to declare that abortion is homicide regardless of the stage of pregnancy;[121] the Catholic Church had previously been divided on whether it believed that abortion was murder, and did not begin vigorously opposing abortion until the 19th century.[13] Islamic tradition has traditionally permitted abortion until a point in time when Muslims believe the soul enters the fetus,[13] considered by various theologians to be at conception, 40 days after conception, 120 days after conception, or quickening.[122] However, abortion is largely heavily restricted or forbidden in areas of high Islamic faith such as the Middle East and North Africa.[123]"