Find me a scientist who agrees with this statement.Brains are not necessary for sentience. — Gregory
No, you're right I don't understand anything about philosophy, I only have an honours degree in it from one of the world's best universities.Most people don't really understand anything about philosophy, apparently you included (after all, you asked for "proof" for the soul lol, gee) — Gregory
I suppose another way of putting that would be to say that Moore thought we can't know what 'good' refers to - what property it denotes. But it seems to me that we can't decide that issue until we have worked out what the word 'good' actually means, i.e. what function it performs in ordinary discourse. R.M.Hare, whose lectures I attended long ago when life was simpler and we all had more and longer hair (well, I did), reformulated Moore's open question and thought that in so doing he had made it unanswerable (https://www.jstor.org/stable/2252015?seq=1).I think Moore´s point of view is more metaphysical or ontological, we have statements like "pleasure is good" and at the same time we would never know what is "good" for sure. — Antinatalist
I think nature comes with some built-in values.What other value, apart from the value of valuers do you imagine might exist? — Janus
Your first statement does not provide any grounds for accepting your second statement. Was it supposed to? If not, what is the first statement doing there? Do you understand how to construct a logical argument?Babies have heart beats and brain waves by the tenth week. They are alive and sentient at conception. — Gregory
That's like a burglar telling me it's not about theft.↪Herg
It's not about insults. — Gregory
An atheist who believes there are such things as souls is a new one on me.Your abortion stance is contrary to what your soul tells you.
I don't think 'pleasure is good' is informative to any being that has experienced pleasure. I think it's something every being that has experienced pleasure knows to be true, even if they don't have language in which to express it. My dog knows pleasure is good. He also knows pain is bad, which is why he cringes if he thinks I'm going to hit him. (I never do, but he's a rescue, and I think he probably had a bad start in life.)Moore had said if good is defined as pleasure, or any other natural property, "good" may be substituted for "pleasure", or that other property, anywhere where it occurs. However, "pleasure is good" is a meaningful, informative statement; — Antinatalist
You're more optimistic than I am. Nice poem, BTW. As we're sharing, I'll post one of mine.I believe that if we are still around in 100 year or so, humans will be looking back and wondering WTF we were thinking. — James Riley
Hey, EricH, now you and I are BOTH Nazis! If you're not too busy tomorrow, shall we invade Poland?↪EricH
You're trying to dissect pregnancy with a Nazi-like mind. — Gregory
False analogy. Jews and gays are sentient, pre-sentient foetuses are not. When are you going to face up to this?↪tim wood
It's not about logic on paper but real life reality (existential reality). Hitler said Jews weren't people. The president of Poland said gays aren't people. Pro choicers are doing the same thing with a group of individuals because the littler persons are invisible to the eye without ultrasounds, etc. — Gregory
And YOU have the nerve to call ME a Nazi?!!?James Riley
Actually it is up to men to control woman in some ways because women can't be happy unless they are controlled by men in some way — Gregory
*sigh* No I don't. It sounds like a rather messy and unpleasant job, and there's a high risk of being assaulted by deluded pro-life extremists like you.It doesn't respect pregnancy but you can't see that because you want to be an abortion doctor. — Gregory
We're in the same boat. We currently have one dog, and in the past we've had three other dogs, 16 cats, and 24 guinea pigs. We feed our dogs and cats on tinned food which no doubt comes from intensive farming of cows, sheep and pigs, which I disapprove of on moral grounds. so I am also a hypocrite, but I don't have time and energy to give them meat from kinder sources, and besides, we're vegetarian, so we don't have meat in the house. It's an ethical quagmire.(I imagine you're not too keen on the idea of pets at all - would I be right?)
— Herg
You are right, but I'm a hypocrite. I have a dog and three cats. — James Riley
Well, I wouldn't talk of essences, not believing in them, but yes, I think it's bad. But we're all in it up to our necks. Slavery of humans was largely abolished in the 19th century, but we still enslave animals. If there's a God, he's not going to be happy with us when we finally meet him.But I've often wondered if domestication of species was original sin. You take something and deprive it of it's essence. That can be utilitarian but I don't think it's good.
Ridiculous. What is wrong with someone who supports abortion of pre-sentient foetuses saying they would be willing to perform the abortion themselves? It merely shows that I am honest and consistent. I can't help it if you are too squeamish to accept the fact that I would practise what I preach.'m not going to respond to you on this because there were other ways to respond to what I initially said instead of saying you'd be happy to perform an abortion. Since you're a Nazi I'm not going to reason with you because it's my reason connected with ethical sense vs your reason connected to evil. There no real way to have a discussion with you even though your arguments are the same as others. It's just about the best way to deal with you — Gregory
I sympathise with both prey and predator, but generally more so with the predator, because a quick death by having the neck severed is preferable to a slow death by starvation. I have occasionally rescued prey animals from domestic pets, but that's because they can be assumed to be well fed without needing to catch and eat prey on their own initiative. (I imagine you're not too keen on the idea of pets at all - would I be right?) I live in the suburbs, and we quite often get foxes wandering around in the daytime looking for food, looking very thin and, to my inexpert eye, mangy. They are a by-product of human society, which fucks up the natural order and doesn't care what misery it causes to other species.Whenever I hear people sympathizing with a prey animal under attack, I try my best to sympathize with the predator trying to put food on the table (and feed his/her own kids) while some dickhead human comes to the rescue of the "innocent" little prey animal. — James Riley
If the bear knows she has a cub, then presumably the cub must be pretty well developed, so when you say 'yet it's ok for humans to do it', what you mean is that it's ok for humans to kill a well developed foetus. No, it isn't ok, because by that time, the foetus is a sentient being, and therefore has interests of its own which deserve to be considered.Imagine you watched a nature show where a female bear violently hits her side against a tree to kill her cub inside her. You would feel your soul (you could feel that anywhere in the body I suppose) recoil in shock from it. Yet it's ok for humans to do it? — Gregory
I am not saying that. I am talking about sentience, not life, and you have not had the guts to face up to my arguments. I am not denying that a pre-sentient foetus is alive. I am not denying that aborting a pre-sentient foetus is taking a human life. I am claiming that a human life can have no value to itself if it has never been sentient, so taking that life is not taking something of value. Could you value something if you could not think and feel? Of course you couldn't. Face up to this argument like a decent human being, stop evading the real issue, stop hiding behind youir supposed 'common sense', which is really just cowardice and prejudice, and answer my arguments, if you can. And if you can't, step up and be a decent human being and admit that you can't. If you don't do this, you have no right to be here on this forum.It's people who say "not enough life there for me to respect" when they obviously don't have the right to say that. — Gregory
Why are you here at all if you hate philosophy so much?The basic premise of pro-life belief is that we follow common sense and respect all human life. It's not about philosophy. People used philosophy to justify slavery, killing Jews, and some philosophy some day may say anyone over 60 is no longer human. — Gregory
Well, you don't really argue philosophy at all, do you? You've just come on this forum to preach at us and hurl insults. And now you've added ageism to your other delightful qualities. BTW, I'm not a Nazi, politically I'm pretty much middle of the road.↪Herg
I'm not going to argue philosophy with a doodoo elderly Nazi — Gregory
LOL. No, I don't engage in philosophical ping-pong just for the sake of it. I concede the field to you. Have a nice day.Yes. Do you know what a circular definition is?
— Herg
Yes. Your criticism of my statement was accurate. Your turn. — T Clark
I do, as it happens. Here it is, in two parts:You have no proof a fetus isn't as sentient as you — Gregory
This injunction only applies if the 'others' are sentient, because if they aren't sentient, it can't matter to them how they are treated, so it shouldn't matter to us.We are to treat others as we would be treated. — Gregory
Your question contains an error. If I had aborted the pre-sentient foetus that later became me, it would not have developed into me, so it would not be myself that I was aborting. You should have said, 'Would you have aborted the pre-sentient foetus that later developed into you?' And the answer is 'no', because both my parents were healthy and able to look after me without harm to themselves, they both wanted me to be born, and who am I to stop them having a child if they wanted one?Would you have aborted yourself?
Yes. Do you know what a circular definition is?Well, it wasn't me that introduced this red herring, was it?
— Herg
Do you even know what the phrase "red herring" means? — T Clark
Well, it wasn't me that introduced this red herring, was it?The word "natural" is not the subject of this thread. The subject is "naturalism." — T Clark
Nice to see the true spirit of Christian love is alive and well on this forum. ;)Abortion doctors should all literally be crucified. — Gregory
I'd be perfectly willing to kill a pre-sentient foetus, but you don't get a lot of opportunity when you're a retired computer systems designer.If you wouldn't actually kill a fetus yourself you shouldn't be supporting it
No, I'm suggesting that since the word 'natural' pre-dates the scientific method, it must then have had a meaning which did not depend on the scientific method, and may well still have the same meaning. For instance, in the days when science was called 'natural philosophy', what did people mean by 'natural' in that phrase? I would also point out that 'natural' is a word used in everyday talk, and I'm sure most people don't think about the scientific method when they use it; they may not even have heard of the scientific method.That would imply that there was nothing natural until the scientific method came along. That doesn't seem right.
— Herg
Do you think the world didn't operate in accordance with scientific principles before there was science? Was there a different set of rules that operated before there were sentient beings? — T Clark
How can this be a definition of 'natural' if the word 'natural' is in both the definiendum and the definition?the natural is what is allowable under natural laws — T Clark
That would imply that there was nothing natural until the scientific method came along. That doesn't seem right.The definitions are pretty specific - the natural is what is allowable under natural laws established using the scientific method. — T Clark
The life of a sentient being can have value both to that being and to other sentient beings. Thus my life has value to me, and also to my dog (because I feed him). By contrast, the life of a non-sentient being, such as a pre-sentient foetus, can only have value to other sentient beings; because it is not sentient, it can have no value to itself, which is to say, it does not matter to the pre-sentient foetus what happens to it, or whether it continues to live or not.In my opinion sentience does not define life. But I think, most valuable and meaningful life is sentient. — Antinatalist
The fact that if nothing is ever conceived, nothing exists which could be denoted. You can only denote something that exists, has existed, or will exist. See Russell, 'On Denoting' (https://www.uvm.edu/~lderosse/courses/lang/Russell(1905).pdf)↪Herg "because 'the never-to-be-conceived person' fails to denote anything."
What makes you say that? — Xanatos
I think you need to be more precise. Parturition involves several stages (https://www.healthline.com/health/parturition#stage-3). At which of the following stages do you consider that the woman no longer has the 'unfettered right'?I think a woman should have the unfettered right to do whatever the hell she wants with her "baby" up until parturition. — James Riley
'Depriving this person' is confused. If there is never to be a conception, then there is no person to be deprived, and so to refuse to conceive a person is not wronging the never-to-be-conceived person, because 'the never-to-be-conceived person' fails to denote anything.In other words, refusing to conceive someone and thus depriving this person of a future of value is perfectly acceptable; — Xanatos
I take it you mean some sort of essence that makes humans human. This is a myth, there is no such thing. Humans are composed of matter and energy, like other material objects, and as far as anyone has been able to discover, nothing else.↪Antinatalist not quite, the logic is following the essence not the accident — Alexandros
I still don't understand what you mean by a 'moral subject.' Please say what you mean by it. Are you using it the way it is used here: ('A moral subject is anything that can be harmed', https://ethicsunwrapped.utexas.edu/video/moral-agent-subject-of-moral-worth), or are using it to mean something else, and if so, what?let's make it concise, in your example there are no moral subjects as morality only exists in human consciousness, there are different degrees of consciousness. Animals are conscious too. Anyway, morality can exist in that dimension only and it doesn't affect the objectivity of it. Objectivity which is going to be attained through intellect. You have an analigy with numbers or ecuation pointing out relations objectively existent outside the realm of the mind, we just discover them through intellect. Regarding morality, it exists only when there are moral subjects and its universal values are objective in logical thinking. We disagree in a point in which discussion cannot go further because you are sustaining ammorality as a basis for every other point you want to make. — Alexandros
The first and last statements here are incompatible. If morality exists only in human consciousness, then there are no objective moral truths; but if the value of human life is morally objective, then there ARE objective moral truths. You can't hold both positions, they are contradictory.Morality exists only in human consciousness. Therefore in your example there is no moral subject. Ergo, it proves nothing. Next point, the value of human life is morally objective. — Alexandros
Well, as I've said, I disagree. My example of the last man alive is an argument to support my position. You've given me no arguments to support yours, only assertions.That's the basis of Morality.
They weren't meant to be formal arguments, they are simply facts which shed some light on the reasons why people claim that human life is something special.Next points you've written are not even arguments
Do you think it is immoral to beat a dog for your own amusement? If you don't, then your view is immoral. If you do, then you hold a moral view which does not imply the value of human life.It's easy, Morality implies the value of human life objectively.
If the fact that two people who were nearly aborted turned out to be happy is a good argument against abortion, then presumably the fact that a lot of people who were not aborted turned out to be unhappy is a good argument for abortion.I know two people who were almost aborted because of those trends of pseudo philosophy and pseudo science. And they are happy to be alive. — Alexandros
No, it doesn't. Suppose that there was only one man left alive, and he was so brain-damaged that he could never feel anything again. It would not matter to him if he died. His death would only matter to him if he could somehow regain sentience and start to feel again. And of course, since he's the last man left alive, it can't matter to anyone else either. So the death of such a man would not matter at all, because there is no-one for it to matter to; it would therefore have no value, positive or negative. This shows that human life and death only matter, only have value, insofar as sentience is involved. It is sentience that confers value, and without sentience, there is no value. Human life in itself has no value; it only acquires value where there is sentience.A human life has a moral value in its essence. — Alexandros
Again, there is a whole potential in process already, which you are terminating, if you didn't do anything, the development is going to be a persona. — Alexandros
Very well, since you evidently lack the energy to discuss whether my premises are true or false, I will present my reasons for believing them to be true. You will find that I am not, in fact, begging the question.You merely assume or assert controversial premises and reason from that point onwards, which is the fallacy of begging the question. — S
It comes from a variety of sources. One is religious belief ('the gods have told us what to do, so we ought to do it'), another is social programming ('our leaders have told us what we should do, so we ought to do it'), and a third is the one I mentioned earlier, the recognition that pleasure is good and pain bad, and the entirely reasonable inference from this that we ought to promote pleasure and reduce pain. [\quote]
— Herg
Again, if morality is a judgment or assessment of behavior, how can someone else make a judgment for us? If you're saying that we literally receive a judgment from someone else, how does that work? — Terrapin Station