He argues that any Pro-Choicer who hopes to defeat Marquis’ argument must construct an argument that does all three of the following:
1) It identifies an alternative property that accounts for the wrongness of killing
infants, suicidal teenagers, temporarily comatose adults, and paradigm persons. — Rank Amateur
We have had no need to adduce any "alternative property." nor is there any evidence to support any notion of any "preference" for anything of Marquis's.2) It shows that the alternative property is preferable to Marquis’ property, especially in terms of offering an account that best explains the wrongness of killing. — Rank Amateur
Well, this introduces and implies without the least support that a fetus is a person, or in terms of the above, a member of the community. I here use Hitchen's razor: what is adduced without reason or support can be dismissed without reason or support. i dismiss the implied claims that the fetus is a member of the community, that a fetus is a person.3) It shows that the fetus does not possess this alternative property (or that it doesn’t possess the property during the period of gestation in which the majority of abortions take place) — Rank Amateur
And the Civil War was about state's rights and not slavery: a rank piece of sophistic re-writing of history. Read Lincoln's Cooper Union speech and research Southern newspaper editorials and articles. Anyway, Roe v. Wade is about abortion. Actually, that what it says. Scalia and originalism are twin horrors. Or, originalism is Grendel's mother to Scalia's Grendel. More on this see Justice David Souter at Harvard video on Youtube. (Erudite, sharp, educational, and entertaining.) Possibly you believe the 14th amendment is overreach, too, or have you read it?My take or Roe v Wade is, the case was more about states rights than it was about abortion. My views on it are almost completely in line with Justice Scalia's, his many comments on it that are easy to find. Basically it was an overreach by the court, for an issue the constitution says should be a states right to decide - i am more swayed by originalism interpretations of the constitution. — Rank Amateur
Andrew4Handel
976
I don't see why it is acceptable to create a life and not acceptable to end a life.
Why does someone have the right to create someone without that persons consent and expose them to suffering?
A fetus does not express desires and we can only speculate about what it might think about existing. It that is the nature of creating someone. — Andrew4Handel
And the Civil War was about state's rights and not slavery: a rank piece of sophistic re-writing of history. — tim wood
Reject the CA, if you see something better. — Banno
But you're dancing around the question. What is a human being? Why is a sperm attached to an egg a person and a fingernail not? — Hanover
Why do you think that the action of reproduction is an exercise of any right? — tim wood
A quibble. A one second old embryo has minimal worth, but a 10 year old child infinite worth. At what moment in time does this thing have sufficient worth to cause us to protect it fully? That moment is called personhood. — Hanover
No, no, no. That's not actually reflective of reality. There is no objective point at which sufficient worth can be attained. The whole reason why this topic is so controversial is because there is such variation. Different people value this "thing" differently or not at all depending on a number of subjective factors. People have different feelings, different priorities, different ways of thinking. That's the key determinant here, not personhood. Your rules are not the rules. There are no rules we must all adhere to, we each set our own. — S
You’re being obtuse. You are a human being; you have been one from the moment you began to develop. You did not develop from a sperm cell, you did not develop from an egg cell, you have never been a liver cell, you have never been a fingernail. The combination of the former two was your conception and beginning; the latter two are simply a part of you. — AJJ
If I have a stack of wood, a saw, and a set of plans, do I have a table? — Hanover
This strikes me as a global objection to ethical analysis generally and a declaration of ethical subjectivism, — Hanover
You speak of the massive variations in opinions and subjective viewpoints, but there's actually a well formed consensus on whether the intentional killing of a healthy, bouncing baby boy is unethical. — Hanover
If we can't say whether the killing of an embryo is objectively wrong because all such determinations are necessarily subjective, then it follows we can't say the same for the murder of you and me. — Hanover
If I've misunderstood your position and you actually believe there is an objective basis to declare the murder of you or me unethical, then you'll have to explain why those same objective criteria cannot be used to evaluate what may rightly be done to embryos. — Hanover
No objection whatsoever to ethical analysis generally. A declaration of ethical subjectivism? Why not? — S
I meant that there's a variation within a particular range to the extent that it makes this a highly controversial topic. — S
I certainly judge murder to be deeply wrong. My moral overview is not that nothing is wrong and that therefore anything goes, which is the suggestion I suspect you of planting. I just don't believe in objective morality. — S
If that was true, we could expect resolution in the form of one side coming to its senses. — frank
Easy to say. If human life begins at conception, what is there just prior to conception? This sort of thoughtless remark is a hallmark of the quality of most pro-life argument. It has the power of rant, immune to argument and reason. But we're a philosophy site. Here if nowhere else you can be asked to account for your argument. Account then: according to you "human life begins at conception." What exactly does that mean? Do not answer in terms of human life, because your argument say that begins at conception.Don’t really know what you’re struggling with. Human life begins from its conception, from what other point can you say it begins? If it is going to be valued, it should be so from then for the reason I gave. — AJJ
Dismissed because unargued and unsupported, merely assumed and asserted. It seems pretty clear that you can rant, but you can't argue - likely do not even understand what argument is. The FOVA depends on assuming what is in question - and that's not argument. The mistake is begging the question. I call it ranting.FUTURE OF VALUE ARGUMENT (FOVA)
Despite the unsupported dismissals of the argument on the board. — Rank Amateur
For all your effort you're quitting the field. Until and unless you wrestle with the substance of these things in real and substantive terms, you're wasting your time and your interlocutors. For example, I posted just above an argument, but you have not and perhaps cannot and will not respond to it. You just go back like a broken record to echo and repeat empty noise. Is that the best you can do? Is that all you got?on - but this will be my last post on it — Rank Amateur
Are you suggesting that life might begin before it is conceived? Or after?
“Life begins at conception” is a truism, you numpty. It’s just to say it begins when it begins, and it begins in this case once an egg cell has been fertilised. — AJJ
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