Perhaps you know what you were speaking of, but the point here is communication, getting the other person to know what you're speaking of. You get to have your private wold of meanings, but clearly that doesn't do for communication. And if communication is your intention, then it becomes a fair question if indeed you know what you're talking about, if your communication of it isn't near the target. — tim wood
And if that's in question, then how is it that it's obvious you should or anyone should favor your standard, if in fact your standard is open to question, i.e., is non-standard? — tim wood
activities, projects, experiences, and enjoyments
— Rank Amateur
So in murder these are the future-goods which are deprived, according to your rationale for murder being categorized as wrong.
Now I would say a bird has activities, projects, experiences, and enjoyments -- eating, building a nest, whatever the now feels like to a bird, and the pleasures of birds. Dogs too. Animals of all sorts have a future of this sort. And they also have a value.
But I would say that animals are not as valuable as humans. I don't say this with respect to their biology -- as clearly humans are just animals as all the rest -- but because of the ethical category they fall into. — Moliere
For myself I would just say murder is the immoral and intentional killing of a person -- immoral because sometimes the killing of person's is warranted, even if it is not praiseworthy. It is permissable -- such as cases of self-defense, in cases of war, and in cases of euthanasia (in order from less to more controversial). Whether a person has a future or not, such as the case where a person does not wake up from a coma, is not relevant to my thoughts -- the person has value regardless of their future. — Moliere
To me it seems that your own argument sneaks personhood, of this sort, in by referencing the activities, projects, experiences, and enjoyments -- things which, say, a stone or an apple will not have. It just misses some of the important things that makes us specifically persons, rather than just beasts, and then tries to write off personhood accounts by saying the personhood of such-and-such does not matter, its the future of such-and-such that does. For msyelf the history matters ethically because it's the history of persons -- its not just any future, its the future of persons. But maybe there is some way of construing the future in a way that does not reference activities, projects, experiences, and enjoyments -- or maybe there is some way to differentiate this from animals while at the same time not resembling what most of us mean by persons. But I'm not seeing how. — Moliere
Agree, and in the actual argument marquis address it. But the argument is not about any future, it is about a future, like ours. — Rank Amateur
I have addressed this issue in the argument, and it is about non-justified killing. Hopping not to run off into a side argument, I ask we don't spend time arguing what is or is not justified. — Rank Amateur
The entire purpose of the FOV argument is to avoid the personhood issue.
In short form it is quite simple and intuitively true.
Despite the coffee shop philosophy, we - people like you and me have a future that we value.
A significant harm of killing us is the loss of that future — Rank Amateur
Now the biology
About 2 weeks after conception there is a unique human organism
You, me and every human on the planet can directly trace our existence in time and space as a biological entity to such a unique organism that could only have been us.
What you moliere are living right now was the future of that one unique organism at one time.
The argument is it is wrong to unjustifiably deny a human future of value, like ours at anytime in our unique development
The argument is based mostly on pure biology, one inference that futures such as ours are valuable, and an application of ideal desire to the fetus
The argument has holes, mostly around the issue of ideal desire. But it had lasted 30 years because to a very high degree the premise is true and the logic is sound.
The thing that I always find ironic in these discussions is how so many folks, who value science so greatly in the theist, atheist discussions abandoned it in a heart beat in the personhood issue.
And the same folks how value reason so greatly in the theist,atheist discussions, are willing all kinds of twists of reason when it comes to the personhood issue, as below
The fetus is not a person because it does not have trait X
But there are all kinds of things we are happy to call persons that don't have trait X
Ok, let me modify trait X so it only applies to a fetus
Which just make the argument a fetus is not a person because the fetus is not a person
As your, it is not sentience, it is the history of sentience that is important, There is only one kind of human without a history of sentience, a fetus at some stage. Take out all the parts in the middle and your point is just a fetus is not a person because it’s a fetus
Hrrmmm? Have we talked about a/theism and science before? I honestly don't remember.
FWIW, I try to be consistent. Obviously I fail at times. — Moliere
think that some moral considerations are not black and white, and that abortion is the sort of action that falls in that category. The best way to proceed, in such cases, is to allow people to make the decision on their own because the complexity of the situation is too great for a universal prescriptive rule. — Moliere
Yes! That's exactly what I'm saying -- personhood is not a metaphysical category (though if we are cognitivists then we should supply some criteria by which to make a judgment), but an ethical one. — Moliere
Technically I wouldn't say a newlyborn has all the qualities of a person, but in the interest of laying down a line that is on the safe side I say birth is a good point because at least at that point there is a separate body. — Moliere
Who gets to speak for the fetus in that case? And that was the point I am making, are you 100% sure it deserves no moral standing in the discussion? — Rank Amateur
Who gets to speak for the fetus in that case? — Rank Amateur
Never said it, or thought it. — tim wood
A pregnant woman wants to have an abortion
— tim wood
Only if we could replace the wants with needs.
— TheMadFool
Absolutely not, in a free society. It's enough she want one. Whether she needs one or not may be someone's business: hers, her family's, the father's, her doctor's, but definitely not yours. Suppose it were yours. What account could you give for any attitude you might have about it, much less any decision about it? — tim wood
It follows from your position that abortion should be unrestricted. — TheMadFool
Absolutely not, in a free society. It's enough she want one. — tim wood
(1) Subject to the provisions of this section, a person shall not be guilty of an offence under the law relating to abortion when a pregnancy is terminated by a registered medical practitioner if two registered medical practitioners are of the opinion, formed in good faith—
(a) that the pregnancy has not exceeded its twenty-fourth week and that the continuance of the pregnancy would involve risk, greater than if the pregnancy were terminated, of injury to the physical or mental health of the pregnant woman or any existing children of her family; or
(b) that the termination is necessary to prevent grave permanent injury to the physical or mental health of the pregnant woman; or
(c) that the continuance of the pregnancy would involve risk to the life of the pregnant woman, greater than if the pregnancy were terminated; or
(d) that there is a substantial risk that if the child were born it would suffer from such physical or mental abnormalities as to be seriously handicapped.
If abortion is just a wants issue doesn't it mean that it's nothing more than about right of a woman over her body? — TheMadFool
If abortion is just a wants issue doesn't it mean that it's nothing more than about right of a woman over her body? — TheMadFool
If she wants to have one, she should be allowed, within the first two trimesters. Third trimester, needs might come into it. — Banno
timwood says an abortion is like having a haircut, a woman's right to do whatever to her body. — TheMadFool
I mean by this that there are no a priori grounds for interfering with her on the basis of her wants. Or, in other words, it's none of your business. — tim wood
"Is"! Don't you think there might be just a little bit more to it than that? The rest of your post, if it truly represents your views it is too antediluvian even to be worthy of argument.Abortion is a social issue — TheMadFool
On what compulsion, from whom?but it's a truth that women have to face. — TheMadFool
For whom? Exactly who has this problem and why?What could have been well regulated and acceptable abortion is now an unsolvable problem. — TheMadFool
That's a moot point. — TheMadFool
Really! Make your case! I dismiss your statement as the ignorant repetition of something you think clever to repeat. Keep in mind that Roe isn't intended to be philosophy; it's arguments are mainly sound, as near as I can tell - a qualification of good philosophy. So have at it. Your words please. Tilting at the stuffed straw-man arguments you've been presenting is tiresome.But there is really no dispute it is bad philosophy. — Rank Amateur
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