Or is it that I have understood it and still reject it. — Banno
↪Rank Amateur Here is the key flaw: the notion of a future of value does not capture what it is to be a person ("like us"). — Banno
it makes no such claim - it makes no person hood claim about the fetus at all. — Rank Amateur
It is the most popular pro life argument in existence, it is all over the internet, — Rank Amateur
I have done my best to explain it. — Rank Amateur
If your have some real intellectual curiosity to understand an argument that is opposed to your beliefs... — Rank Amateur
Don't take me for a fool. What are "People like us" if not people? The argument revolves around personhood. The pretence that it does not is part of what makes your approach so disingenuous. — Banno
It is as simple as you Tim Wood have a future, if you do not die, or are killed it, as a matter of pure fact it will happen
Which is pure fact. — Rank Amateur
so agreed it is a fact ? The concept of future - as defined as time that has not yet happened is a fact ? We agreed that such a thing as the future is real ?? — Rank Amateur
a lack of a dispassionate reading — Rank Amateur
re state for me what your understanding is of the complete arguement — Rank Amateur
Indeed, I am passionate. What makes your argument sinful is that it pretends to show that the life of a piece of tissue is valuable without mention of the woman on whom it is parasitic. It is symptomatic of the grossly distorted view of human dignity that falls from conservative theology. Misogynistic, homophobic, nasty stuff. — Banno
- i have said at least 10 times and at least 5 to you - — Rank Amateur
You bemoan repetition... then you reply by repeating yourself.
Here's the rub: A woman has far greater moral worth than a piece of tissue.
Let that be an end to it. — Banno
...and still you do not see the poverty of your reply. Indeed, it is tiresome. You seek to treat the foetus as if it were distinct from the woman. It isn't. Take it out and it is dead. And the reason you need to treat it a if it is distinct from the woman is that you wish to ascribe to it moral standing that it does not deserve. — Banno
make a full argument to support it for once. — Rank Amateur
My argument in full: A woman has far greater moral worth than a piece of tissue. — Banno
It is the most popular pro life argument in existence, it is all over the internet, I have done my best to explain it. — Rank Amateur
My argument in full: A woman has far greater moral worth than a piece of tissue. — Banno
Her moral worth gives her authority? — DingoJones
Nothing complicated. Authority implies an ability to rule - whatever it is. Being subject to an imperative means you do not rule. A simple example comes to mind. You drive on a road that ends at a T intersection. You have authority over whether you turn left or right; you rule that. But the turn itself is an imperative, you have to turn, on that you do not rule.In what way do you mean? — DingoJones
So how does it follow from that distinction that you have an imperative to make a choice willy nilly? Isnt what you just described as imperative precisely NOT making a choice? — DingoJones
I assume like most people including Banno you're not so sanguine at terminating a pregnancy at 36 weeks as you might be at ten weeks. I'm assuming that the idea that life is sacred, that you abjure, is not the same as saying that life has value, which I assume you agree with.For me, I bypass most of the arguing about abortion by removing the basis that life has a sacred value. Absent that, there isnt much to debate. — DingoJones
Well, two aspects. One is you have to turn, hence imperative. The other is that you can choose whether to turn left or right, that's within your authority. — tim wood
I assume like most people including Banno you're not so sanguine at terminating a pregnancy at 36 weeks as you might be at ten weeks. I'm assuming that the idea that life is sacred, that you abjure, is not the same as saying that life has value, which I assume you agree with. — tim wood
Willy-nilly: "will he or nil he." You have to make a choice whether you will it or "nil" it. Maybe I'm missing something here. We're just trying to iron out usage on an idea we both understand, yes?willy nilly choice rather than a normal choice? — DingoJones
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