By the way, what is the reasoning for placing high moral value on "rational will."
Why not? Moore, at least, says that they are. And saying that they are not is presenting a particualr moral theory. Argue your case!Moral theories are not analyzed based off of moral intuitions: — Bob Ross
I quite agree! And pro-life views evaluate the behaviour around abortion in an appallingly bad way! They claim that a cyst has more worth than Mrs Smith!Moral theories are evaluated based off of how well they evaluate what is actually good qua (right and wrong) behavior. — Bob Ross
And pro-life views evaluate the behaviour around abortion in an appallingly bad way! They claim that a cyst has more worth than Mrs Smith!
Thanks for making my case! — Banno
So do I. That's one of the reasons I use it. It's mere propaganda, and should leave folk feeling cold.I hate the term pro-life. — Fire Ologist
Because I must, in order to be a morally good agent, respect a thing relative to its nature; and in order to respect a fellow will, like mine, I must treat them as an end in themselves and never a mere means. — Bob Ross
Why not? Moore, at least, says that they are. And saying that they are not is presenting a particualr moral theory. Argue your case!
I quite agree! And pro-life views evaluate the behaviour around abortion in an appallingly bad way! They claim that a cyst has more worth than Mrs Smith!
Suppose you believed in moral theory X. Moral theory X entails that, in a trolley car situation, one must never sacrifice an ant (or any insect) to save any people. If a bug is on the tracks, you ought not pull the switch and save the five persons. Would that consequence of moral theory X- that bugs cannot be sacrificed to save people- be devastating to moral theory X?
Either way, a woman's bodily autonomy has precedence over a zygote's life. — Michael
Develop into human beings. Interesting that you now phrase it that way. — Michael
I don’t care about flies and am at constant war with them. It’s wrong to kill a human being when he doesn’t deserve it. Flies deserve it in virtue of their very nature. — NOS4A2
I understand the position. A human-in-utero is morally insignificant. I just don’t understand how one can reach that conclusion. I suppose his worth might increase and decreases with his cell count, or, he is morally worthless until he is in my phone book, but who knows?
But weighing the moral worth of human beings in various stages of their development so as to decide who are morally permissible to kill is a disgusting business. We’ve left ethics entirely and have approached an exercise in excuse-making and dehumanization, in my opinion. — NOS4A2
It's no less disgusting business than weighing the moral worth of non-human organisms. Is it wrong to kill plants? Flies? Cows? Dogs? E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial? — Michael
This is why most of the arguments made here are non sequiturs. Whether or not it is wrong to kill a zygote does not depend on how we use the word "human being". — Michael
You have not provided why it would be, e.g., wrong to never sacrifice an ant to save a person other than an intuition you have; which is not sufficient to disprove it. — Bob Ross
What is a new human being, is one of two essential questions at the heart of the discussion. — Fire Ologist
Where in time and space does the human being pop into existence? — NOS4A2
It is problematic because it is circular logic: you are saying that moral judgment X is wrong because moral judgment X seems wrong to you. This kind of thinking, lands you in wishy-washy territory where you can justify anything to yourself so long as you have a strong intuition about it. It's nonsense. — Bob Ross
I don’t know what you mean by a means to an end.
Does anyone deliberately get pregnant and have an abortion as a means to some end?
Anyway, sure, we value what is like ourselves. That makes sense.
Wouldn’t a good moral agent respect the will of a pregnant woman?
If I understand your position at all, basically because a person has a “rational will” and an ant does not.
If abortion contravenes the telos of a zygote, making abortion illegal also contravenes the telos, rational will, or flourishing of the mother and others involved.
You need to abandon this essentialist view of the world and language. — Michael
Exactly right. So what should we call this shape-shifting being? — NOS4A2
When it's a foetus call it a foetus. When it's a baby call it a baby. — Michael
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