That's not good logic. If yellow, than poisonous. Not yellow, so not poisonous? — Fire Ologist
Whereas your whole argument is that X is immoral because it seems immoral to you? Or because you think your invisible friend claims it is immoral?
It's worth noticing the slip in your spiel. A person has a rational will. A cysts does not. Consistency, where art though?
You want to engage in an extended debate in order to hide the simple truth that a cysts does not have the same worth as Mrs Smith.
You would use sophistry as a distraction from the immoral act of forcing someone to undergo an extended and unnecessary ordeal.
…
Your pretence of depth is no more than surface posturing.
You still at heart want there to be an "is" from which you can derive moral truths to which all rational folk must agree.
But it can't, becasue in the end what counts as flourishing is chosen. You cannot escape the fundamental difference between what is the case and what we choose to make the case.
The flourishing of the cyst is a far less definite thing than that of Mrs Smith.
For a start, it is entirely dependent on the flourishing of the mother.
Further, the quality of life of Mrs Smith is something that we can ask Mrs Smith about, while that of the cysts is mere supposition.
You would choose the flourishing of a cyst at the expense of the flourishing of Mrs Smith.
If mind, then human being. No mind, so no human being. — Fire Ologist
It seems your version of Neo-Aristotelianism is somehow grounded in idealism rather than practical living and achieving eudaimonia (human flourishing).
What counts as a human being and what does not is an issue not of looking around and discovering something that is the case. but of making a choice. The line can be put anywhere we choose. — Banno
What is clear is that Mrs Smith is a human being. — Banno
It is clear that she has capabilities, needs, and desires — Banno
Your insistence on conception as an absolute partition from which moral considerations apply — Banno
BRO….I don’t see how that is a simple truth, let alone true. — Bob Ross
It would be unreasonable - not reasonable - to assume the blue ones are poisonous. For if they were poisonous, then on the assumption this is something the guide book author knows and would wish to warn us about, there'd be a warning against eating them....yet there isn't. — Clearbury
All of that is a reasonable way to make an assumption. But what if you don't want to make an assumption? The guidebook is unhelpful if you do not want to make an assumption. — Fire Ologist
What a mess. — Banno
What counts as a human being and what does not is an issue not of looking around and discovering something that is the case. — Banno
What is clear is that Mrs Smith is a human being. — Banno
if the faculties of reason of most warn against having abortions, then regardless of what assumptions we might make about fetuses, our guide-book on reality - our reason - is implying that fetuses are persons.
On the other hand, if the faculties of reason of most do not warn against abortions, then our reason is implying that they are not the destruction of persons. — Clearbury
I'm asking you to tell me what you value about Mrs. Smith. — Fire Ologist
"AmadeusD: I think I'm still curious as to why you, Banno, think there's such a stark ethical difference between the embryo and the person
Banno: Well, ethics is about what we do. And I'm off to an art exhibit and lunch with friends. Not something that can be done with a zygote. — Banno
When you find yourself asking a question such as this, it may be time to reassess your values.Then how is a new born baby any different than a zygote...? — Fire Ologist
it may be time to reassess your values — Banno
I'm just not sure how this helps a pregnant person who asks "I don't know what to do because I don't want to be pregnant or have a baby, but I also don't want to kill a person, so what would you do if you were me?" I guess I'm saying, please write the guidebook according to Clearbury. — Fire Ologist
Not so fast. — Fire Ologist
The question is whether abortions are right or wrong. — Clearbury
reason of most — Clearbury
No doubt.You are back to just begging the question. This has been by far the most unproductive conversation I have had in a while. — Bob Ross
you can't tell a zygote from Mrs Smith, there is little more to say. — Banno
But you are assuming you know what an abortion is. — Fire Ologist
virtually everyone's reason represents the killing of [a newborn baby] to be wrong, and that really is evidence that they are persons. — Clearbury
Because most other people don’t kill newborns, you see that as evidence that they are persons. — Fire Ologist
Honestly, I’m not sure I follow you. It would help me if you didn’t use the poison berry/guide book analogy, and just state the case using words like pregnant woman, fetus, person, abortion, rules, ethics, etc. — Fire Ologist
it really is the case that virtually everyone's reason represents the killing of one of those to be wrong, and that really is evidence that they are persons. — Clearbury
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