Oonagh wrote:
OK, so I exaggerated the 18 year sentence thing. Adoption is cool.
I agree.
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In jest getting rid of your sidewalk isn't an option either because snow will fall regardless.
Yes, but without the sidewalk, you don't have anything to shovel!
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With respect and I may seem redundant, but I can not see from your point of view that removal of the situation is a viable one when it goes against what science and nature intended. Sorry
Science and nature are not personal forces. They don't
intend anything. Science has enabled safe abortion, not found ways to condemn it. Nature is a more interesting argument, but it runs into the same problem as saying "homosexuality is not natural!" Well of course it is "natural!" Everything that exists in nature (and humans --including the things we create-- are part of nature) is "natural."
I'm enjoying this debate, and you normally don't participate, so don't take this as a criticism, merely an education. There are many logical fallacies people can fall into in formal debate (which this is not, but the rules of logic don't suddenly disappear because of informality), and many of them have been quantified and labelled so they don't need to be explained from the ground up.
This is one of them:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naturalist ... _to_natureI am, for better or for worse, generally utilitarian in my views. What works? what doesn't? What provides the most beneficial* results for individuals/society/the species (in that order.) But this is not an ideology. If I have any ideology at all, it's an anti-ideology. I don't believe that principles, or morals, or
ideals should ever be the basis of a policy decision. I believe, instead, that ideals, morals and principles come about as a result of enacted laws, rules, policies, or dogma, rather than the other way around. And in general, I believe that such rules need to have a sound basis in protecting the health of the society they are part of. Note that "health" has nothing to do with moral health, that would be circular. Health is the existence, continued functioning of society. And I believe that prioritizing the individual over the group generally works best for this, as society is comprised of individuals, its most basic building blocks.
I do not consider a fertilized egg to be an individual. I do consider a newborn baby to be an individual. Somewhere in between these two events, then the individual --or the "person"-- comes into being. However, science can't help you define a person. Religion certainly can, but so can fairy tales, and I don't see much difference between the two, so I'm disinclined to grant it any credence. What I'm left with is logical consistency. This is what my entire position is based on.
*define beneficial? That's going to be tough, now, isn't it? And it will vary from person to person.