gwnn, on 2012-October-26, 03:59, said:
Yes, I am a man and worse of all, trying to inject some objectivity into moral questions.
In this thread we have already heard that pro-life people are condoning murdering innocent doctors.
And I know that a lot of 'pro life' arguments are just citing scripture which is even more absurd. I am just arguing for an argument that is devoid of subjective experience, emotions, holy books and would explore the issues with defining the principle "do not kill" for these cases.
I don't think `objectivity' is the right word. How about Logic, or Rationality. It is not irrational to look for answers to moral questions in religious texts. If you believe that religion to be correct. Now you can claim its irrational to believe in any particular religion etc, but that is a different point of view. Everyone has to make some assumptions about morality to function in the world, and even if you believe religions to be bollocks, its not clear that the Atheist/agnostic assumptions are any more rational/lead to better outcomes.
I think of religious doctrine as being a set of short cuts for moral reasoning. I hold out hope that one day there will be broad agreement between secular and catholic thinkers. But if you want a secular argument for the pro life position, here is one that I think is pretty strong. Citing scripture is not absurd if you believe that the person you are arguing with is also invested the same or a similar holy book. If I met a pro-choice christian religious arguments would be my preferred method of argument. If I was speaking to an atheist they would not be.
Start out asking "Why is murder wrong", and you might start with an answer like "because it harms me" but then you can kill someone in a totally painless way, and if he has no relatives etc to grieve for him its not obvious what the harm is, and then you might come to the conclusion that "The future days that he might have lived have value, and I am taking that good from him", and if you think about it some more you will see that this corresponds well to moral intuition about killing people, e.g. its worse to murder children than adults, its acceptable to kill in a just war since you are weighing up the relative values of different futures. However, as soon as you say that the value of a life in the present is (at least partly) tied up in its future/potential, then when you ask "when does the moral value of a life start" you will come to the conclusion that the moral value starts as soon as the process of development of that unique organism begins, which brings us back to conception/fertilisation, or some fuzzy period within a few days of that.
Re pro-life violence. It is just generally true that large groups of people arguing about emotive subjects will have a crazy fringe. That is as true of the pro-choice lobby as it is of the pro-life lobby. You can see a (semi) regular update on violence against pro-lifers at prochoiceviolence.com. Famously Eric Henry murdered his grandmother, a reverend for telling him she was pro life and would not give him money for his gf's abortion. Prominent Pro-life Blogger Gerard Nadal received death threats and a bomb threat against both himself and his children. I mean I don't really follow this stuff, I just assume that both sides have a crazy fringe. I mean, I heard that Convenience store clerk is at a higher risk of being murdered per person than an abortionist in the US. More churches were vandalised by the gay community in the early nineties than there are abortion clinics in the US. I mean, I have never personally sourced these statistics, so I will not vouch for them, but they are things I have heard that seem plausible. There are only 700 or so clinics, which is fewer catholic churches then there are in LA, which had a particular problem with homosexual vandalism against churches I think.
If you include beatings, then I suspect that pro lifers have actually suffered more. The few people I know who do regularly picket in the US say that being attacked or threatened (even with guns) by people going into and out of the clinic is fairly routine. In short, while obviously not supporting this kind of violence, it does seem like people have it way out of proportion. There have only been 8 murders of abortionists by pro-life activists ever in the US I think.
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper