Posted by silentpadna on 4/13/2011 2:27:00 PM (view original):
I'm not going to quote the entire exchange because it gets hard to read, but anton, it was you who brought up the "moral" argument. I was simply addressing the points you made. You said you know the mother is human and were not sure about the fetus. I asked you to define the difference, which you didn't. You then appealed to a different stage of development - arbitrarily picked, and a vague reference to Kant (who I am familiar with) along with claiming that there is no utilitarian argument based on your arbitrary claim. The implication in your argument is that this arbitrary claim or assertion is fact, but you did not support it.
I'm not trying to convince you to switch a view to pro-life (of course I'd love to do that) - but I am trying to point out the merits of the position. I can 100% see the merits of the pro-choice position, given a single premise. If the fetus is not a human being, no justification for abortion would be necessary and we would have no right to restrict it. It's the premise that I and other pro-life people have a problem with. Without it being true, the entire justification falls apart. You've chosen to take the converation into a different direction, avoid the question and assert that I don't understand the philosophy of morals.
I'll go down that road with you another time. You are obviously free to avoid answering the questions I've posed to illustrate the pro-life position, but I've made it pretty clear. Whether you agree with them or not is not my aim. My aim is to let some of the folks here understand that the position we take is a reasonable one. It's not about forcing the poor to become poorer or desiring women to suffer or any other of that nonsense. It's about coming to a conclusion based on what we actually know about life and trying to protect individuals who cannot protect themselves. I do not have an opinion about when life begins. It's clear that upon conception, an organism is formed. It is living and has the DNA structure of a human. From that point on, all it does is grow. It cannot change into any other type of being despite the level of development, where is lives, or what it is capable of. None of those are opinions. None or those are arbitrary. I am pro-life because it's not possible to reconcile the type of being a fetus is with the right to kill it. Come to a different conclusion? Fine. Call the pro-life position illogical and I think it's a stretch. There are many many non-hysterical intelligent people (a whole lot smarter than me) who hold the same view.
I'm attempting to answer the question of whether an abortion is moral.
And no, nothing you've said on that subject particularly indicates that you understand the philosophy of morality. Sorry.
You believe humanity begins at conception. I'm not convinced. Give me a moral reason to treat a zygote, or even a 20-week-old fetus, as a human being. So far you have yet to even try.