BlawBlaw wrote:rwebb wrote:BlawBlaw wrote:The moral status of a fetus is not relative to the hopes, wishes and opinions of the woman carrying it unless you are a moral relativist.
Not that I have any qualms about the term, but let's not misuse it. Moral relativism refers to the proposition that morality should be judged relative to the situation or the culture at hand, e.g., female genital mutilation is okay in cultures where it is the accepted norm.
What I'm saying is quite different (and IMHO pretty much self-evident): that morality is judged according to the values of the person doing the judging. In other words, moral values are always a matter of opinion. There is no lab test to prove the existence of a soul, or to show that a fetus has intrinsic worth, or even to determine right or wrong. You can resort to the "absolute truth" of the Bible or of whatever God or gods you prefer, but it is still only your opinion that your source of absolute moral authority is valid and that you are interpreting it correctly.
That would be "subjective relativism" rather than "ethical relativism", in technical terms.
rwebb wrote:BlawBlaw wrote:rwebb wrote:BlawBlaw wrote:The moral status of a fetus is not relative to the hopes, wishes and opinions of the woman carrying it unless you are a moral relativist.
Not that I have any qualms about the term, but let's not misuse it. Moral relativism refers to the proposition that morality should be judged relative to the situation or the culture at hand, e.g., female genital mutilation is okay in cultures where it is the accepted norm.
What I'm saying is quite different (and IMHO pretty much self-evident): that morality is judged according to the values of the person doing the judging. In other words, moral values are always a matter of opinion. There is no lab test to prove the existence of a soul, or to show that a fetus has intrinsic worth, or even to determine right or wrong. You can resort to the "absolute truth" of the Bible or of whatever God or gods you prefer, but it is still only your opinion that your source of absolute moral authority is valid and that you are interpreting it correctly.
That would be "subjective relativism" rather than "ethical relativism", in technical terms.
No, that's not what I meant either, though maybe I didn't express it well. The distinction you're making is that subjective relativism says that whatever I feel is right for me is what I should do; whereas (conventional) ethical relativism says that whatever society feels is right for me is what I should do.
I'm saying neither of those two things. I'm saying that whatever moral standards I believe in, whether absolute or relative, religious or humanist, they are my own opinions, and not some objective Truth that can be independently verified. Morality deals in value judgements, unlike science, which deals in facts.
One can design an experiment to show that a fetus has its own DNA, but no such experiment will ever show that it has its own soul or its own rights or its own value. My point was simply that when people make those kinds of assertions, they are expressing opinions, not facts.
rwebb wrote:Did you really need to quote that whole message for a one sentence reply? You really are a waste of bandwidth.
rwebb wrote:Did you really need to quote that whole message for a one sentence reply? You really are a waste of bandwidth.
rwebb wrote:Don't be silly, Paycheck. Your last two "contributions" to this discussion were complete non sequiturs. The answer to your question, as if it needed an answer, is "no".
Now what?
One can design an experiment to show that a fetus has its own DNA, but no such experiment will ever show that it has its own soul or its own rights or its own value.
Paycheck wrote:Please explain how you have a "soul" (and therefore are worthy of protection as you implied) and an unborn child does not?
rwebb wrote:Paycheck wrote:Please explain how you have a "soul" (and therefore are worthy of protection as you implied) and an unborn child does not?
I didn't say I had a soul, I didn't say an unborn child does not, and I certainly never meant to imply that a soul would make either of us worthy of protection. In fact, if by "soul" you mean something immortal, then I would probably argue the opposite. For instance, in the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna explains to Arjuna that he does no moral wrong by killing his worthy and virtuous opponents in battle, because in doing so he merely frees their souls to move on to a new and possibly better life. What's wrong with that?
One can design an experiment to show that a fetus has its own DNA, but no such experiment will ever show that it has its own soul or its own rights or its own value. My point was simply that when people make those kinds of assertions, they are expressing opinions, not facts.
rwebb wrote:For instance, in the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna explains to Arjuna that he does no moral wrong by killing his worthy and virtuous opponents in battle, because in doing so he merely frees their souls to move on to a new and possibly better life. What's wrong with that?
Paycheck wrote:rwebb wrote:For instance, in the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna explains to Arjuna that he does no moral wrong by killing his worthy and virtuous opponents in battle, because in doing so he merely frees their souls to move on to a new and possibly better life. What's wrong with that?
So you think there is a battle between an abortionist and an unborn child? Boy, that sure is some battle.![]()
How about one of your enemies doing the same to you? You know, because he wants you to move on to a better life.
rwebb wrote:Paycheck wrote:Please explain how you have a "soul" (and therefore are worthy of protection as you implied) and an unborn child does not?
I didn't say I had a soul, I didn't say an unborn child does not, and I certainly never meant to imply that a soul would make either of us worthy of protection. In fact, if by "soul" you mean something immortal, then I would probably argue the opposite. For instance, in the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna explains to Arjuna that he does no moral wrong by killing his worthy and virtuous opponents in battle, because in doing so he merely frees their souls to move on to a new and possibly better life. What's wrong with that?

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