Others too, although they are less well-known. I am autistic, which is considered by many to be a disability. Do I have a place in society? — Pattern-chaser
I find myself wondering if we should not be considering instead how each member of society (able or disabled) can contribute to society? — Pattern-chaser
However it is not a naturalistic fallacy when the methods nature uses itself have proven outcomes (such as millions of years of the death of failed species and the survival of the strongest species). I — intrapersona
Lifelong suffering from disability can be prevented yet you want to argue we ought not to intervene with our superior intellects (much in the same way judges do)... — intrapersona
Which in the case of disabled people isn't much at all really is it? Are they not like a parasitic drain due to our ethical hesitation? — intrapersona
But this betrays a basic misunderstanding of evolution. Evolutionary 'fitness' is only ever context-bound (to an environment), and the evolutionary record is paved with detritus of the millions upon millions of evolutionary 'failures' produced by evolution itself. There is no possible, coherent way of talking about evolution as a 'legitimate' system with 'proven methods'. The majority of evolutionary history is a history of miserable failure. — StreetlightX
Stephen Hawking was afflicted later in life, but he is an illustration nevertheless of how misleading the term "disabled" can be. — Baden
Yes, of course you're right. Stephen Hawking should've been drowned at birth, right? :fear: Because he was just a "parasitic drain" on society, right? :fear: Yeah, kill 'em all! :fear: :groan: :cry: :rage: — Pattern-chaser
Disabilities of the kind that serve no positive influence. Mainly in the form of mental retardation. I only speak to physical disabilities insofar as they effect peoples mental/emotional wellbeing (as much as they enjoy their life and even want to live with what challenges they must face).
So I'll confine myself to shuddering with fright when I wonder which intellects are sufficiently "superior" to decide whether my own disability condemns me to euthanasia? Do you consider yourself up to this task? :chin: I'm afraid I don't. Sorry. :fear: — Pattern-chaser
Your statement is irrelevant if you see the post above yours — intrapersona
It is readily apparent that a university professor is sufficiently superior than any given person with trisomy 21 (down syndrome). Need I say more?
The basic principle is, if they are able to maintain a positive wellbeing and a benefit to society then existence is allowed. — intrapersona
Yes, but it is the outcomes of those failures that are the "proven" successes — intrapersona
Because it seems we really can't have any kind of natural selection going on without any human interaction involved. — intrapersona
Stephen Hawking was afflicted later in life, but he is an illustration nevertheless of how misleading the term "disabled" can be. — Baden
Yes, of course you're right. Stephen Hawking should've been drowned at birth, right? :fear: Because he was just a "parasitic drain" on society, right? :fear: Yeah, kill 'em all! :fear: :groan: :cry: :rage: — Pattern-chaser — intrapersona
Simply put, should we let evolution do what it does best which is filter out the weak? — intrapersona
Have we reached an intellectual summit over the reigns of evolution by allowing severely disabled people to live prosperously with taxpayer supplied checks? — intrapersona
Not every university professor can maintain a positive sense of well-being and/or is a benefit to society and certainly not every given person with trisomy 21 is unable to maintain a positive wellbeing and/or is of no benefit to society. So, even by your own criteria of whose existence is allowed, the argument isn't sound. — Baden
But this is nothing but a tautology: all it says is that every evolutionary success is a success, and every evolutionary failure is a failure - right up until the point a failure becomes a success and vice versa. You can draw no conclusions from this, let alone the idea that successes are 'proven' - whatever that even means. — StreetlightX
Evolution is a theory about the origin of species. — Wayfarer
Simply put, should we let evolution do what it does best which is filter out the weak? — intrapersona
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