Interested if others see this paradox — Rank Amateur
I also don't think of the just-conceived egg/sperm combo as a person, or an ensouled being. When does a fetus become a person? When the first-cry infant is held in the arms of his or her parents, personhood has been achieved. — Bitter Crank
I disagree that these issues are comparable. Climate change is an issue about preserving the environment so we can sustain our civalisations. The abortion debate is about how we value the autonomy of people's choices, mistakes and lives. Both issues are far too complex to be summed up as you have. — SnowyChainsaw
I see both about a tension between human life, and some other thing of value.
What I find interesting is in many cases an individual would make an argument based on science for climate change against a social, financial argument. And make a social argument for abortion against the science. I also find it interesting that the final objective of those who favor climate change, is ultimately about saving future lives, And at the same time can find justification to devalue future human lives in the cases of abortion
This is because they are very different issues. — SnowyChainsaw
Sure, I can agree with that for the most part. But I still feel it assumes that there is a conflict between values in the context of discussing these two issues, which is just not the case. — SnowyChainsaw
Because they do not question the same principles. — SnowyChainsaw
One is a science issue, the other is a social issue. Neither pits one against the other.Both climate change and abortion pit science against social issues.
One is a science issue, the other is a social issue. Neither pits one against the other.
The biology on abortion is clear. A fetus is 100% human, and 100% alive. — Rank Amateur
Personhood and rights therefore accorded are an argument outside science. — Rank Amateur
Yes, and that doesn't make it less important. And whether a fetus is viable or not lies in the field of science. — Bitter Crank
Yes, and that doesn't make it less important. And whether a fetus is viable or not lies in the field of science.
— Bitter Crank
agree - however using viability as a criteria for person hood is outside science. — Rank Amateur
but often the answer we want colors how we see things - causes blind spots — Rank Amateur
I see no paradox either. Abortion hinges upon a metaphysical principle: what constitutes an individual human life; no amount of empirical analysis can provide a definitive answer. On the other hand, climate change is entirely an epistemic issues associated with propositions such as — Relativist
Your judgment that there's a paradox depends on treating fetuses as individual human lives and treating global warming as factual. — Relativist
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