They might be mistaken as to the facts right up until they act on their understanding. Then they are acting immorally.And if pro-life proponents genuinely believe that the blastocyst has the right to come to term, is it right to say that they are acting immorally rather than just, in your view, being mistaken about the facts? Is it immoral to incorrectly believe that something has rights it doesn't actually have? — Michael
They might be mistaken as to the facts right up until they act on their understanding. Then they are acting immorally. — Banno
This is in contrast to an approach that gives priority to the foetus, ignoring the role of the woman. — Banno
This seems an existence question: does there exist such a circumstance, such a reason? We might first ask what counts as "morally justified"? But there is a simple reason usually adduced: when the mother at risk. Done? Is that it? — tim wood
Rank Amateur's desire is to have the argument expressed in terms that suit him. Don't play along.
How about you show where the propositions are false, or the conclusion does not follow, or the argument is incomplete and fallacious because .... and support your because.
Make an argument specifically why your cyst does not have a right to its existence. So far I have only seen pronouncements stated as fact.
Seems a pattern on TPF. If one makes an argument one doesn't like, dismiss it out of hand, and restate your own position. — Banno
It is relevant because it is a realistic often occurring result of creating a child.
Creating more children is just going to create more children in that situation and not alleviate the situation.
If child welfare was so high on the anti-abortionist agenda then why are so many children in dire circumstances? Children can only suffer because they are created. — Andrew4Handel
I don't think it right to say that human dignity inheres in anything. Rather, like any value, it's projected onto others by us. Some value the life of a foetus, others don't. On what grounds can one group say that the other group is wrong? — Michael
Where do you get the idea the fetus has any rights? In Roe v. Wade it's argued that such have potential rights coincident with the rights they would actually have if and when born alive, but not until. That's the US Supreme Court, referring to practice "from time immemorial.",that is the fetus does have a right to live, does it have a right to the use of the woman's body. — Rank Amateur
In the argument he presented Rank Amateur posited that the reason for not killing a human was found in its future value, and hence by extension, the reason for not killing of a foetus was found in its future. I cited the capabilities approach in contrast to this. The worth of a person ought to be taken as read; they are to be treated as an ends, not as a means. We ought then act in ways that lead to actualisation of the capabilities of each person. What a person is, is found in those capabilities. — Banno
A better example comes from your own post:
,that is the fetus does have a right to live, does it have a right to the use of the woman's body.
— Rank Amateur
Where do you get the idea the fetus has any rights? In Roe v. Wade it's argued that such have potential rights coincident with the rights they would actually have if and when born alive, but not until. That's the US Supreme Court, referring to practice "from time immemorial — tim wood
Most briefly, it's a hypothetical argument. All of the important premises are granted uncritically. With such an argument you can prove anything you want to prove. It may not be immediately apparent how that can be. Suppose I wish to suppose the moon is made of green cheese. Let's accept as given, even prima facie, as Marquis says, that the moon is made of green cheese. Therefore the moon is made of... & etc. QED. And I hold the entire FOV argument to be a thing claimed and assumed, but in no way demonstrated or prove or even subjected to critical thought. — tim wood
A better example comes from your own post:
,that is the fetus does have a right to live, does it have a right to the use of the woman's body.
— Rank Amateur
Where do you get the idea the fetus has any rights? In Roe v. Wade it's argued that such have potential rights coincident with the rights they would actually have if and when born alive, but not until. That's the US Supreme Court, referring to practice "from time immemorial." — tim wood
SO my question again: where do you get your idea that the fetus has rights? — tim wood
However the point is just made as a given and not supported. — Rank Amateur
. I respect and appreciate the effort you're putting into this. May I suggest you slow down and chew a bit more. Your proposition seems unobjectionable - but it's my business to object. It's not me; call it the spirit of the sound argument. I have a right to life. But what does that mean? The US Declaration of Independence lists (the) three unalienable rights, the first of which is (the right to) life. But this is no positive right; it is merely a constraint - a legal constraint without itself having the power of law, but of advising law and its implementation - on those who might otherwise feel that my life was their's to take. A US soldier, for example, can certainly be ordered into harm's way, but not expressly to die.. The fetus is such a thing as has a right to life, — Rank Amateur
The entire argument is based on an unsupported assumption that the fetus is due lesser rights than the women. — Rank Amateur
just occasionally it would be nice if you even make a feeble attempt at supporting one of your pronouncements — Rank Amateur
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