you're wasting your time and your interlocutors — tim wood
It's the "says you" defense. I say abortion is wrong and you say "says you," and I say sure, and because I say it, it is so for me but not for you, and then we just sort of end things there. — Hanover
There are actually variations throughout the whole spectrum of opinions. A small minority find murder of children moral. Infanticide is practiced in some cultures. Are you committed to infanticide being moral for me if I say it is? — Hanover
You don't think anything goes for you, but I don't see upon what basis you can force me to adhere to your moral standards unless you think there's something inherently correct about them and that's it not just a matter of personal preference. — Hanover
Ah well, shaking the tree won't get you out of it. A credit to your equanimity and sense of humor. But look. seven billion or so people on the planet. Just exactly that many acts of conception. And in every case human life begins with that act of conception. My point, and obvious I should think, is that mom and dad are both alive and human. Their "stuff" is both alive and human. Nothing not alive or not human is involved. So far as human life is concerned, nothing "begins" then. Rather it's all part of a continuous process.Settle down. I’m not outraged, I’m amused at your blunder. Read my response again, I’ve answered your objection. — AJJ
Nope. If the argument is sound, then agreement or disagreement is not a personal choice. But it is telling and informative that you think it is. And indeed you have been repeating - but that was your choice. You were invited to defend the arguments you apparently endorsed. But all you have done is repeat. I am forced to conclude that's all you have got. But the implications are expansive. That you don't argue and defend is suggestive that you do not understand what you're saying. And so on.the argument is there - agree - disagree is a personal choice. — Rank Amateur
You cannot win a moral argument because there is no evidence of any moral facts.
If there were moral facts and rules nature breaks them all. — Andrew4Handel
Well no, because as I’ve said previously in this thread, a sperm is not a human being and neither is an egg cell. Once an egg cell is fertilised a human life is conceived, by which I mean something that, if not interrupted, will become a fully developed human being. This is not the case with a sperm or an egg cell; the human embryo is precisely that, an embryonic human being. — AJJ
You cannot win a moral argument because there is no evidence of any moral facts.
If there were moral facts and rules nature breaks them all. — Andrew4Handel
Human life begins from its conception, from what other point can you say it begins? — AJJ
Address the premises or the conclusion of the FVOL directly and with support of your counter opinion and I will address - — Rank Amateur
Personally, I believe there are at least some moral truths, including that genocide is morally wrong. — Noah Te Stroete
Where do these moral truths come from and what do they consist of? — Andrew4Handel
Do you understand that an argument - most arguments, all that I can think of - comprise premises and a conclusion. One argues for and supports the premises, and then exhibits the conclusion as following from the premises as a matter of form, with flourishes as desired. — tim wood
Look. The sky is filled with purple flying unicorns. I prove it thus: premise: the sky is filled with purple flying unicorns. I assume that's true. Therefore, the sky is filled with purple flying unicorns. — tim wood
Why on earth would I be referring to all human cellular life there, as opposed to the life of a new human being? You’re being a pedant.
If you take a child to be the offspring of parents then of course it’s a child in there, right from the very start. — AJJ
Ethics is all about ought. If you can will that everyone ought to lie to the murderer at the door to save an innocent person, then it is a moral truth. If you can will genocide to be a universal law, then committing genocide is not morally wrong. It seems to me that there are at least some moral truths. — Noah Te Stroete
One does not argue or support ones premises they are:
"A premise or premiss [a] is a statement that an argument claims will induce or justify a conclusion. In other words, a premise is an assumption that something is true" — Rank Amateur
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