If we’re going to value the lives of our fellow human beings at all, then we must do so from the beginning. Otherwise people, when it suits them, will come up with arbitrary reasons we’re allowed to end life, as they do. — AJJ
But just because I assume them does not mean that they're true — tim wood
or that in virtue of my assuming you are compelled to accept them as true. — tim wood
you would understand that you are compelled to acknowledge that the sky is filled with purple flying unicorns. — tim wood
My argument in this thread has simply been this: If we’re going to value the lives of our fellow human beings at all, then we must do so from the beginning. Otherwise people, when it suits them, will come up with arbitrary reasons we’re allowed to end life, as they do. — AJJ
Well, it is not just a matter of willing, but rather logically willing it to be universal law where doing the opposite would result in the breakdown of society. — Noah Te Stroete
I have already told you, I dispute the claim - because I just looked up and it is not - await your rebuttal
You do understand that this is the process of argument don't you ?? — Rank Amateur
I’m saying a human being’s life starts at its conception — AJJ
No it doesn’t.
Irrelevant to my case. — AJJ
I was never the only person who judges it to be wrong, so it was never wrong only for me. There were always others. And you're one of them, surely. So why do I need to convince you? — S
so just once, for all that is good in the world, stop arguing against the premises in my argument like 5 pages ago in the abstract, pick one you believe is false and tell me why. — Rank Amateur
Therefore, when I die, I am deprived of all of the value of my future. Inflicting this loss on me is ultimately what makes killing me wrong. This being the case, it would seem that what makes killing any adult human being prima facie seriously wrong is the loss of his other future. — Rank Amateur
As to FOV, some time ago I asked what it is and how it is assessed. A problem is that you refer to it as a "future" consideration. I don't know what that is. I think what you have in mind is a present value. That is, at this moment, according to you (near as I can tell) there exists a quantifier that expresses the present value of your future. Let's suppose there is. What does it mean? How do you calculate it? And finally, what difference does it make - who should care? And while you're working this out, remember that your guy Marquis did not do any of this. — tim wood
In, the 20th century, easily a billion people had negative FOVs. But what would it mean? Answer: it would mean nothing. Any decision based on an FOV would needs be based on other considerations as well. — tim wood
The loss of this FOV is that which "ultimately makes killing wrong." Don't you mean that it is the loss of the potential, the possibilities, of the future, that is part of what makes killing wrong? — tim wood
t forget that it is not the killing itself that is the problem, but the cause, reason, and circumstances of the killing. — tim wood
And finally, if you're correct and this FOV is the parameter, the measure, you claim it is, then what prevents us from killing those with a bad FOV? — tim wood
Implicit in this notion of an FOV is the idea that the victim suffers the loss. How? The victim is dead. Please make clear how the victim suffers the loss of his or her FOV. In death, that which can suffer ceases to be. — tim wood
It's empty foolish assertion, empty foolish argument, and empty foolish conclusions. And all unnecessary. I'm of a mind that Marquis knows this now and knew it when he wrote it. The people who buy it either are foolish - "Hey, people have an FOV, no more abortion!" Or knowing its failures and flaws, have notwithstanding adapted it to their own ends to persuade the ignorant and thoughtless. — tim wood
This is non-responsive.
The question was asked so that you could provide your basis so that I would know what you relied upon to determine that infanticide was murder. Whatever principles you rely upon should be usable to determine the outcome of unclear cases. This, of course, assumes your principles are logical and not simply emotive, but if they are emotive, then I'd have expected you to say that in response to the question I posed, as opposed to simply posing another question of your own. — Hanover
Why? What is being killed? I think most folks agree that at some point the fetus is essentially a person. I think currently - and in some places for a long time - either viability or quickening is the sign of nascent personhood, viability and quickening being not the same thing. And I think most people agree that aborting then is at least problematic. In any case, these occur after the first trimester. Viability, about 24 weeks. Quickening, 13 to 25 weeks. (That is, quickening as when the mother first feels movement.)Any discussion on abortion needs to start with some theoretical account of the wrongness of killing. — Rank Amateur
Irrelevant. No one is considering killing "people like us."But why is it wrong to kill people like us? — Rank Amateur
If you merely said that killing people harms them, I think most folks would let that pass But you want to build an argument on it. So let's look at it. My point here is that you're a victim being killed only while you're alive. When you're dead, you're a dead victim and you are not and cannot be killed any more. Inasmuch as you're dead, whatever your future was, no part of it was actual. Indeed, no part of your or my future is actual, even while we're alive! How can we be deprived of something we neither have nor can have?A better answer would be the primary wrong done by the killing is the harm it does to the victim. — Rank Amateur
Or is this future restricted to the rose-colored version? The question is, how assessed, how valued.the loss to me of all those activities, projects, experiences, and enjoyments which would otherwise have constituted my future personal life. These activities, projects, experiences, and enjoyments — Rank Amateur
I do not recall this part of it. But I very seriously doubt that Marquis (himself) allows for any such thing. Respect for life is not merely assessment of FOV. Think about it; grant this and the Nazis could exterminate anyone, any group, they pleased. They merely would have had to reduce the FOVs of their victims to zero, and there you are. And that latter part they could do and did do. Marquis's is then arguably a covert argument for genocide!In the argument marquis does allow for euthanasia for people with no future, such as those in permanent vegetative states etc. — Rank Amateur
You confuse present and future value. And you adduce no reasonable way to define it, assess it, value it, or demonstrate how it matters.I do not see how any of that has to do with the premise above, can you explain the relationship to the premise please — Rank Amateur
How is anyone going to make a decision based on FOV alone? Won't they have any current concerns? And is it not reasonable to suppose that current concerns will outweigh this FOV?In, the 20th century, easily a billion people had negative FOVs. But what would it mean? Answer: it would mean nothing. Any decision based on an FOV would needs be based on other considerations as well.
— tim wood
Financially? I am not getting the point you are trying to make here either. Not trying to be difficult but am really not understanding your point yet. — Rank Amateur
Are you here arguing that killing is never justified, cannot ever be justified?and asking for some forbearance in not having to argue the nature of justified (killing) — Rank Amateur
When? Under what circumstances? And the how& etc? If it's the individual, then his FOV gets close to zero and even to negative values the more danger he's in. Or is this all abut unreal, speculative FOVs? What you apparently forget, and that Marquis never apparently even thought about, is that reality governs. FOV is presumably about reality (never mind how). If you're a combat soldier, your real FOV is affected by the combat. In any case, how that soldier's FOV would be calculated is a clear function of the risk he is subject toI would say the determination of that (the FOV) should be left to that individual. — Rank Amateur
How can he lose it? He never had it. Nor in whatever it is that you suppose that he has is there anything of substance. I know this goes against common and informal usage, but we're not within the bounds and limits of that usage, so we must not be informal and common. And to be sure, if it's the individual who scores his own FOV, then a first trimester embryo - fetus has none at all.What the victim really loses is his future. — Rank Amateur
This alone ought to make you question the value of Marquis's arguments.But than you can extend that point to all murder, and say murder is not wrong, because now the victim doesn't know or care anymore — Rank Amateur
Absolutely not, in a free society. It's enough she want one. Whether she needs one or not may be someone's business: hers, her family's, the father's, her doctor's, but definitely not yours. Suppose it were yours. What account could you give for any attitude you might have about it, much less any decision about it? — tim wood
I'm not saying abortion should be banned but it needs to be monitored and regulated for the benefit of women themselves. — TheMadFool
Hm. Yes, men need to make sure women use abortion only when appropriate. :down: — Banno
Women will lose a little bit of their humanity if we make abortion completely free. Don't you think? To say abortion is a choice that can be exercised freely is tantamount to saying the fetus is nothing and dispensable. — TheMadFool
There are women who want children. They value life and its origins in the fetus. According to you they must be sick in some way. — TheMadFool
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