bernie14
Filter Manipulator
Yes, yes, one side is defending human rights and the other are smug, narrow minded primitives 

But that means the debate will never be settled.![]()
Same thing w age of consent, age one can drive or drink alcohol or join the military.There is no specific moment when you go from no personhood to personhood, it doesn't work like that. And that's the problem. The law expects exact definitions, but here one does not exist.
Even if a specific moment existed where you could point and say: "Ha! There it is! At this exact millisecond personhood has been formed!", surely this would be different for every single person on the planet anyway.
The law is forced to approximate here and specify a point in time that's clearly defined in legal terms and specifies a change from non-personhood to personhood. But that's not what actually happens in real life
I found this interesting because I've read several of your posts as criticizing people for "talking the talk but not walking the walk" or simply pointing out "bad" behavior while not upping their own game. [forgive me for paraphrasing your points into a couple tiny soundbites].The accusation of 'virtue signalling' is an attempt at deflection (or dismissal). In practical outcomes, it's the same as someone saying "I don't want to" or "I don't care". It's just more wordy and intended to appeal to an audience as well. The phrasing on disagreeing with the proposed changes will depend on the person's moral framework, but whether it's poc hoc rationalisation or a legitimate criticism will depend on factors unique to the situation.
But, theoretically, I can teach my kid to be morally superior. To indulge in it. Taught behaviour, all around, right? It's not necessarily innate.I can see a trend, hope it's spotted by others, see that it isn't & be sad about it, all without any moral superiority.
I can goto Spain, attempt to speak Spanish, do it badly, someone can notice and correct my errors and help me improve all without making themselves 'superior'. Being right isn't superior & being wrong isn't inferior. Anyone who speaks one must assume imagines they have some nuance to add to the conversation. Why be defensive about it?
You teach your kid everyday right? Doesn't make you superior.
Not everyone w an opinion or idea about improving society is moral grandstanding.
Ehhh, personhood. Abortion's the other one. But we're all falling into the mess in both threads, so I don't even know why I'm pointing it out. Probably because I'm already typing a reply to someone elseEdit: forgot this was about abortion.
When you're sad & feel alone in your ideas and then you read something that resonates with you it can elict a strong feeling of approval.Regardless, I don't think any form of sad involves "", so y'know, I just wasn't buying your claim up to this point
Personhood/sentience etc. can be seperated from morality. Like automobile safety the ultimate goal is morality but you can try to look at it purely mechanically (what are the aspects that make a human human and add the morality in afterwards).The point is with regards to abortion and thus personhood is it is associated with a moral standing by default
And if something goes wrong? Artificial wombs don't guarantee that everything will work out perfectly. They just guarantee that a woman won't have to go through the process of gestation and childbirth herself, and of course artificial wombs don't engage in risky behaviors like smoking, drinking, taking drugs, or other activities that could endanger the fetus if an accident were to occur.Once artificial wombs ae developed it might make abortion always illegal.
Reseune is the place where all this is happening. It's a community of scientists working on an incredible variety of projects and experiments, on a planet that's partially terraformed (the native atmosphere is deadly and will give you cancer if you breathe any of it).Cyteen said:This one was going to tie up nine tanks for three weeks, and six for six weeks, before they made a final selection and voided the last backups.
Reseune was taking no chances.
Uh-huh. Terribly concerned for the suffering of a fetus even though nobody really knows when or how that happens, but couldn't care less about the suffering of a baby that's born with defects or other issues, or at the other end of life and the suffering of Alzheimers victims and people with terminal illnesses who might prefer not to suffer.I tend towards the view hat the most reasonable cutoff for when the state has some interest in regulating abortion is once the fetus develops the capacity to suffer. Since suffering is subjective and hard to measure, the best proxy is probably once it has the nerve connections that allow it to sense physical pain. That is around 20 to 22 weeks.
WHAT?!There should never be exceptions for rape or incest. Those imply that the purpose of the abortion ban is not to protect innocent life but only to punish girls or women for having consensual sex.
The state, of course, since it's forcing the birth of the child.What if the unborn child is found to have a genetic disorder, such as Batten's disease, which will be degenerative and fatal within 5 to 7 years? Should an abortion be allowed? If the State says no, who should pay the additional cost of caring for such a doomed child?
If one believes that a fertilized egg is a person with all the rights of people who are born (and more rights than the woman in whose body it is), then it is inconsistent to allow for exceptions for rape. The "child" is not the rapist, and "executing" it for the crime of someone else is horrific.Are you seriously telling us that you think it's okay to force a woman, teenager, or even a child to continue a pregnancy that happened due to rape/incest (the two are usually the same, since few people willingly commit incest nowadays)?
You're right, I should've completely ignored any feelings of happy or sad from the start. Your post was complete approval of El_Mac's argument and how you thought people would've already "learned that lesson by now". It was indulgent. It was you being morally superior.When you're sad & feel alone in your ideas and then you read something that resonates with you it can elict a strong feeling of approval.
I don't even remember who/for what I used that smilie with.
Eh. The fact that it technically can doesn't mean it regularly is.Personhood/sentience etc. can be seperated from morality. Like automobile safety the ultimate goal is morality but you can try to look at it purely mechanically (what are the aspects that make a human human and add the morality in afterwards).
No. I wish the left would learn so they could win.You're right, I should've completely ignored any feelings of happy or sad from the start. Your post was complete approval of El_Mac's argument and how you thought people would've already "learned that lesson by now". It was indulgent. It was you being morally superior.
We can measure IQ without pretending it makes one person worth more than another.I We wouldn't rate so many things on IQ. And so on, and so forth.
I too wish for a great many things that would cause the change I'd like to see in society. But I disagree on the learning required, because to me, it's more than just "the left" that needs to learn, and to see it frequently characterised as such does come across as moral grandstanding. It implies you, or the general ideological group you associate with, has somehow got its own problems sorted out.No. I wish the left would learn so they could win.
I don't feel morally superior when potential allies are busy infighting. I'd rather be on a winning team that doesn't alienate so many.
No, IQ is literally designed to segregate people by a rather simplistic and reductive view of intelligence. But that's for another thread. I'm the one who brought it up, so that's my mistake.We can measure IQ without pretending it makes one person worth more than another.
Ideally we can acknowledge and celebrate people's merits without thinking they're better than us & acknowledge their limitations without castigating them.
One can have an opinion on another or a group or society without any implications of having ones own problems sorted.I too wish for a great many things that would cause the change I'd like to see in society. But I disagree on the learning required, because to me, it's more than just "the left" that needs to learn, and to see it frequently characterised as such does come across as moral grandstanding. It implies you, or the general ideological group you associate with, has somehow got its own problems sorted out.
How is this related to what I said.Everyone and every group has problems to deal with. The impact is measured by the progress towards any goal made regardless of that conflict. Conflict comes and goes all the time, right?
Agreed.No, IQ is literally designed to segregate people by a rather simplistic and reductive view of intelligence.
Mostly agree w all that.The point is we associate things with morality on a very basic level. If someone does a stupid thing a bunch of times, we assume they're inherently stupid. If someone does a smart thing a bunch of times, guess what we assume? The problem with that is it's quantified on what we see of that person. Which is something I struggle with online with a bunch of people I've generally only ever known through digital interactions. But that's my point - it's very difficult not to do, to the extent that we all do it. When it comes to personhood, we've already talked about stuff like dementia and whatnot in this thread, which merely proves the point. We're trying to litigate "personhood" based on something like brain activity, or some other biological function (which, technically, you could simulate with a machine. Ethical quandaries aside, this kinda begs the question of what we're even trying to define in the first place).
It all comes back to "right" and "wrong", because the topic of the thread is personhood. How a person qualifies as a person. Morality is baked-in.
If we were truly able to jettison morality and all these other pesky grey areas, it'd be a very done-and-dusted topic, in my opinion. The "pro-life" movement is by-and-large excessively funded by both conservative and theological interests. Conflict of Church and state indicates undue influence on legislation that is too flawed to support. Rejected. Personhood is defined by the social apparatus of the state, and an unborn child requires the birth parent in order to survive. Regardless of whether or not both parent and (unborn) child are determined to be a person, logistically, this puts the birth parent at a higher priority. Again - voiding morality for the moment. Priority wins. It's icky, because it kinda makes it about what a person's "worth", but that seems to be how personhood works in most countries anyhow.
(this is assuming no proposal involves changing the state apparatus to provide full support to all involved parties, because a lot of the situation we're stuck in is because of a prioritisation of resources)
Seems simple enough, but I'm sure people will find a way to disagree. Pretty much all pro-life arguments are founded on the emotive (and moral) appeal of killing a person (while ignoring or dismissing any threat to the birth parent, but that's an aside).
I addressed @MagisterCultuum and would prefer him to reply, thank you. I want a simple, nonconvoluted reason why he thinks it's okay to force a woman or child to give birth if they were impregnated by a rapist or were the victim of incest (very few of these women would be engaging in "consensual rape" or even "consensual incest" unless it's cousins. That's still allowed, though society tends to raise its eyebrows on such things these days.If one believes that a fertilized egg is a person with all the rights of people who are born (and more rights than the woman in whose body it is), then it is inconsistent to allow for exceptions for rape. The "child" is not the rapist, and "executing" it for the crime of someone else is horrific.
If someone professes to be against all abortions except in the case of rape, they are telling us that the reason they are anti-abortion is not because they believe the fertilized egg is a person but because they want to punish women for getting pregnant when they don't want to be.
This isn't a statement that women who are raped should be forced to give birth, but a statement that anti-abortion people are inconsistent, and their arguments about abortion rights are not rational.
Sure you can, but that isn't what happened. The implication was a lesson learned, vs. people who hadn't. That said, if you're dead set on insisting you didn't mean to come across as being superior, I'd really hope that's an insight into all the other times other people seem to be doing the same. Very rarely does the person doing it think they're being superior. Those cases are the obvious exceptions that are often pretty easy to ignore.One can have an opinion on another or a group or society without any implications of having ones own problems sorted.
I've never made any claims to have my own life figured out.
You were talking about the left fighting with itself, but don't worry about it, it's best for another thread.How is this related to what I said.