I'd argue that more abortions would lead to less use of the death penalty, but that's a whole different discussion.
11/12/2013 6:35:35 PM
Freakonomics has that thing where they claim abortion was responsible for a 30% drop in national crime. Unwanted kids are criminals! Who knew!
11/12/2013 7:05:34 PM
Interestingly enough, non-whites tend to have abortions more frequently than whites (mostly because of socioeconomic conditions and lack of resources, education, birth control, etc). You'd think the hard right would actively encourage brown people to abort their babies, but I guess slut-shaming ALL women is a higher priority on the agenda.
11/13/2013 11:55:52 AM
11/13/2013 4:37:29 PM
11/14/2013 1:19:04 AM
11/14/2013 1:29:53 AM
11/14/2013 1:41:50 AM
We don't murder them but we certainly lock people up for non violent crimes for long periods. Also none of this bickering has changed my mind about abortion.
11/14/2013 8:11:58 AM
11/14/2013 8:31:01 AM
11/14/2013 10:25:32 AM
^it's a fallacy to assume that a person's pro-life stance has to do with the bible or religion.
11/14/2013 12:42:36 PM
yet no other anti-choice argument has been raised[Edited on November 14, 2013 at 1:05 PM. Reason : .]
11/14/2013 1:04:51 PM
wat
11/14/2013 2:45:48 PM
The crux of the pro-lifer' argument against abortion mostly has to do with the supposed sanctity of life of the fetus. Who perpetuates the sanctity of life claim again? Oh, that's right: religious folks who believe that life begins at conception! I don't hear lots of atheists clamoring for more control on abortion, but oddly enough I hear them being against the death penalty pretty frequently. I fall in the same camp as theDuke in that I'm not exactly crazy about abortion OR the death penalty, but they definitely are appropriate for certain situations. And FWIW I'm not an atheist...
11/14/2013 3:03:46 PM
11/14/2013 3:46:20 PM
11/14/2013 3:53:17 PM
11/15/2013 2:52:36 PM
Of course it's arbitrary. Is that better or worse than handed down from the sky by an imaginary friend?
11/18/2013 8:31:01 AM
11/18/2013 8:41:59 AM
11/19/2013 12:30:52 AM
11/19/2013 8:14:19 AM
^^You're so full of shit. You call out materialism and then act like your alternative isn't Yahweh and the Bible. You quote C.S. Lewis for Christ's sake.What I meant by arbitrary is that all moral ontology is arbitrary. Choosing to maximize well-being and minimize suffering as the basis of a moral framework is the arbitrary part. Building the moral framework from there (and deciding that abortion should be an option as a corollary from it) is not arbitrary.The sad part is that your moral ontology is also arbitrary you just don't want to admit it because you think this makes it meaningless, when that couldn't be further from the truth. Choosing to base your morality on maximizing well-being when you could have just as easily chosen maximizing rape makes that choice ultimately meaningful.But seriously, you're welcome to present the evidence for your non-arbitrary moral ontology at any time.[Edited on November 19, 2013 at 8:51 AM. Reason : .]
11/19/2013 8:51:30 AM
11/19/2013 9:37:37 AM
Hell, we've never observed the orbit of Pluto, but it's still science to predict where it will be in 1000 years. We've never observed protons or dinosaurs either.
11/19/2013 9:52:53 AM
And by that, you mean that it takes 250 goddamn years for it to go around the sun once.But right, we don't actually know it'll complete that rotation. It could get half way around and decide it's had enough. Like
11/19/2013 10:02:07 AM
well, according to ohmy, the maximally good being he's afraid to name could just decide to halt the orbit at some point.
11/19/2013 10:39:45 AM
uh what? I agree with everything you guys have said about science in the last few posts. i guess you guys take issue with my use of the word "immediate". We make predictions based on what's immediately observable. I never meant to say those predictions aren't valid. Take "immediate" out then, my point still stands, and you haven't addressed anything else in my post.
11/19/2013 4:08:18 PM
I think we all agree with ohmy that moral frameworks are arbitrary. There's no universal reason, as disco_stu pointed out, to pick favoring rape or not favoring rape.But as disco_stu pointed out, in the absence of a universal standard, societal stability and thriving is a better basis than believing in ancient religious beliefs or believing everyone should be raped.Ohmy definitely seems full of shit at this point, unless he has some evidence to suggest Christianity is real and thus a good chose as the basis for his framework, rather than being an arbitrary belief system developed over thousands of years by hundreds of politicians, priests, scoundrels and a few good people.
11/19/2013 4:21:02 PM
11/19/2013 4:24:50 PM
11/19/2013 4:37:37 PM
^ baby steps here mrfrog. geez...
11/19/2013 4:41:00 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/11/19/supreme-court-refuses-to-block-texas-abortion-restrictions/
11/19/2013 9:16:38 PM
11/19/2013 10:31:15 PM
11/19/2013 11:45:13 PM
There was a lecture on youtube I was going to post, but I couldn't find it.The basic idea is that the professor asks you to make a moral criteria. Then he gives you a scenario where the action you know to be right violates the criteria you just came up with. Then he does it again. Basic point: you have your views and then rationalize them, not the other way around.
11/19/2013 11:51:37 PM
^If you find it, please post it. I love stuff like that and am incorporating it into some work I'm doing in English Education here at grad school about the formation of ideologies and on literary critical theory.And I agree with you (or the professor). Everyone is biased (for many reasons). That doesn't excuse reckless reasoning or complete indifference, but it's something we must acknowledge so that we can try to work towards an objective understanding of the truth. (The Christian faith..Scriptures specifically... talks a lot about that actually)
11/19/2013 11:55:25 PM
11/20/2013 1:52:58 AM
11/20/2013 8:40:05 AM
11/20/2013 8:50:48 AM
11/20/2013 9:20:27 AM
Albuquerque Voters Reject Late-Term Abortion Ban
11/20/2013 11:00:41 AM
11/20/2013 11:42:09 AM
11/20/2013 11:48:00 AM
11/20/2013 11:48:30 AM
11/20/2013 11:53:59 AM
11/20/2013 11:54:29 AM
That if you can't be reasonable with A you're unlikely to be reasonable with B?
11/20/2013 11:55:23 AM
^^you'd care when you were in unbaptized baby hell limbo^but those are two different things, you need to establish how they are related. [Edited on November 20, 2013 at 11:56 AM. Reason : I am very curious what a reasonable argument in favor of God looks like, make a thread!]
11/20/2013 11:55:28 AM
I see what you're saying. You want me to jump to the "proving of God". That's the variable. I'm saying the constant in each of these situations will be faulty reasoning. Which is faulty reasoning. Which if you can't acknowledge, won't help in A, B, X, Y, or Z.Aghhhh...we're getting ahead of ourselves though. I want disco's answer as to why rape is bad.And please not ... IT'S JUST GENERALL ASSUMMED MAAAAN. Because many people generally assumed child sacrifice was good, as well as slavery, as well as war for conquest, and so on. in fact...some cultures have believed that rape was GOOD (in the context of war on vowed enemies for example)[Edited on November 20, 2013 at 12:00 PM. Reason : ]
11/20/2013 11:58:33 AM
no, i want you to explain how one's thoughts on moral absolutes reflects how they would respond to a "reasonable argument in favor of the existence of God" you need to show a connection between those things if you want to make that argument
11/20/2013 12:01:02 PM