7/14/2010 3:35:41 PM
7/14/2010 4:01:48 PM
7/14/2010 4:02:29 PM
7/14/2010 4:06:26 PM
7/14/2010 6:17:56 PM
"the world needs ditch-diggers too" - judge smails
7/14/2010 6:32:47 PM
Duke and Grumpy,If a woman who is pregnant past whatever demarcation point you choose (let's say she's at 8 months) is at fault in an automobile accident in which she loses her fetus, should she be charged with vehicular manslaughter?If a woman who is 8 months pregnant trips over something in her yard that she placed there and loses the baby, should she be charged with involuntary manslaughter?If she drinks alcohol or smokes should she be charged with endangering a child, or contributing to the delinquency of a minor?These are examples of my problem with treating an unborn child as a person in terms of rights. Physiologically a fully gestated fetus isn't very different than an infant, of course. But to suggest that we should consider the unborn a person it puts a limitation on the mother's rights, which I whole-heartedly disagree with. The moment that that fetus no longer has that impact on the mother, the moment that it gains autonomy, we can call it a person with all the same rights that any other individual has (as a minor of course). It no longer has the physiological ability to limit another's rights.For the record, I'd be against my wife having a late-term abortion, excepting in the instances of severe genetic defects (and stupid fucking doctors that didn't diagnose it earlier). But I'm still against making it illegal for a woman to decide what to do with her own body.
7/16/2010 8:42:52 AM
when a mother is involved in an auto-accident today in which her 7mo baby dies, does she get charged with manslaughter? depends on the fucking situationtry thinking before posting.
7/16/2010 8:44:42 AM
So that's a yes, then? There are some cirumstances where the only loss of life in the accident was her fetus and she should be charged with a crime? That's what I want to know.
7/16/2010 8:50:48 AM
well, if their philosophy is to remain consistent, of course the answer is yes.this isn't difficult
7/16/2010 8:59:12 AM
7/16/2010 10:27:49 AM
7/16/2010 4:49:03 PM
It's a part of her body until it comes out, you can't caps lock that away
7/16/2010 7:37:46 PM
Why? Because it's inside the woman? Well, my dick's been inside a woman. Does it become part of her body?Or is it because the fetus relies on the woman to live? This, of course, as opposed to a newborn, which is completely self-sufficient.Siamese twins have shared body parts. Should one be allowed to kill the other without the other's consent, in order to improve his or her own life?Once again, you're skipping the important issue -- whether or not an unborn person is a person -- and jumping straight into some women's rights bullshit that's neither here nor there.[Edited on July 17, 2010 at 3:35 AM. Reason : ]
7/17/2010 3:34:21 AM
7/17/2010 7:26:36 AM
7/17/2010 9:02:52 AM
This discussion is not about female reproductive health.
7/17/2010 9:38:22 AM
sorry, I thought the title was "Pro Choice vs. Pro Life"
7/17/2010 10:10:10 AM
It is.
7/17/2010 11:34:30 AM
[Edited on July 17, 2010 at 12:06 PM. Reason : what's the worth]
7/17/2010 11:55:34 AM
o damn i should have waited 30 minutes :-(
7/17/2010 12:10:47 PM
7/17/2010 12:14:55 PM
wait, are you being frank with us?
7/17/2010 12:22:34 PM
[Edited on July 21, 2010 at 2:14 PM. Reason : kk]
7/21/2010 1:49:59 PM
I am pro-choice, but I am against abortion.
7/21/2010 2:00:17 PM
http://www.jsonline.com/news/wisconsin/101325324.html
9/4/2010 1:29:47 AM
^Apparently that block has now been lifted, at least temporarily.http://www.newsobserver.com/2010/09/10/672966/fbi-uncovers-plot-to-bomb-abortion.html
9/10/2010 7:36:22 PM
^the irony of that news story is that a guy is being investigated for criminal actions when he never successfully killed anyone, while the news defends the abortion clinic that daily kills...Oh snap...PS I believe both are wrong...i in no way advocate this dude...just pointing out the irony
9/10/2010 9:38:14 PM
except that this douchebag wasn't plotting to kill a clump of unwanted cells.
9/10/2010 9:56:42 PM
NOT LOOKING GOOD, MOOSE
9/11/2010 10:58:03 AM
9/11/2010 11:13:34 AM
9/11/2010 11:43:42 PM
^ Nobody really hates you, they just feel sorry for you
9/12/2010 10:30:36 AM
9/12/2010 1:03:38 PM
9/12/2010 9:53:58 PM
Anti-Spawn[Edited on September 12, 2010 at 10:23 PM. Reason : ]
9/12/2010 9:56:05 PM
9/13/2010 4:04:41 PM
9/13/2010 7:58:09 PM
9/13/2010 8:03:34 PM
^Actually, I was responding to those atheists that don't like what the abortion guy wanted to do. I was emphasizing that it was silly to argue that if in fact naturalism is true. Really all arguments are stupid if naturalism is true, because the argument is just a part of our automatonic state!As for frightened...no lol...I mean seriously? To me free will is so self evident its silly to argue against it...because by arguing against it you are in effect proving your own free will or you are merely being an automaton. If you choose the latter, don't get mad at whatever people do...although i guess you wouldn't really have a choice because you are just an automaton...so do whatever I guess, because you can't really control it, you're just a product of the system.
9/13/2010 10:06:50 PM
^ not all models of naturalism (none that rely on valid premises, i'd argue) are mutually exclusive with free will. The fact that "randomness" is a mathematical, measurable, property of the universe proves this.Natural machines can rely on random elements, thus making their future states unpredictable (aka chaotic).
9/13/2010 10:16:32 PM
I don't believe in Random...do you have any specific events in nature that have been shown to be random? I'm asking that as a question not as a sarcastic remark. That and I am merely taking some of your own Richard Dawkins thoughts on the subject of naturalism
9/14/2010 7:30:48 AM
Just like free will, randomness effectively exists from our perspective. Take genetic mutation, for instance. While it almost certainly has a cause, there are sufficient extremely difficult to detect causes that it appears to have a random rate of occurrence. Does that mean it's actually random? When in reality it was a neutrino missing every other atom and colliding with DNA at the moment of replication? Or any of an effectively infinite number of factors that could cause the DNA replication process to fail in a way that it couldn't totally correct?So again, just like free will, in an entirely natural universe it's likely that randomness doesn't actually exist. But shit, pseudo-randomness that is impossible to tell apart from objective randomness might as well be called randomness right? It effectively exists, and it's useful to refer to it as such in our existence.Before someone mentions quantum mechanics again, I'll agree that it introduces uncertainty to the equation rather than actual randomness. It's likely (and most at least some physicists I think would agree) that we simply don't yet understand it enough to deal with the uncertainty. We just cannot (yet?) observe the variables and in fact they may not ever be observed. I'll admit my understanding of quantum mechanics is rudimentary, so if there are any physicists that want to school me I welcome it. It's a field I have a great interest in.
9/14/2010 8:54:47 AM
9/14/2010 9:19:21 AM
But obviously in the strictest sense of the word random, the physics acting on the flipping coin itself are decidedly non-random. And much more observably non-random than quantum effects like radioactive decay.Probably why you used quotations around "random".
9/14/2010 9:45:20 AM
9/14/2010 11:11:56 AM
9/14/2010 11:42:01 AM
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9/14/2010 8:19:44 PM