"I am opposed to murder, but have no problem if you do it."
In the current topic on fetal gene sequencing, the otherwise articulate and insightful Prof. James R. Brenner of the FIT chemical engineering department said that he would not terminate a pregnancy because to do so would be anti-life, but neither would he stop someone else. Jim is not alone. More than once, here in the Gulch, other people have made the same claim. They are opposed to abortion but believe that the government should not be involved in a personal decision.
Why would you feel (believe, conclude, surmise, deduce, induce...) that something is _wrong_ "for you" and then say that it might be right for someone else? I am not talking of chocolate-versus-vanilla but basic moral questions.
Why would you feel (believe, conclude, surmise, deduce, induce...) that something is _wrong_ "for you" and then say that it might be right for someone else? I am not talking of chocolate-versus-vanilla but basic moral questions.
Regarding the "inconsistency of ethical and political subjectivism", Mike, you fail to appreciate how limited a single human being is regarding his/her effects on government actions. It is not a matter of being inconsistent. It is a matter of realizing one's limitations. You seem to know a lot about Clint Eastwood movies. Well, a "man has to know his limitations". My limitation is that I am not going to be able to convince everyone of the correctness of how I live my life, let alone convince them of how they should live their lives. We all have a finite amount of energy, and I should not be wasting that time on efforts that cannot be in my best interest.
2) However, I personally am quite limited in my response, even if I wanted to do something about it.
3) The government response is independent of mine.
4) I am quite satisfied with my moral code, and it is based on a solid standard.
Objectivist never considered truth as a function of arithmetic; and neither does science. Whether anyone agrees with me or not is not an evaluation of the truth of falsehood of my assertions. In point of fact, I have made no assertions. I only asked why, if you consider abortion to be the taking of a human life, you can turn a blind eye to it, and say that it is none of the government's business? That is why I recast the discussion to be about robbing banks. This is not about abortion or about robbing banks. It is about the objectivity of morality. You seem to endorse that. You seem to allow that some circumstances exist in which an otherwise immoral act (bank robbery; abortion) would be permitted or excused, even if not encouraged. Most people who are opposed to abortion and bank robbery take an ABSOLUTIST stance. But absolutism is a philosophical error. And so you seem to agree.
Of course, if you rob a bank, someone might get hurt or killed. So, there is that risk of unjustly injuring an innocent person.
And the basic problem is that the money is not yours. Some people argue that, but I do not. I would not impose my standards on someone else.
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Lest anyone be confused, the above was a rhetorical reply. None of the responses so far in the tet-a-tet between brenner and robbie actually addressed the issue.
I am not being self contradictory by not interfering with you doing an action that does not impinge upon me.
You are PROJECTING your contradiction with my moral code onto me as it being my action.
When in fact it is your action and therefore YOURS not mine.
Self contradiction only applies if I am not adhering to MY code.
I live MY moral code.
Yours will be different, after all we are different individuals. We will have "rules" we both agree on. We will also have rules that are not in common, meaning we do not necessarily agree on.
Any action that falls into that category for us presents the possibility of the outcome in your title.
If our definitions of murder are not congruent, it will come out that way.
Abortion is one of the most controversial issues of our time.
I do not include it in my definition of murder however.
I am against it, but you might not be, as is your right.
I do not have the right or responsibility to dictate your choices in life to you unless they directly impact me.
I think abortion is wrong and having or performing one will harm you in ways you cannot know going forward, but that is your choice to make.
Do not expect me to approve of it, perform it, or fund it for you. If you want it, you own it, pay for it yourself.
Moreover, you are confusing the role of government with the role of an individual in this case. What I have to say about condoning or not condoning any immoral act is not particularly relevant to the argument, because I do not have the ability (or the desire) to use force to make you or anyone else comply.
I refuse to give anything to a pan-handler. I always give money to our auxiliary priest who manages a mens shelter in downtown Milwaukee. The first is a guilt play, the second a gift of compassion. There is a difference.
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