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Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 12:59 pm
by ZooTech
sv-wolf wrote:I don't believe in God, and I do believe in a woman's freedom to make up her own mind whether or not to have an abortion. I object to religious totalitarianism which imposes its own values on others and prevents people with a different set of values acting in accordance with their own light.
Whether or not you believe in God, there is still the matter of right and wrong. A woman's "right to choose" begins and ends in the bedroom. To argue otherwise is to reinforce what I said earlier - that abortion is nothing more than a way to make sex as consequence-free as possible. Instead of granting abortions, why not just tie the tubes of the promiscuous woman in question and let her have at it?

oldnslo wrote:You must have said something a Catholic might say so he assumed......
Bingo!

Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 1:03 pm
by Sev
ZooTech wrote:
oldnslo wrote:You must have said something a Catholic might say so he assumed......
Bingo!
I'd like to know precisely what that is, as I've yet to truely experience any religion. Much of the information I have is gleaned from friends who are catholic and my own readings with are "basic christianity" coupled with a handful of philosophical texts which predate those types of splittings.

I'm honestly trying to learn here, since so many of my arguments are based on what I know, I'd like to know what I'm missing.

Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 1:15 pm
by Chris8187
I didn't gleam it off a Friends episode, and I would find it offensive you think I'm that stupid to believe it just because it was on a Friends episode. It is one theory that people have come up to figure out why humans do what they do, and some evolutionists take this position too.

Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 1:16 pm
by sv-wolf
Chris8187 wrote:I'm not going to make a really long post, but I have one interesting thing to say. No matter who you are or what you do, it is always for a selfish reason. Try to disprove that one. It isn't possible. If someone helps another needy person, he feels better about himself or maybe it helps his self-esteem. That is only one example, but everyone is selfish all the time.

-edit, The reason faith is needed is because everyone has done something wrong and the punishment for "sin" is death. This is where Jesus and faith in Him is so important to the Christian faith.
Yep, this is an old one and not as hard to argue against as you think. Someone who helps another certainly feels better about himself and is a happier person for it. That is a universal truth and is observable everywhere. When people act selflessly out of compassion or fellow feeling for others are they always calculating the benefits to themselves? I don't think so. Of course that will sometimes be the case. But by no means always. The benefits of acting selflessly arise as a consequence of a kindly act but are not necessarily the origin of it.

There are many examples that could be cited, but take an act of heroism. The soldier who throws himself on a bomb to save innocent civilians is a rare figure, but a known and genuine one. When he acts is he calculating the chances of his feeling better about himself? He is much more likely to be driven by a sudden feeling of empathy for others. One thing that drives us to act selflessly is our ability to identify ourselves with the needs and vulnerabilities of other human beings.

Claiming a unconsious self-seeking motivation for an seemingly selfish act is a circular argument. It assumes that the unknown unconscious motivation is a selfish one, but that is what you are trying to demonstrate. In evolutionary terms altruistic behaviour is completely explicable.

Now if you get very sophisticated about all this you can pick apart each case and claim some self-interested reason for every act, just as you can claim the opposite. But there are a couple of good reasons for not thinking in these terms. It's a very crude way of looking at human behaviour and more importantly it encourages people to act in harmfull and anti-social ways.

By using the word 'selfish' you are lumping together two very different things: acts which are intended to benefit the perpetrator and which are either consciously intended to harm others, or careless of their needs, and acts which are intended to bring comfort, aid etc to others. And this is not only confusing, it is dangerous.

Confusing the two allows people to argue that all human behaviour is 'selfish' and therefore genuinely thoughtless and selfish behaviour is justifiable on the grounds that it is 'human nature'. What they mean, in fact, is that all human behaviour, whether 'selfish' and 'selfless' is self-referenced, which is a very different thing.

On your edit: in some societies, for example Northern Buddhist societies there is no concept of Sin and no experience of guilt. Tibetan's, for example, are simply confused by the Christian notion of guilt. Feeling bad about oneself is a cultural thing and simply doesn't exist in their society. The idea of self-hatred, so common in our society simply horrifies them. Nevertheless this is a religion and a culture that holds compassion as one of their highest values.

But beyond that, I challenge your notion that faith is needed to turn someone into a good person. I know many, many good people who would claim to be atheists or agnostics or who run very cool about their religion.

Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 2:30 pm
by sv-wolf
ZooTech wrote:
Whether or not you believe in God, there is still the matter of right and wrong. A woman's "right to choose" begins and ends in the bedroom. To argue otherwise is to reinforce what I said earlier - that abortion is nothing more than a way to make sex as consequence-free as possible. Instead of granting abortions, why not just tie the tubes of the promiscuous woman in question and let her have at it?

I agree, but right and wrong are not fixed, unvarying things, or the private preserve of this or that ideology or religion, or of the state. Nor are they absolute and unrelated to circumstance.

Within any tightly controlled ideological group (like the Catholic Church, in which I had the misfortune to be brought up), the established morality will itself be tied up with very self-justifying and self-interested notions. This is reason enough to argue that this issue must be a matter for wide-ranging public debate. Private and public morality so often get mixed up. Whatever you or I personally believe, public morality must take account of the real world, which means it must take account of the consequences of public policy.

My own view is that right throughout history, women have always sought abortions in large numbers and have been sucessful in finding them in the back streets, with terrible consequences to themselves and to others. Where a need arises, a solution will arise too. Ban abortion and we will be back to those times. To allow that to happen, in my view would be immoral.
.

Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 4:42 pm
by Wizzard
Damn , this is almost as good as the helmet debates .
First let's think a minute about the abortion angle . All of you cannot begin to tell me that you have never , ever met anyone in your life that did not make you wish that abortion could be retroactive . I know , I certainly have .
As far as death and dying . The reality is that most people
don't know how to live so of course they cannot conceive any rational thought about the concept of dying . When all that really dies is the EGO . So religions give man/woman an out for their egos .
Now as far as the worlds religions , here is another reality for you peeps , there is absolutely nothing new under the sun . All the so called modern religions and I include Christianity in that , all had their roots in much earlier belief systems . If you take the time to study history you would know that . However I do know that some of you deny historical fact . Which never ceases to amaze me among intelligent humans .
Not in this discourse , but in others , I have heard many statements made regarding "Pagan Religions" and most of you don't even have any concept of what Pagan really means or even where that term came from . So allow me to englighten you a bit .
Middle English, from Late Latin paganus, from Latin, country dweller, from pagus country district ; which were the last to get all the new gossip , ways , etc . Not anything (evil) at all . Just the folks that had the misfortune or whatever to live remotely from the centers of change .
I realize that there are many folks who live with tunnel vision when it comes to the realities of history . I really tried to stay out of this debate , but there comes a time when one has to stand up and be counted .
There are only two absolute things that we ever own in our lives and they have nothing at all to do with $$$$$$$$ or possessions . You can be rich or poor and I have been both a few times in my life .
What we own that is ever completely our own is our time and our integrity.
And time is finite .
Now lets get back to history for a minute , which is where I left off before I went off on a tangent which I am oft wont to do .
Historically , the earliest belief systems were matriarchal long before the advent of Christianity .
The real battle of the sexes started not between spouses but between priestesses and priests for the control of peoples minds and pocket books . Altho the pocket book issue came along much later . About the time of the Rabbis , Imams , Preachers , etc.
Ok , I am gonna get off of my soap box for a minute but you can bet your hind end that I'll be back for this one .
Regards, Wizzard

Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 4:54 pm
by fireguzzi
I'm honestly trying to learn here, since so many of my arguments are based on what I know, I'd like to know what I'm missing.[/quote]



Man seeking knowledge learns something new every day
Man seeking wisdom forgets something he has learned every day

A picture tells a story , don't it ?

Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 6:30 pm
by Wizzard
Image

Graphix therapy works for me........ :wink:
Regards, Wizzard

Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 7:14 pm
by oldnslo
I thought SV's post was a detailed personality profile of George W.......... :)

Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 7:27 pm
by Sev
fireguzzi wrote:
sevulturus wrote:I'm honestly trying to learn here, since so many of my arguments are based on what I know, I'd like to know what I'm missing.


Man seeking knowledge learns something new every day
Man seeking wisdom forgets something he has learned every day
Empty phrases that lack both knowledge or wisdom are apparently what I'm seeking. Either that or I'm not smart enough to understand what you've posted. /rolleyes.