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humanguy wrote:I asked you how theist dictates personally affect your life, and you said:
How was my question not appropriate when now, nine pages into this thread, you're saying that you are a direct victim of theist dictates?.

Keep The Reason wrote:humanguy wrote:I asked you how theist dictates personally affect your life, and you said:
How was my question not appropriate when now, nine pages into this thread, you're saying that you are a direct victim of theist dictates?.
Because my victimization is a spit of piss in the ocean and it doesn't even matter. It's what I see others suffering from at a far more massive level that's important. Your question is just a waste of time because I don't have to have ANY direct victimization in order to be compelled to act if others are victimized. You made it an issue, there is an answer, so I offered it but this whole line of argument is idiotic because it does not matter if I have direct suffering or not.



Rian wrote:From the little I've read, there have been a lot of exciting advances from non-fetal stem cells, and I'm not aware of anyone that objects to their use.

Keep The Reason wrote:What exactly is the point of such rhetoric?
To be clear, Moonwood, the people who DO oppose it are Christian (and some other religious) moralists. If, and when, other groups become an obstacle to human progress, we can have that discussion when we're on that bridge, be they religious or secular. Today, and in reality, we're faced with the obstacles thanks to religious values.
You know, maybe you should pull away from the history books a bit and recognize the actual in-the-trenches reality that effect people's lives today. You great on what happened in the distant past, and there's value in that for certain, but how people are left to deal with the living consequences of these beliefs is important too.

Moonwood the Hare wrote:Because it looks to me like you are saying that if a person holds a particular view on the basis of a religious belief then that must be opposed. So I am asking what if the same view is held on a non-religious basis. In fact I can point you to papers on the ethics of stem cell research that make no mention of religion at all so this is not a purely historical question. My question is do you oppose these views because they are held on the basis of religious beliefs or because you think they cannot be rationally defended. And if opposition to stem cell research can be rationally defended does it matter whether those who oppose it hold particular religious views or not? In short this comes back to the matter of seeking a civil public square where on the basis of their diverse views people can enage in ethical debate without being dehumanized as 'obstacles to human progress'.

Keep The Reason wrote:Of course you'll find a smattering of people who might hold similar views on a topic but not from a religious perspective. I know of self-loathing homosexuals who were virulently anti-homosexual like J. Edgar Hoover and Roy Cohn. And it even turned out that they got powerful. This dosent mean that Fred Phelps' Westboro Church ( god hates fags) is right or justified.
But the exceptions to a rule do not destroy or relieve us of the consequences of the rule, despite how entertaining it might feel to pretend otherwise. Christians adamantly blocking stem cell research is a problem, despite a fraction of dissidents who might agree with them on secular grounds. If a secular atheist doesn't believe condoms deters AIDS, and that happens to jibe with the Catholic stance in Africa, this doesn't mean we through up our hands, state, "Oh we'll, this secular opinion agrees with the religious one, so I guess it's ok to let people continue to be ravaged by AIDS in Africa."

gary_s wrote:KTR, your argument is missing something important, and that's a solid basis for it's conclusions. What Moon is pointing out is valid. There happens to be plenty of non-religious opposition to abortion and the use of embryonic stem cells, which is merely abortion opposition by extension. There are quite a few atheists who are in opposition and can make a very compelling argument. So, what's missing here is the basis for your particular opinion. Is it scientific consensus? Medical consensus? At the moment, I'm not clear on that. It appears that it's merely your personal opinion, which you are certainly entitled to. But how is it informed? Is it just "KTR's view of how things should be"? If you are hoping to persuade others to your way of thinking, you have to provide some objective grounding. I happen to agree with you that religious meddling has stunted an otherwise powerful science and has done little to diminish theist's ultimate goal of reducing abortions. It's a matter of poor thinking on their part, and putting ideology ahead of practicality. Yet even in Conservative circles, you'll find supporters of embryonic stem cell research.
The most influential secular argument against abortion comes from the Philosopher Don Marquis. It goes like this:
P1) It is prima facie seriously morally wrong to kill anything that has a future like ours.
P2) Typical fetuses have a future like ours.
C1) It is prima facie seriously morally wrong to kill a fetus.
P3) Abortion is the killing of a fetus.
C2) It is prima facie seriously morally wrong to have an abortion.
To accept this argument, you only need to accept that the wrong-making feature of killing is that it deprives what is killed of a future that is relevantly similar to the future of any normal adult (i.e., that experiences in it are or will be valued by the organism), because this wrong-making feature of killing is generalized to form (P1) above.
Notice, though, that this argument does not entail an across the board prohibitionary stance on abortion (what Judith Thomson has called the extreme view), but is rather more moderate. In fact, it is compatible with the abortion of fetuses that will not possess a future of value and experience (e.g., anencephalic fetuses), abortions when the mother's life is at stake were she not to abort and possibly more.
Source:
Marquis, Don. "Why Abortion is Immoral" The Journal of Philosophy Vol. 86, No. 4 (April, 1989), pp. 183-202


Moonwood the Hare wrote:The argument that the political system in the US is biased towards the religious (whoever they are) seems flawed in the case of abortion in particular since for example the Roman Catholic position which is shared by many evangelicals is that all abortion is wrong and therefore all abortion should be illegal. Given that all abortion is not illegal it would make more sense to say that the law in the US is biased against this religious position.
Roe vWade Decision wrote:Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973),[1] is a controversial landmark decision by the United States Supreme Court on the issue of abortion. The Court decided that a right to privacy under the due process clause in the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution extends to a woman's decision to have an abortion, but that right must be balanced against the state's two legitimate interests for regulating abortions: protecting prenatal life and protecting the woman's health. Saying that these state interests become stronger over the course of a pregnancy, the Court resolved this balancing test by tying state regulation of abortion to the woman's current trimester of pregnancy.
I am even more concerned when you describe those atheists who disagree with you as Quislings. As if no atheist can hold a moral position different to yours without somehow betraying the cause. I think this is the kind of thing that an atheist freethinker like humanguy objects to. It seems to me there can be religious arguments for and against stem cell research and secular arguments for and against. For example John Polkingorne who sat on the parliamentary committee here in the UK on the ethics of stem cell research in one of his books suggests that if zygotes are indeed people then heaven will mostly be populated with those who have never had an earthly life and he finds this implausible; that is a clearly religious argument that can be used in favour of stem cell research. However I am fairly sure Polkinghorne would reserve that kind of argument for those occasions when he is preaching to the choir as KTR would say. When on the committee he would have used much more secular arguments. In General then I would say that when arguing with people who do not share ones religious beliefs or commitments one should find common ground elsewhere. Hence to take an atheist example when KTR feels that a certain view is impeding the progress of mankind that is for want of a better term a religious view (in the sense that it is based on fundamental convictions about the nature and destiny of human beings which not all people will share) then that needs on the whole to kept out of public discourse and reserved for preaching to the choir.

Keep The Reason wrote: By his own admissions, humanguy watches "Jeopardy".


Keep The Reason wrote:The secular arguments against abortion seem not to be either scientific or medical in nature, but moral in nature-- and as such, is open to as much criticism as if it comes from a religious viewpoint.
I do not believe this is a particularly compelling argument against abortion but that is a completely different discussion. (However, briefly, now all human cells can be said to "have a future just like us" and so it is now morally wrong to scratch one's nose or masturbate without slaughtering millions of potential humans).
The forces for social change in present day USA offers a massive amount of leeway towards the religious and their morality. That morality shackles scientific progress whether or not there are also quislings amongst atheists. There is no scientific or medical reasons to thwart abortions across the board, like the religious want to do in large numbers, and there is NO reason to thwart stem cell research at all. It isn't even a moral issue as one can cull embryonic stem cells from miscarriages, which is AKA "abortion by god".

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