Oreoracle;5670214:
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Originally Posted by **tonyrey**
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*Do you believe then that the life of anyone whose life seems useless **is*** valueless?
Can you recite the utilitarian definition of “utility” for me?
How about “conducive to happiness”?
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How does the unborn child value its life?
It doesn’t. That’s the point.
Then why did you write:"The more
the unborn child and others
value its life, the more utility it has?
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Does the value of life depend entirely on the **subjective **
evaluation of a few individuals?
It can depend on the subjective evaluation of many individuals. Can you give me an example of value that does not arise from subjective evaluation? Think about it like this: If everything in the universe were to lose consciousness, including God, would anything be valuable? No consciousness/opinions/emotions = no value.
If the physical universe did not exist there would be no basis for life, consciousness, emotions or value. Since it provides a
basis for rational and sentient existence it must be valuable.
So the law against killing a person ceases to be a law because one is allowed to kill in self-defence?
Laws are not moral absolutes and were never intended to be. They aren’t morals because they aren’t prescriptive. Instead, they describe a punishment that you will be forced to endure if you are found guilty of committing a particular crime.
So if you can evade punishment there is no reason not to commit a crime? Laws are just based on expediency?
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So the destiny of the unborn child depends **entirely **
on the whim of its mother?
Almost 100% of the time, yes. Since the mother is the one enduring the grueling process of pregnancy, and is one of the two (usually) who will have to raise the child, which will take up a good deal of the next 18-21 years of her life, I would say her feelings outweigh others in most cases.
So in this case morality is based
entirely on **one **person’s feelings? The father and the child itself should not be taken into account?
Are you referring to physical pain, emotional trauma or what? How do you assess happiness?
“Happiness/pleasure,” as I’ve told you, is defined as the feeling produced by the satisfaction of preferences. “Pain/suffering” is defined as the feeling produced by the dissatisfaction of preferences. A preference is usually considered a compulsion to a goal of some kind.
So if you have a preference for agnosticism it is because you are compelled to have that preference?
How does it contradict everything else the Church has said about morality?
Have you ever read any work on Catholic ethics? Catholics hate worrying about consequences.
Please give a precise reference to substantiate this statement.
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From what you have stated it seems you believe it would have been better if you had been aborted to prevent your mother from grievous suffering.
Obviously, my mother very strongly wanted me to be born. Since her happiness rested on my birth, I had positive utility, so it would have been wrong to abort me. If she had wanted an abortion, I would have had negative utility, and abortion would have been the right course of action.
So her happiness was more important than your life. Even if her pregnancy had been perfectly normal she would have been justified in preventing you from having an opportunity to develop into a mature person and enjoy life? Doesn’t it occur to you that it would have been rather selfish of her?