Funny how this comment…
Is contradicted by this comment.
It’s funny how people take things out of context - copy & paste makes it so easy!
In my previous post I looked at the public opinion of people, 500 years ago, who would have agreed with the statement that the sun goes round the earth. More than 99% would have agreed, but it is false. Observation and critical thinking (science) has shown that to be wrong. The point was to show that the ‘truth’ is not always determined by the majority.
Then I looked at the percentage of people who would agree that, in
exceptional cases, an abortion could be justified.
The case in question is a 9-year-old-girl, 36 kg, pregnant with twins, raped, and medical doctors state that her life is in danger.
This second ‘opinion poll’ is a very different issue. It is a moral issue. It cannot be proven right or wrong through science. On a moral issue, I think, we need to listen to what people have to say. That was my point.
Two other examples would be slavery and racism. Both were perfectly acceptable, if you go back far enough in time.
The notion of ‘truth’ gets thrown around a lot, or even ‘absolute truth’.
Can’t remember who, but more than one poster stated that abortion is always murder, that this is the ‘absolute truth’.
Now, neither science nor philosophy can give us absolute truths. Only mathematics can. For example, 17 will always be a prime number.
Religions, or a religious people often claim that they have the absolute truth. Do they? We Catholics believe in the Real Presence of Christ during the Eucharist. That’s the ‘truth’ for us, or that Jesus didn’t have any siblings. A Southern Baptist doesn’t think this is true. That’s the ‘truth’ for him/her. I know … our church is ‘truer’, but can we honestly claim to have the ‘absolute truth’? (I am sure I will get blasted for doubting that).
That’s what I tried to point out. St. Augustine didn’t classify the abortion of an “unformed” fetus as murder. St. Anselm said (and I quote him again) “no human intellect accepts the view that an infant has the rational soul from the moment of conception”. He as well didn’t see abortion in the early stages as murder. Same goes for St.Thomas Aquinas. We Catholics have very high regards for these people. They obviously didn’t have the ‘absolute truth’. My question is: what makes us so sure that we have it now?
(By the way, the book by Dombrowski which I mentioned last time - I haven’t even read it. It was part of the curriculum on philosophy of religion, which I studied 10 years ago. I just vaguely remembered the shift in position of the Catholic Church on the issue of abortion).
Concerning that poor Indian woman in Ireland, two years ago (for which I got blasted as well by 1ke) - my point was that such cases give wonderful ammunition to the pro-choice crowd. I am not siding with them!!
From what I can gather, she suffered a miscarriage which led to the blood poisoning that eventually killed her. An earlier abortion would have prevented that. But because the fetus had a heartbeat, nothing could be done for her in Ireland.
I repeat again: thousands of abortions have been and are being carried out which saved the life of the mother. Only in exceptional cases do we hear about these cases.