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fix
Guest
Consent equals morally correct?To answer the immediate question - euthanasia, when quality of life is irreparably damaged, and only with the consent of the (fully aware) subject.
Does the baby get a chance to decide? And how much suffering is needed to claim one has the authority to commit homicide?If morality is based on the real-world supposition that suffering occurs (and before anyone suggests that suffering sanctifies the person undergoing said suffering, that may happen in some circumstances, but it is far more likely that suffering will brutalise the subject to some extent), then the decision to abort the foetus becomes a matter of weighing up the pre-birth suffering and the post-birth suffering. In some cases, the circumstances into which the child will be born will cause a lifetime of suffering, not just a half-hour’s suffering, or whatever the timeframe is for an abortion procedure.
Logic, objective truth, and morality are contrary to the “real world”?If, however, morality is based upon what is set down in religious texts, then the choice is yours as to whether you surrender your rational, real-world faculties to writings that are confusing, contradictory and in some cases highly destructive and inhuman; or whether you apply intellect and mental vigour to the choices with which you are presented, in a real-world context.
Basically, if we decode your words, it seems we look to hedonism, relativism, and rationalizations to determine how we ought to act.That is what must be weighed - real-world consequences, real suffering, the real cost to the world, both human and otherwise.
Nancy