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Fone_Bone_2001
Guest
I don’t claim they’re totally separate - obviously they do influence each other.You can say that ethics and religion are totally separate, but that does not make it so. I admit that people without religion can and do have ethics. However people derive their ethics from different sources. An atheist might derive his ethics from purely pragmatic considerations of what will make society prosper; or he might derive his ethics from some mystic sense of human dignity. But a Christian informs his sense of ethics from his understanding of God as the author of all ethics. A Christian would never say “I have my ethics and I have my religion and they have nothing to do with each other.”
(Christians, by the way, almost uniformly reject “divine command theory” on a philosophical level, so I’m not sure it’s accurate to state that we consider God “the author of all ethics” … in a sense that’s true, but not in the “divine command theory” sense.)
In any case, though, it remains true that no religious view whatsoever is necessary in order to justify the claim that the law must prohibit and dissuade me, Fone Bone 2001, from killing you, LeafByNiggle, even if your existence proves greatly inconvenient for me. A variety of religious views - including none whatsoever - is compatible with that legal imperative.
That unborn human beings are just as human as you and I means that the same principle applies. While religion and ethics have a mutual relevance, religion is totally unnecessary to justify the basic principle behind universal human rights.
Two clarifications:Another reason I am reluctant to place too much emphasis on secular science as the basis for my opposition to abortion is that science can cut both ways. Today you have some scientific findings that seem to support our ethical and moral beliefs. Tomorrow there may be some results that say the opposite. For example, consider the purely hypothetical case where someone discovers a previously unknown connection between mother and baby where some additional DNA gets incorporated into the fetus 3 weeks after conception. If such a thing were to happen, would you be ready to revise your morality (or ethics, if you will) and say that abortion in the first 3 weeks is OK because the fetus is not yet fully alive? I would not want to leave myself open to having to say that. There are plenty of good moral reasons for opposition abortion. Relying on “science” to be the basis for this opposition is both dangerous and distracting to the effort to convince others of what we believe.
(a) I’m not “relying on science.” A pro-choice person like Peter Singer is 100% consistent with the science; his views on abortion do not go against it at all, because he admits that he doesn’t think that all human beings should have a right not to be killed.
So our position relies, really, on two things, not one: the scientific fact that an unborn human being is, in fact, human (this is an undeniable tautology), and the moral/political opinion that what we commonly think of as human rights ought to be protected by law for all human beings. The pro-life argument needs both to work, not just one. We do rely on more than science.
That said, the former (the scientific principle) is materially undeniable, and the latter (the ethical/political principle) is denied by only a few - like Peter Singer.
(b) Concerning your hypothetical question about “DNA incorporation,” I admit I’m not sure where I would stand. Necessarily, more would be different than the one condition you specify, since that’s not how genetics works. So I would need more information about this hypothetical - and an expanded imagination of my own - in order to envision the scenario with enough thoroughness to comment on its moral implications.
The Robert George quote is a satire of the “pro-choice” position.I thought an abortionist is a person who performs abortion. We are not talking here of the legality of killing abortionists or doctors (who usually are the ones that perform abortion); we are talking of the legality of killing unborn human beings.
Can you clarify?