F
futboladikt86
Guest
Hi all! This article I’m presenting is in the Philippine politics setting. It is defending a bill, which includes giving of artificial contraception to people and limiting the number of children per family, that is being passed.
RH Bill: A matter of conscience
by Jaime Oscar M. Salazar
Certain representatives of the Catholic Church, a staunch and powerful opponent of the reproductive health (RH) bill, have gone as far as threatening those in favor of the controversial piece of legislation with excommunication… The condemnation of “artificial” birth control is enshrined in the papal encyclical Humanae Vitae, and what seems to be its most significant argument is that “artificial” birth control methods seek to separate the unitive and the procreative functions of sexual intercourse—functions that God made inseparable.** Though “based on natural law”, and in line with what has been “constantly taught by the magisterium of the Church”, such a formulation ultimately begs the moral question, saying little more than this: artificial contraception is morally wrong because what it does is, and has always been, bad. It is a circular argument: it presupposes what it seeks to establish. In other words, The conclusion that artificial contraception is bad, is supported by the same premise: that artificial contraception is bad.**
Even the assertion itself that artificial contraception is inherently wrong is also difficult to sustain, as will be shown below.
ph.politicalarena.com/noynoy-aquino/blogs/rh-bill-a-matter-of-conscience
What’s your take on this article guys? I disagree with what the article’s author says. :dts:
RH Bill: A matter of conscience
by Jaime Oscar M. Salazar
Certain representatives of the Catholic Church, a staunch and powerful opponent of the reproductive health (RH) bill, have gone as far as threatening those in favor of the controversial piece of legislation with excommunication… The condemnation of “artificial” birth control is enshrined in the papal encyclical Humanae Vitae, and what seems to be its most significant argument is that “artificial” birth control methods seek to separate the unitive and the procreative functions of sexual intercourse—functions that God made inseparable.** Though “based on natural law”, and in line with what has been “constantly taught by the magisterium of the Church”, such a formulation ultimately begs the moral question, saying little more than this: artificial contraception is morally wrong because what it does is, and has always been, bad. It is a circular argument: it presupposes what it seeks to establish. In other words, The conclusion that artificial contraception is bad, is supported by the same premise: that artificial contraception is bad.**
Even the assertion itself that artificial contraception is inherently wrong is also difficult to sustain, as will be shown below.
ph.politicalarena.com/noynoy-aquino/blogs/rh-bill-a-matter-of-conscience
What’s your take on this article guys? I disagree with what the article’s author says. :dts: