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grannymh
Guest
LOLNo worries, Granny.
I just read this entire post!
Using “men” is fine with me, especially in the context of our discussion. I do like using “humankind” but that is not written in stone. In addition, so far I have not objectively reasoned how to be in two places at one time. Since one of the places is the grocery story, my tummy wins and I will have to post in dribbles.
I worked in the period when one said “Run it up the flagpole and see who salutes.” Recently, in another thread, I attempted to address your bottom line point. As far as I know, no one saluted.
First, the reason I chose “The human person is worthy of profound respect.” is that I like the scientific tone of the definitive human species. Also, people being more than one opens up the possibility that some of the individual people are not quite worthy.So should we respect all men? Do they all deserve respect? I find it difficult to believe that they do. Maybe God does, but that wasn’t the question.
This often cranky (feminine of snarky) granny deliberately uses the word “profound” because it automatically starts really really interesting discussions about people like Martin Bryant. If the shouting does not get too loud, we can use a priori, stand alone objective facts. Now I am not sure how “In equal measure” is being used. My first reaction is that giving profound respect to both Sir Ernest Edward Dunlop, a World War II hero, and to Martin Bryant would be both objectively possible and subjectively not so possible. That is a rather cranky weasel statement, but I consider it true.
Returning to the last line in post 20.
Because of the observable difference in kind between the animal kingdom and the peerless human species, it is possible to profoundly respect all men. Both those who recognize the existence of God and atheists who do not believe in gods cannot change human nature per se. Obviously, our wonderful scientists can work “miracles” on our decomposing anatomy. One does not have to believe in God in order to understand the difference in kind between a beaver dam and the Hoover Dam, a concrete arch-gravity dam in the Black Canyon of the Colorado River, on the border between the U.S. states of Nevada and Arizona.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoover_Dam
It is our peerless species which demands profound respect from all people.