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warpspeedpetey
Guest
All the comments that were not specific to the syllogism. the flag waving, the “I don’t understand how rights work in a pluralistic society” kind of stuff. thats all red herrings. Restating my argument every which way but the way i wrote it is straw manning.Dictionary.com says a red herring is “something intended to divert attention from the real problem or matter at hand; a misleading clue”.
Which logical fallacy am I ignoring? What logical flaws? If I ignore something than it usually because I have already answered it. It isn’t information germane to the discussion. Or sometimes if something is ludicrous prima facie. Posts can get much to long to be manageable in a reasonable amount of time if you respond to every word printed simply because it was printed.By framing the argument in a self-contained manner the person presenting said argument lays upon him or herself the responsibility to make sure it contains no logical flaws. If the intent was to avoid emotionalism, it did not come across, it would seem. Also, could your refusal to address your claimed logical fallacy simply be dodging the question?
That’s the working assumption. Under the theory that rights can be established by men, a moral evil could be a right.In reference to the argument, without the framing, is the assumption that just because these rights come from God (and let’s assume they do)
I haven’t argued that. People are much to hedonistic to alter their behavior .that God’s laws must be laws in said nation?
One cannot derive a right to commit a moral evil from G-d. No one.What, then, happens to the religious freedom the catechism seems to promote? What happens to the rights of people who are not religious? Nowhere does God give Christians the right to force their beliefs on others, and banning things like gay marriage isn’t a matter of violating, say, the right to marry, but on the right of individuals to define marriage according to their religious views.