Thanks for this Vico. I think we are finally getting somewhere.
I am still struggling with the basis as you have phrased it here. Not that I think it is totally unworkable, but rather that it needs a little more. The reason that I say that is that as it reads now, the basis seems defined in such a way as to p(name removed by moderator)oint only what you want it to p(name removed by moderator)oint. (I am feeling like I am in a strange world here. First I was pulling for PassingThru, because he/she seemed on to something new in my thought process. Now, I am pulling for Vico, as I think he/she may be on the way to something important.)
Really, Vico, I think you are on to the answer we need. Can you somehow word the basis so that it does all these things:
- Excludes life-saving measures.
- Excludes pain relievers.
- Includes all normal body systems (that is, reproduction is not singled out).
- Is still intuitively obvious to most people.
I really think you may be able to do it.
However, in this last post, the basis is vague enough that it doesn’t quite stand as a foundation on which to build a logical argument.
At least that is my feeling.
And, thanks again for playing along. I think I am learning lots, especially about other people’s thought processes.
~ Minny
Vico wrote: …[It is] immoral to intentionally disorder the physical constitution or physical processes. This must allow for preservation and promotion of life, for example an amputation to save a life is not intended to cause a disorder but to preserve life.
It is immoral to 1. intentionally, and 2.
disorder the physical constitution… WRT you first 2 points, 1) Excludes life-saving measures, and 2) Excludes pain relievers, neither life-saving measures, normal medical treatment of disorders, nor the relief of pain
disorders the body, but rather attempts to *restore *the body to its normal functioning, or in the case of a birth defect to bring the body up to the way it was intended to be. so medical practice of all kinds is outside the scope of what Vico said.
Now, as to you last two points, 3) Includes all normal body systems (that is, reproduction is not singled out), 4) Is still intuitively obvious to most people; this is very interesting because this rule which Vico is bringing up is *so very *intuitive that in most cases we already practice it. In fact, we go further, and condemn those who try to enhance the body *beyond *what it is designed for, ie, by the use of steroids to increase physical performance.
For example, consider those cases in which a doctor does something wrong, like leaves a part of the intestine open rather than closing it when he is operating. We would consider the patient “broken”, and this would not count as good medicine, would it? The patient would want, and we would all agree that he deserved, to be fixed. The patient’s body functioning was
disordered by this error.
As another example, my neighbor had what I believe is called a gastric bypass because he was morbidly overweight (like 200–250 pounds overweight on a 5’6" height). Here the operation is to help the man be at the weight he is designed to be, to restore him to normal functioning.
But if a young woman with a perfectly normal weight or even low weight tried to get this operation, the doctor would refuse and send her to a psychologist! Why? Because her body is already functioning normally.
Now we will consider the issue of artificial birth control. This is designed to *stop *the *normal *functioning of the 2 bodies involved, in the way that the error of the surgeon above *stopped *the functioning of the body of the patient.
So we can see that the use of abc would be analogous to someone’s requesting an operation to insert a tube which would redirect the food he ate to a bag outside himself so that he could eat as much as he wanted to without gaining weight. No doctor would do that, would they? And the reason they would not do that is that the “patient” would simply need to abstain from eating in order to achieve his goal, which is to not gain weight.