Teahive wrote:Diogenes wrote:There is nothing in current law resembling a clear line. It is RIFE with contradiction and assumption.
And I'm not arguing in favor of current law.
Maybe not by commission, but obviously by omission. What is the law is the entire point of the controversy. You are either defending existing law, or arguing in favor of it's replacement.
Teahive wrote:
Diogenes wrote:I disagree. It is my belief that a Universal morality exists and can be objectively defined. Evolution, in fact, has created such a thing, and it is normally imparted by instinct. We have just yet to recognize and codify it completely.
Some aspects are obvious. "Thou shalt not Murder", "Though shalt not steal", "Thou shalt not bear false witness", etc.
As it is contrary to the passing on of genes from members of a species which kills it's offspring, evolution will eventually correct this problem, and thereby once again assert a Universal morality.
Diogenes wrote:Those that pleasure themselves by creating children and then abjure their responsibility by killing their own offspring will eventually cull themselves from the gene pool in favor of those who do not.
The trait will become less likely to be passed on, unless it has some undiscerned offsetting propagational benefit that comes with it.
You are confusing moral acceptance of abortion with performing the act, as if humanity would somehow descend to killing all babies.
Not necessarily killing all babies.
I just ran across this today.
In Japan, birthrates are now so low and life expectancy so great that the nation will soon have a demographic profile that matches that of the American retirement community of Palm Springs. “Gradually but relentlessly,” the demographer Nick Eberstadt writes in the latest issue of The Wilson Quarterly, “Japan is evolving into a type of society whose contours and workings have only been contemplated in science fiction.”
Teahive wrote:
A society that allows abortion can still have an abortion rate near zero.
You are arguing that meddling with an existing dynamic might result in a stable quiescent point? This would only be true if the previous existing dynamic had no real purpose anyway.
My argument is that the degree of instinctive maternal protection will vary from woman to woman. Given time, the characteristic of indifference to offspring will be selected out of the system. The remaining pool of women exhibiting the greater degree of maternal instinct will slowly expand relative to the other.
Your argument that it could reach a quiescent equilibrium seems at variance with natural selection, and that isn't even with regard to any social dynamics at work.
Teahive wrote:
Furthermore, you seem to assume that the stance towards abortion is a trait that is passed on (genetically?). But if that were the case, how did the pro-choice sentiment spread in the first place?
That is a short question that requires a long answer. I don't know how much you know about the history of how we got to this point, so I would have to start from the beginning. Rather than do that, i'll just point out three powerful components.
1. The development of Anti-biotics and birth control medications made the tendency toward reckless sex much more ubiquitous. By removing the worst risks, (in most cases) it induced females to be much less recalcitrant about engaging in sex outside of marriage.
2. The tendency of people to accept those things as true which people in Authority tell them. (The Court said so, and therefore people believed it.)
3. The influence of that minority of people who have been in position to propagate their own personal preferences to the masses, while inhibiting opposition voices from being heard. (Intellectuals, Glitterati, etc.)
Genetic effects in Humans take a long time to manifest themselves because the humans have such a long lifespan. Eventually, reality catches up to stupid human ideas. (See my We are DOOOOOMMMMEDDD! thread.)
Teahive wrote:
As an idea that spreads, it might continue to outpace population growth in such a way that cultures which ban abortion today may grow but at the same time become increasingly tolerant towards abortion.
And they may legalized pedophilia, theft and human sacrifice, (as have some societies in the past) but that wouldn't make these better societies. I would be surprised if nature does not compel them to pay a price.
Teahive wrote:
And it's entirely possible that allowing abortion has offsetting benefits. It could be that it leads to more pregnancies in the first place because sex is perceived as less risky. It could be that women who abort unwanted pregnancies have more children later, while those with an unwanted child don't. It could be that unwanted children are less likely to have children themselves. It could even be that unwanted children are more likely to become murderers.
They are. That's why the "War on Poverty" produced so many criminals. Whether there is a natural selection benefit to abortion remains to be seen. If such exists it certainly seems counter-intuitive.
Teahive wrote:
Diogenes wrote:Subjective laws defined by subjective opinion are not a good basis for justice or stability. The founders believed in "natural law" and employed it in the construction of our nation's government. Where we have deviated from it there have been consequences that have proven to be severe. (Slavery/Civil war)
Again, laws should follow natural boundaries because once established they have a natural resting place and are not so easily moved by whim.
Laws should follow moral boundaries. If those don't happen to coincide with "natural boundaries", tough.
I argue that moral boundaries ARE natural boundaries. See previous comments above. Explain to me how you make a "moral" boundary at three months gestation?
Teahive wrote:
Where does the linked page refer to failure to take precautions?
It is implicit in the data to anyone that has even a slight understanding
of the reliability of various birth control methods.
Teahive wrote:
Diogenes wrote:CKay wrote:[*]The purpose of a moral system is in ensuring that the genes of its adherents are passed on (so the morality of an action is down to whether it aids the transfer of genetic material - this a special case of utilitarian argument).
Not just transfer, but to provide the intermediate protection of it as well. It does no good to transfer material that does not in turn transfer material. Raising children to die without offspring is pointless. It serves no purpose in species survival.
Morality serves no purpose to inanimate objects. Of course it is utilitarian. Only living creatures can exert will. Usefulness, purpose, or utility are characteristics only of living things.
So if someome defined their purpose as something other than ensuring species survival, why should they agree that raising children which produce no further offspring is pointless?
If a chicken pretends to be a cow, does that mean you can get milk out of it? Each acts in accordance with it's nature. (i.e. it's programing.)
I suspect that it is not possible for a normal person to reject their instincts in favor of some "purpose" they've made up their mind to follow. Interaction with people everyday are expressions of the instinct towards species survival. If you rescue a child, or loan money, you are engaging in acts that eventually equate to assisting species survival.
The act of eating and breathing is contributing to species survival. I have long argued that the act of suicide is a programed response designed to aid in species survival.
What you suggest would be a neat trick.
Teahive wrote:
Diogenes wrote:tomclarke wrote: Greatest happiness for greatest number is suspect, as nicely illustrated by Huxley's Brave New World, where a drugged-up population is enslaved but happy. But this is merely "greatest fertility for greatest number!"
Happiness is not a purpose, but a condition of functionality. Survival is the purpose. Also, in the example you provided, the happiness only exists as an illusion, and is the consequence of artificial tampering. It isn't actual happiness.
Back to the naturalistic fallacy. If "natural" means "in the absence of external interference", then artificial tampering is the presence of external interference. So happiness derived from the presence or actions of other people is the consequence of artificial tampering, and therefore not actual happiness...
This is the fallacy of false equivalency. Happiness created by interacting with other people is not equivalent to happiness created by absorbing drugs that chemically react with your binding receptors. Chemical induced happiness is no different from shutting down processes or introducing viruses into a computer operating system.
It is tampering with the design of the system, and will likely result in a crash.
Teahive wrote:
Survival is the purpose of what? Do you believe a species is a living creature in itself? And if so, what makes you think that we, merely being its cells, are able to discern its will?
I think people like to create boundaries to define one aspect as "this" and another aspect as "that", when in fact they are regarding different manifestations of a continuum.
Humans and their species are inseparable. A person cannot exist without his predecessors. Even one created out of raw chemicals would be following the blueprint copied from his evolved human ancestors.
As for discerning it's will, it has billions of wills, but the entire lot vector sums to survival and well being.
Later people.
‘What all the wise men promised has not happened, and what all the damned fools said would happen has come to pass.’
— Lord Melbourne —