I passed these two guys recently who were stopped at a red light. They were
flailing their arms to some tune I couldn't hear, obviously enjoying
that particular moment in their lives. It started a chain of thought;
what about the billions of people who don't have all the resources we
have for enjoying life in the wealthier countries? What about those who are capable of achieving
fulfillment in life wherever they are? And what about those with
greater talent, intellectual ability, courage, appreciation for living
or a propensity to be good or evil? If there is a God and this is It's
test, we obviously aren't all given the same starting point.
Would all the rewards be equalized out to make it fair somehow? Or
(I'm not suggesting rank), is there a natural recognition of those who
made the greater or lesser use of their time here? Would we judge
others as we would ourselves, in the light of undeniable Truth,
recognizing the need for oblivion for some, and to feed on the brighter
light of others?
Doesn't the greater obstacle or the greater the achievement from one's
starting place deserve more respect? Would the rich child who grows up
in the freedom of Singapore or the wealth of the US who saved the world,
be more or less worthy than a street urchin in Zimbabwe who risked his
life to save another's? Is fairness even an objective. Think of an
audience enjoying the talents of the performers they see on stage or
screen, only now all types of talents and accomplishments would be
appreciated in the same way.
For the moral subjectivists, should this recognition be a
goal in this life, is that possible, or should we go further and attempt
to give equal respect to everyone no matter what they do? Should we
make Hitler equal to Gandhi, for instance? If not, how do we
differentiate?
As you can see, this post is more questions than answers.
This site is dedicated: To the study of the nature of Truth, for which the term, Veritology is coined; To the proposition that both objective Truth and subjective Truth exist in compatible forms; And that Truth and God, if such a divine being exists, are equivalent. Amazingly, we have formal academic disciplines for almost any subject imaginable except Truth--which is usually given piecemeal lip service and dismissed.
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Intelligence
Intelligence
“People take different roads seeking fulfillment and
happiness. Just because they're not on your road doesn't mean they've gotten
lost.”—H. Jackson Browne
Success
can be defined as looking back on your life so far, and saying I did the right
thing. I'm proud of who I was (not of
who I intended to be or what others believed I was). Put another way, we could have no greater
fulfillment than to say to ourselves, honestly, "Well done".
We
berate people who acquire wealth (unless we are one of them), but if it was
acquired and used with honor (which we tend to assume was not the case), they
have a lot to be proud of in providing for their families as well as jobs and
prosperity for others. Money, fame and
especially power all require great character to avoid their misuse, but they
are far from being the only forms of success.
If, say, two people independently make a significant discovery, but only
one achieves public acclaim and monetary rewards, is the other not also
successful if the only issue was the luck of timing? If a person in Japan had been able to warn
us of the attack on Pearl Harbor, thus saving many lives but lost his own life
anonymously in the process, would he not have been a success, or even a hero—even
if the warning had been ignored? Are
husbands and wives not successful who raise responsible children in a
supporting atmosphere? There is only one
quality required for success—character.
And if character is maintained, success is automatic. We can't be a person who missed the acclaim
and then drop out. We can't say, I'll bum my way through life then make sure I
go out in a blaze of glory. We can't abrogate the responsibility for raising our
children to a pill. People with
character do the right thing all the time, when no one is watching, and when
everyone is watching. The judge we all
stand before on judgement day is Truth, stripped of our illusions and in its
unavoidable light, we are unable to lie to anyone, including ourselves, and
forced to be our own judges.
Man's
superior tool for achieving success is his intellect. Much has been made of
some types of intelligence, while others are downplayed. Is society not missing out if we don’t try to
develop them all? What follows in this
section are some basic types of intelligence, observed and noted by your humble
author as food for thought. They are
certainly not to be considered definitive.
Call it a semi-educated shot-in-the-dark. One thing is certain, intelligence should be
a matter of more serious study without the obstacle of cultural bias.
The
moron, the multitalented genius and the idiot-savant form a triad inside of
which we can all be found. Studying intelligence is a matter of
importance. If we recognize and learn
more about the vagaries of intelligence, instead of reducing everyone down to a
basic IQ number that emphasizes some attributes and de-emphasizes others, we
will enable people to more fully recognize their capabilities and level of
success. They will then become more
productive members of society and more fulfilled as individuals with a better
sense of their self-worth. In the
meantime, until we do learn more, we mustn’t sell ourselves short. Many view themselves as being of lower innate
intelligence, when in actuality what they may have is a deficiency in the
surmountable attributes of knowledge and confidence.
We’re
all familiar with those who can learn to play a musical instrument by ear,
instinctively operate a computer, thread a football through a defense to a
tertiary receiver, or solve a mathematical problem with ease. They are naturals at what they do. We may not all have such superior natural skills,
but we do all have the potential to be better than most at something.
The
decision to include the following list was a difficult one and there is no
claim to any expertise in intelligence, but it may spark an interest in the
many avenues for fulfillment that there are.
The point is that we must learn who we really are beyond our illusions
and what we’re good at by looking first at what we enjoy doing which so often
leads to a subject that is a combination of both. If this section helps some to consider an unexplored
aspect of themselves, that’s all that’s intended here.
What
is offered below is a speculative list of possible types of intelligence that
may help some recognize an ability that they had previously considered
superfluous, but now worth developing if for no other reason than to develop
their self-confidence. It should be
understood that this list, or an eventual more refined one, is only the first
of many steps to come as we move forward from the straight-jacket of our very
limited IQ measurement or other commonly recognized characteristics of
intelligence.
Of
the types of intelligence listed here, it should be pointed out that knowledge
itself is not one of them as that is one of the things to which we apply our
intelligence. Also, it is doubtful that
math, verbal or artistic ability are discrete types of intelligence, but are
more likely just combinations of the other forms.
Active
Memory—Amount and detail of raw
knowledge retained and retrievable on demand (Rote memory).
Passive Memory—Amount and detail of raw knowledge retained and retrievable with
prompting such as with multiple choice questions (forms a considerably larger
amount of information storage than active memory for most people.)
Cognitive
Speed—varies for each individual depending on the application such as
information retrieval or motor reaction time.
Multitasking/thinking under pressure—self explanatory.
Muscular
coordination—Athletic ability and physical aspects of speech.
Hand eye
coordination—playing a musical instrument, working with tools/machines. Related to muscular coordination, but less
dependent on strength and endurance and more on finesse.
Social
Receptivity—Ability to receive and interpret social signals. One who can
read body language and between the lines.
Social
Projection—Ability to project social signals and impart emotions to others such
as with leadership, charisma or intimidation.
Factual Projection/problem solving—Ability to communicate facts and ideas or apply
them.
(The
previous four are very interrelated and are the most easily subjected to
suppression or distortion by the emotions, especially factual receptivity. Gamesmanship, leadership, “followership“ and
intimidation are skills resulting from the combination of these abilities.)
Symbol recognition—interpretation of words and other symbols or symbolic ideas.
Linear Logic—If
a=b and b=c concluding that a=c; looking forward several steps in a chess game.
Intuitive
Intelligence—The ability to make a "leap of logic", or better
stated, to make an intuitive leap; e.g. decoding anagrams, finding a
relationship between two or more seemingly unrelated facts. Many times it occurs after studying a problem,
the answer suddenly appears as an epiphany or in a dream. It is the most ephemeral form of intelligence
and hardest to define with probably many sub-facets; one of which would be
characterized as imagination or the ability to create original ideas.
Sense of
humor—ability to originate,
communicate or understand something that is humorous or amusing.
Sense of
irony—ability to originate, communicate or understand something that deliberately
contrasts apparently opposite meanings for humorous or satirical effect.
Artistic
intelligence—abilities encompassing
the inception and/or interpretation of any of the arts. It is the expression/understanding
of artistic, original creativity.
Spatial
awareness—(e.g. Is my right front tire going to further flatten that road
kill up ahead.)
Focus—the
workhorse of intelligence which is important to all the other types. It comes in the form of concentration and
persistence, which is harder to measure since it may need evaluation over
periods of time as long as a lifetime. Someone low on cognitive speed but high on
focus would probably be seen as smart but slow or a late bloomer.
The
incorporation of reason into one’s understanding of the world is sometimes
avoided because it appears to require an intimidating amount of effort and
intelligence. Living requires effort,
but avoiding reason can be more wearing than abiding by it due to the nagging
realization that we aren’t being honest with ourselves leading to the effort
spent maintaining the wall of emotion and tangle of lies fending off reason.
Further,
like a little exercise for the body benefits our physical as well as our mental
stamina, so too the appropriate use of both reason and emotion actually becomes
soothing with use instead of their being an irritant. As for applying intelligence, the only things
required is an understanding of the nature of Truth and determining one’s
particular intellectual abilities which we all have in some areas—and all of
which are almost certainly not possessed by anyone.
Thursday, January 3, 2013
Abortion
No issue is more contentious or morally complex than abortion because it deals with the rights of two individuals and when we achieve our moral right to life, liberty and property. As with almost any issue, moral or otherwise, when trying to think through where we stand on it, the place to start is the extremes.
Aborting a healthy fetus in the process of being born can only be considered murder. On the other hand, forcing a 13 year old girl who is 1 hour pregnant as a result of being raped by her father to carry the baby to term, is nothing short of a moral travesty. Yet we insist on reducing abortion down to Pro-Life and Pro-Choice labels. The fact is we don't have the necessary information to make an informed moral choice in many cases. We can draw an artificial limit, say the first trimester, but that won't cover all situations in determining by whose or what authority we make these decisions--God, the Law, or a family and their doctor.
Any claim to divine authority is specious given that there is nothing in the Bible about it, and all we have are those putting words in God's mouth that the human right to life starts at conception. Some even claim that divine determination is violated by contraception. On the face of it, for those appealing to revealed religion for their authority, abortion is being used as an instrument of power and control.
At the other end, the same could be said about statists who would use the law to give complete authority to the mother with no rights whatever for the baby until it is born, which is no less an artificial limit, or less "holy", than conception.
The fact is we already limit human rights according to age, and few would argue with it. We limit a child's right to liberty and property until they reach some arbitrary age of majority at which point they legally acquire the rights they didn't have a few moments before. Some would say the right to life is different, but tell that to the billions throughout history who lived under horrible oppression, and others who risked or lost their lives in an effort to achieve that liberty. The question this raises is, why isn't there some theological, or secular, explanation for the arbitrary acquisition of our rights to liberty and property? The Bible says that you must not commit murder and that you must not steal. But then it also gives tacit approval to slavery and human sacrifice.
The Golden Rule is the only moral guidance we have, or need, except for the moral complexities of dealing with our children--born and unborn.
This complex issue pushes to the limit the principle that the only thing that should be legislated is morality. It would seem, at this point, that all we can legislate would be in the realm of the previously mentioned extremes, and each of those come to a point where that legislation would be arbitrary and thus without moral authority. We must acknowledge the complexity of this issue and come, somehow, to realize that this must be done on a case by case basis, with the mother making the decision in this area where the law cannot reach, with the advice of her family, her doctor, her society and her faith.
In this "no-man's land" or grey area (between the extremes which can be legislated), the woman must have the final authority, not because it's her body, but because it's her child. And since it is still ultimately a moral issue, the freedom of religion is the final legal authority for her moral authority. The current legal problem here in the US where a retail store chain (Hobby Lobby) is being forced at the cost of over a million dollars a day to provide health care funds for abortions against the religious beliefs of a private company and any number of its employees, is an egregious example of the violation of the necessary separation of church and state; not to mention the First Amendment to our Constitution.
Aborting a healthy fetus in the process of being born can only be considered murder. On the other hand, forcing a 13 year old girl who is 1 hour pregnant as a result of being raped by her father to carry the baby to term, is nothing short of a moral travesty. Yet we insist on reducing abortion down to Pro-Life and Pro-Choice labels. The fact is we don't have the necessary information to make an informed moral choice in many cases. We can draw an artificial limit, say the first trimester, but that won't cover all situations in determining by whose or what authority we make these decisions--God, the Law, or a family and their doctor.
Any claim to divine authority is specious given that there is nothing in the Bible about it, and all we have are those putting words in God's mouth that the human right to life starts at conception. Some even claim that divine determination is violated by contraception. On the face of it, for those appealing to revealed religion for their authority, abortion is being used as an instrument of power and control.
At the other end, the same could be said about statists who would use the law to give complete authority to the mother with no rights whatever for the baby until it is born, which is no less an artificial limit, or less "holy", than conception.
The fact is we already limit human rights according to age, and few would argue with it. We limit a child's right to liberty and property until they reach some arbitrary age of majority at which point they legally acquire the rights they didn't have a few moments before. Some would say the right to life is different, but tell that to the billions throughout history who lived under horrible oppression, and others who risked or lost their lives in an effort to achieve that liberty. The question this raises is, why isn't there some theological, or secular, explanation for the arbitrary acquisition of our rights to liberty and property? The Bible says that you must not commit murder and that you must not steal. But then it also gives tacit approval to slavery and human sacrifice.
The Golden Rule is the only moral guidance we have, or need, except for the moral complexities of dealing with our children--born and unborn.
This complex issue pushes to the limit the principle that the only thing that should be legislated is morality. It would seem, at this point, that all we can legislate would be in the realm of the previously mentioned extremes, and each of those come to a point where that legislation would be arbitrary and thus without moral authority. We must acknowledge the complexity of this issue and come, somehow, to realize that this must be done on a case by case basis, with the mother making the decision in this area where the law cannot reach, with the advice of her family, her doctor, her society and her faith.
In this "no-man's land" or grey area (between the extremes which can be legislated), the woman must have the final authority, not because it's her body, but because it's her child. And since it is still ultimately a moral issue, the freedom of religion is the final legal authority for her moral authority. The current legal problem here in the US where a retail store chain (Hobby Lobby) is being forced at the cost of over a million dollars a day to provide health care funds for abortions against the religious beliefs of a private company and any number of its employees, is an egregious example of the violation of the necessary separation of church and state; not to mention the First Amendment to our Constitution.
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Religion vs. Philosophy
Why is religion, and philosophy for that matter, important?
Originally, somewhere back in civilization’s deep, dark past, religion was the equivalent of science. Grog, in his cave, tried to make sense of the natural world around him; a nature that appeared to be a benefactor and source of fear at the same time. Truth and knowledge were sought. But it wasn’t long before some were able to use that fear and confusion as a source of control if it was manipulated properly.
Later still, someone developed the carrot and stick idea and added rewards from the gods in this life as well as the next, for proper behavior. The original morality consisted of a simple form of the Golden Rule, but it was necessary to include honoring and providing for the gods as part of that favored behavior; and as time passed many more extraneous rules were added to the code of behavior, which eventually ascended to greater importance than proper behavior towards each other. Then finally someone consolidated all the rules from all those gods into rules from just One God, and that mixture of mono/polytheism is where we stood at the dawn of the Age of Enlightenment and the ascendancy of science and the scientific method.
While science has been very successful at acquiring knowledge, the issues of morality (a code of conduct for how we treat each other), virtue (a code for our personal behavior), and of fulfillment and purpose in this life (and perhaps the next), appeared to be beyond the reach of the scientific method. So religion, with all its baggage, maintained its position of spiritual authority—albeit a reduced one.
Enter philosophy, the attempt to use reason to combine knowledge and the metaphysical. But the latter wasn’t subject to reason since there was no knowledge available (other than pure hearsay) with which we could deal. Thus two usually unstated assumptions were made: Human life is of ultimate value, and a laissez faire divine being created the universe. If neither of those was the case there was no possibility for good order or hope for an ultimate purpose.
Today, we stand on the verge of the realization that morality is the only thing that should be the subject of civilization’s legal code—we should never legislation personal virtue. Organized religion continues to fight this principle as if its life depends on it, which it does. It won’t submit to the ascendancy of philosophy for the same reason that governments resist submission to political and economic reason…..the ability to use power to favor an individual or an elite class structure.
Though we have made great strides in science and technology, it appears that we are no closer to conquering evil with good because we still depend far too much on emotion to make our decisions. Progress will not be made until we learn to employ our emotions as the engine to pursue our goals, with reason at the wheel.
Originally, somewhere back in civilization’s deep, dark past, religion was the equivalent of science. Grog, in his cave, tried to make sense of the natural world around him; a nature that appeared to be a benefactor and source of fear at the same time. Truth and knowledge were sought. But it wasn’t long before some were able to use that fear and confusion as a source of control if it was manipulated properly.
Later still, someone developed the carrot and stick idea and added rewards from the gods in this life as well as the next, for proper behavior. The original morality consisted of a simple form of the Golden Rule, but it was necessary to include honoring and providing for the gods as part of that favored behavior; and as time passed many more extraneous rules were added to the code of behavior, which eventually ascended to greater importance than proper behavior towards each other. Then finally someone consolidated all the rules from all those gods into rules from just One God, and that mixture of mono/polytheism is where we stood at the dawn of the Age of Enlightenment and the ascendancy of science and the scientific method.
While science has been very successful at acquiring knowledge, the issues of morality (a code of conduct for how we treat each other), virtue (a code for our personal behavior), and of fulfillment and purpose in this life (and perhaps the next), appeared to be beyond the reach of the scientific method. So religion, with all its baggage, maintained its position of spiritual authority—albeit a reduced one.
Enter philosophy, the attempt to use reason to combine knowledge and the metaphysical. But the latter wasn’t subject to reason since there was no knowledge available (other than pure hearsay) with which we could deal. Thus two usually unstated assumptions were made: Human life is of ultimate value, and a laissez faire divine being created the universe. If neither of those was the case there was no possibility for good order or hope for an ultimate purpose.
Today, we stand on the verge of the realization that morality is the only thing that should be the subject of civilization’s legal code—we should never legislation personal virtue. Organized religion continues to fight this principle as if its life depends on it, which it does. It won’t submit to the ascendancy of philosophy for the same reason that governments resist submission to political and economic reason…..the ability to use power to favor an individual or an elite class structure.
Though we have made great strides in science and technology, it appears that we are no closer to conquering evil with good because we still depend far too much on emotion to make our decisions. Progress will not be made until we learn to employ our emotions as the engine to pursue our goals, with reason at the wheel.
Monday, November 19, 2012
Separation of Church and State
“The morality of the priesthood, and the devotion of
the people, have been manifestly increased by the total separation of the
church from the State.”—James Madison
"The United States of America should have a foundation free from the influence of
clergy."—George Washington
“Persecution is not an original feature in any
religion; but it is always the strongly marked feature of all religions
established by law.” ― Thomas Paine
“I contemplate with sovereign
reverence that act of the whole American people (the First Amendment) which
declared that their legislature should ‘make no law respecting an establishment
of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,’ thus building a wall of
separation between Church & State.”—Thomas Jefferson
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
There are plenty more such quotes, but they won’t
impress anyone determined to believe that separation of church and state is
defended only by a small vocal group.
Most people haven’t noticed how many believers in God, including a
surprising number of Christians are for the absolute separation of church and
state. Baptists have been among the most
stalwart supporters, and it was in their defense that Jefferson created his now famous “wall of separation” analogy, in 1802,
expounding on the meaning of the First Amendment.
John Leland, a Baptist minister from Massachusetts, supported Madison against Patrick Henry’s attempt to establish state
support for religion in Virginia. Leland said, “If all the souls in a government were saints of God, (and) should they
be formed into a society by law, that society could not be a Gospel Church, but a creature of
state." That Baptist position
survives to this day in the American Baptist Convention, which resolved in
1963, and reiterated in 1983 and 1993, “that separation of church and state is
central to our American heritage; that it has made possible a measure of
freedom not previously achieved under any other system; that it is indispensable
to our national policy of equal rights for all [religions], and special
privileges for no religion.” Freewill Baptists, American/Northern
Baptists, Bible Baptists, General Baptists, National Baptists, Primitive
Baptists as well as Methodists hold similar positions.
Where then does the virulent and vocal
opposition to the mere mention of separation of church and state come from? From the Southern Baptists, who split from
their brethren in 1845 in order to defend the biblical sanctity of
slavery. They are now the dominant
evangelical leaders opposing separation of church and state, even though in
1963 their Baptist Faith and Message said:
“God alone is Lord of the conscience, and He has left it free from the
doctrines and commandments of men which are contrary to His Word or not
contained in it. Church and state should be separate.”
It wasn’t until 1995 that the Southern Baptist
Convention voted to condemn its historic support for slavery and failure to
confront racism in the South.
Adding "under God" to the Pledge of
Allegiance seems like such a small thing, but it is the seed of what can become
a dangerous violation of the separation principle. And what is the
motivation behind it but an attempt at indoctrination, after all. President
Eisenhower, when signing the bill to add it to the Pledge (and also "In
God We Trust" to paper money, making it the country's second moto with E
Pluribus Unum), said, "From this day forward, the millions of our school
children will daily proclaim in every city and town, every village and rural
school house, the dedication of our nation and our people to the Almighty. ...
In this way we are reaffirming the transcendence of religious faith in America's heritage and future; in this way we shall constantly
strengthen those spiritual weapons which forever will be our country's most
powerful resource, in peace or in war."
Spiritual weapon indeed.
Monday, November 5, 2012
The Holy of Holies
“The Truth is clever. The minute we create an idol for it, it becomes a lie.” -TPT
Is rule by fear as used by Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Hussein or Taliban/Iranian theocracies et al. any different than that of the Biblical Jehovah, held by dogma to be an object of fear? Are we not taught by biblical scripture to fear God?
In I Samuel 8—“God” begrudgingly accedes to the selection of a king to reign over Israel. Why did the Israelites desire a king against "God’s wishes" for continued rule via the priests, prophets and judges with Saul as “God’s” spokesman? Because the theocratic priesthood used the name of God to justify their corruption. Samuel warned the people of the power of a king but didn’t mention that corruption would be just as much of a problem with a king as it had been with the priests and judges. The people didn’t disagree with Samuel’s warnings, so we are left to conclude that the corruption of their theocracy was worse than the picture he painted of life under a king.
History’s most successful and revered leaders lead through respect earned by demonstration of ability and integrity, not fear.
The temple in Jerusalem was designed to represent the source of fear and awe the theocracy wished to project, but it’s Holy of Holies was as empty of Truth as are all such shams created to validate the power of its custodians. It was itself an idol, and as with all idols, a lie; the great temple, adorned with flowing sacrificial blood, was constructed to shelter fear in a barren room to perpetuate and reinforce a lie. A building is a building unless it is said to be holier than the rocks and stones around it. Then it becomes an idol. You can’t enshrine Truth in a temple or behind an altar--only in our minds and hearts.
Truth itself is the Holy of Holies, the universe its temple and the souls who seek it are its apostles.
Is rule by fear as used by Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Hussein or Taliban/Iranian theocracies et al. any different than that of the Biblical Jehovah, held by dogma to be an object of fear? Are we not taught by biblical scripture to fear God?
In I Samuel 8—“God” begrudgingly accedes to the selection of a king to reign over Israel. Why did the Israelites desire a king against "God’s wishes" for continued rule via the priests, prophets and judges with Saul as “God’s” spokesman? Because the theocratic priesthood used the name of God to justify their corruption. Samuel warned the people of the power of a king but didn’t mention that corruption would be just as much of a problem with a king as it had been with the priests and judges. The people didn’t disagree with Samuel’s warnings, so we are left to conclude that the corruption of their theocracy was worse than the picture he painted of life under a king.
History’s most successful and revered leaders lead through respect earned by demonstration of ability and integrity, not fear.
The temple in Jerusalem was designed to represent the source of fear and awe the theocracy wished to project, but it’s Holy of Holies was as empty of Truth as are all such shams created to validate the power of its custodians. It was itself an idol, and as with all idols, a lie; the great temple, adorned with flowing sacrificial blood, was constructed to shelter fear in a barren room to perpetuate and reinforce a lie. A building is a building unless it is said to be holier than the rocks and stones around it. Then it becomes an idol. You can’t enshrine Truth in a temple or behind an altar--only in our minds and hearts.
Truth itself is the Holy of Holies, the universe its temple and the souls who seek it are its apostles.
Monday, September 24, 2012
Is Sex Unholy?
On what basis can sex be considered unholy while claiming that contraception is unholy as well. Who decides that birth control stops at conception? If not, then when does abortion become evil?
Look to the extremes. Is "aborting" a one cell zygote when the mother is pregnant as a result of being raped by her father, immoral? Is partial-birth abortion of a healthy baby in the process of being born anything but murder? Abortion is the most difficult moral issue we face because it involves the rights of the mother, and the question of when an embryo acquires its rights.
Those who say human rights begin at conception based on divine revelation will be as intransigent in that belief as on all their other beliefs based purely on blind faith in the infallibility of scripture that is fraught with contradictions. So too those who say an embryo gains it's rights somehow instantly once outside the womb, are just as tied to their blind faith of convenience as those to religious revelation. "Pro-Life" and "Pro-Choice" are simplistic labels which are as evil in their simplicity as the immorality they claim to oppose.
There are no simple answers to the issue any more than sex can be reduced to being simple holiness or Original Sin.
Look to the extremes. Is "aborting" a one cell zygote when the mother is pregnant as a result of being raped by her father, immoral? Is partial-birth abortion of a healthy baby in the process of being born anything but murder? Abortion is the most difficult moral issue we face because it involves the rights of the mother, and the question of when an embryo acquires its rights.
Those who say human rights begin at conception based on divine revelation will be as intransigent in that belief as on all their other beliefs based purely on blind faith in the infallibility of scripture that is fraught with contradictions. So too those who say an embryo gains it's rights somehow instantly once outside the womb, are just as tied to their blind faith of convenience as those to religious revelation. "Pro-Life" and "Pro-Choice" are simplistic labels which are as evil in their simplicity as the immorality they claim to oppose.
There are no simple answers to the issue any more than sex can be reduced to being simple holiness or Original Sin.
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