- Joined
- Mar 27, 2019
In which case, you're only interested in morality theory rather than its application, which renders any moral stance you profess at the apex of uselessness. You make proclamations while actively avoiding discussing their implications and practical consequences, as if people aren't actually living these experiences.I ignore them because they should be ignored.
In this scenario, he consigned both wife and child to death despite the fact that he had the means to at least save the wife. Whereas the child is his responsibility on account of him being responsible for his conception as well as him being his flesh and blood, the wife is also necessarily his responsibility on account of his marriage to her and his position in the household. This clearly isn't an ideal situation at all, and either way, there's blood on his hands (well, both husband's and wife's), but would you suggest that failing in responsibility to both wife and child is substantially better than failing in responsibility to only the child?Yes, because he has not murdered anyone.
Not if it comes at the cost of destroyed embryos, obviously. Of course, this is ostensibly not a problem since stem cells supposedly are harvested from after-birth products such as the umbilical cord, and there's research being done to synthesize stem cells in order to evade the ethical issues altogether.Stem cell research saves lives.
You're not "pro-choice".You're not "pro-life".