aTmAg said:Rights cannot violate logic. Therefore you do not have the "right to bring a child into existence in the same way a woman can" because that is not a right in the first place.Bob Lee said:Ag with kids said:What in the hell are you trying to state here?Bob Lee said:aTmAg said:You start with axioms that every (reasonable) person agrees with (like "everybody has the same rights"), and go from there. You don't start from any chapter in the Bible, Koran, Torah, etc. because there are widespread disagreements across those.Bob Lee said:aTmAg said:No they aren't. They are deduced from logic.Bob Lee said:aTmAg said:
Only 20% of Americans attend church every week. If we start passing laws based on virtue then don't be surprised when the definition of "virtue" legally changes and you have degenerate stuff shoved down your throat.
That's why our system is based on rights, not virtue.
rights are based on our understanding of the virtues. Without virtue freedom is reduced to a single human faculty. The will.
That doesn't make any sense. Against which principles do you apply logic? There have to be a set of rock bottom convictions against which you can deduce anything. A set of absolutes.
Do we all agree that everyone has the same rights? Do I, a father, have a right to the same kind of relationship with my children as their mother?
You have to start with a set of truths. You cannot work backwards from the conclusion.
That rights are a function of basic truths, and not the other way around. If I'm a man, and you tell me I have the right to bring a child into existence in the same way a woman can, it doesn't make it so.
If there are 2 apples and 3 people, and you guarantee everyone the right to a whole apple, everyone does not have a right to a whole apple.
Can you give me your definition of logic?