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Metsfanmax wrote:I thoroughly disagree. The death of an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out, is a much more serious loss than the death of a child, who has just barely started to think as a unique individual. Obviously the loss of a child is devastating to the parents, but from the point of view of society, you do not lose as much.
Baron Von PWN wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I thoroughly disagree. The death of an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out, is a much more serious loss than the death of a child, who has just barely started to think as a unique individual. Obviously the loss of a child is devastating to the parents, but from the point of view of society, you do not lose as much.
That's silly. There's an enourmous amount of investment that goese into children. Without them what is there left of society in the future. It's like telling a farmer, oh don't worry you lost your crop of seedlings they aren't worth as much as the corn in your silo.
Metsfanmax wrote:I thoroughly disagree. The death of an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out, is a much more serious loss than the death of a child, who has just barely started to think as a unique individual. Obviously the loss of a child is devastating to the parents, but from the point of view of society, you do not lose as much.
Metsfanmax wrote:I thoroughly disagree. The death of an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out, is a much more serious loss than the death of a child, who has just barely started to think as a unique individual. Obviously the loss of a child is devastating to the parents, but from the point of view of society, you do not lose as much.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
Metsfanmax wrote:I thoroughly disagree. The death of an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out, is a much more serious loss than the death of a child, who has just barely started to think as a unique individual. Obviously the loss of a child is devastating to the parents, but from the point of view of society, you do not lose as much.
Haggis_McMutton wrote:Wait, are you saying that because the child won't become "an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out" for another 20 years or so his net present value is less than that of the adult?
Metsfanmax wrote:Haggis_McMutton wrote:Wait, are you saying that because the child won't become "an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out" for another 20 years or so his net present value is less than that of the adult?
I'm not intending to start discussing the value of human beings because then you have to consider future value as well as present value (although how you discount future value is not something I am trained to answer). I am simply talking about the morals of the situation; it is more wrong to kill an adult than it is to kill a child, because even though the child may one day live a life as a full moral person, with desires, goals and ambitions, the child does not currently have these characteristics to the maximum extent, so it is more wrong to kill someone who does have those characteristics.
This should not even be a worthwhile discussion to have except that peoples' views on this are so backward, because they are willing to kill and eat animals (many of whom are much more intelligent and share more qualities of being a person than most young children; even the ones we don't eat -- e.g. apes and monkeys -- are commonly tortured and experimented on), but think it is the ultimate horror to kill a child. It is wrong to kill any sentient creature for no good reason, but it is surely more wrong to kill those people who have more of the characteristics that make someone a moral person worth saving.
Haggis_McMutton wrote:So when you say child what age group do you have in mind?
Are you saying that it's worse to kill a 30 year old than a 15 year old?
I can understand you argument for todlers, but it gets slightly stickier for older kids.
Metsfanmax wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I thoroughly disagree. The death of an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out, is a much more serious loss than the death of a child, who has just barely started to think as a unique individual. Obviously the loss of a child is devastating to the parents, but from the point of view of society, you do not lose as much.
That's silly. There's an enourmous amount of investment that goese into children. Without them what is there left of society in the future. It's like telling a farmer, oh don't worry you lost your crop of seedlings they aren't worth as much as the corn in your silo.
A surviving adult can always have more children, so that's not a valid analogy.
Metsfanmax wrote:When I compare to non-human animals other than the great apes, I'm talking mainly about people up to about five years old. It's harder when comparing to chimpanzees and other intelligent apes because it starts getting much more difficult to compare intelligences. At any rate, I am certainly not talking about teenagers, because most teenagers are fully developed in all of the respects that makes someone a moral person. When comparing a 15 year old to a 30 year old, you can no longer be certain just based on general characteristics which it would be more wrong to kill, whereas you could adequately make the comparison between a 15 year old and a 3 year old, simply because of biological growth that has not yet occurred.
Baron Von PWN wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I thoroughly disagree. The death of an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out, is a much more serious loss than the death of a child, who has just barely started to think as a unique individual. Obviously the loss of a child is devastating to the parents, but from the point of view of society, you do not lose as much.
That's silly. There's an enourmous amount of investment that goese into children. Without them what is there left of society in the future. It's like telling a farmer, oh don't worry you lost your crop of seedlings they aren't worth as much as the corn in your silo.
A surviving adult can always have more children, so that's not a valid analogy.
The farmer can plant more crops, they've still lost all the investment and effort put in.
oVo wrote:Max, your argument fails because you used the term moral and it will never be moral to kill a person regardless of their age, gender, nationality, social status or other distinction.
I don't think it's a rational or logical choice either, but at least logic is a position you can troll from. The tragedy of a person dying young is that their whole life was still in front of them, where an older person has at least had the experiences of living and may even perish doing what they loved.
It's tragic for anyone to die "before their time" if there is such a thing,
and murder tends to magnify that tragic end.
oVo wrote:Max, your argument fails because you used the term moral and it will never be moral to kill a person regardless of their age, gender, nationality, social status or other distinction.
john9blue wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I thoroughly disagree. The death of an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out, is a much more serious loss than the death of a child, who has just barely started to think as a unique individual. Obviously the loss of a child is devastating to the parents, but from the point of view of society, you do not lose as much.
suppose i installed a time bomb into the body of a 10 year old child that would explode in 20 years and kill them. would i be murdering a child or an adult? would this be better or worse than simply murdering the 10 year old child now?
what if the time bomb was set to 50 years?
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
john9blue wrote:john9blue wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I thoroughly disagree. The death of an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out, is a much more serious loss than the death of a child, who has just barely started to think as a unique individual. Obviously the loss of a child is devastating to the parents, but from the point of view of society, you do not lose as much.
suppose i installed a time bomb into the body of a 10 year old child that would explode in 20 years and kill them. would i be murdering a child or an adult? would this be better or worse than simply murdering the 10 year old child now?
what if the time bomb was set to 50 years?
answer this please max
Metsfanmax wrote:john9blue wrote:john9blue wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I thoroughly disagree. The death of an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out, is a much more serious loss than the death of a child, who has just barely started to think as a unique individual. Obviously the loss of a child is devastating to the parents, but from the point of view of society, you do not lose as much.
suppose i installed a time bomb into the body of a 10 year old child that would explode in 20 years and kill them. would i be murdering a child or an adult? would this be better or worse than simply murdering the 10 year old child now?
what if the time bomb was set to 50 years?
answer this please max
Why?
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
john9blue wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:john9blue wrote:john9blue wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I thoroughly disagree. The death of an adult, who has spent years making plans and trying to carry them out, is a much more serious loss than the death of a child, who has just barely started to think as a unique individual. Obviously the loss of a child is devastating to the parents, but from the point of view of society, you do not lose as much.
suppose i installed a time bomb into the body of a 10 year old child that would explode in 20 years and kill them. would i be murdering a child or an adult? would this be better or worse than simply murdering the 10 year old child now?
what if the time bomb was set to 50 years?
answer this please max
Why?
cuz i'm trying to show you why abortion is wrong![]()
i think you've already realized this, which is why you're avoiding my questions.
oVo wrote:Things never go back to the way they were. Dwight D. Eisenhower
Another senseless event to add to the ugly statistics
of decades of sad events around this planet.
"You must not lose faith in humanity. Humanity is like an ocean; if a few drops
of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty.” Mahatma Gandhi
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