shakeybrainsurgeon
Contributor
sandjeep:It is 'across' the line when the State overides the wishes of the parents in any area period.
I agree that the State (capital S? Rather Orwellian) should be kept out of parenting as much as possible, but "in any area, period?" So the woman in Pennsylvania who used her infant today to beat her boyfriend should not answer to the state? What if the parent "wishes" to have, lets say, an inappropriate relationship with a child? Or, as was the case in my neighborhood growing up, the parents decide to keep the child in a locked, windowless room with no mattress or toys for years at a time? Can the state never intervene?
Children are not the property of parents to do with as they wish. The ownership of humans in this country ended with the Eamncipation Proclamation.
And yes, there should be limits to human experimentation. This isn't based in religion but the law. The cosmos doesn't need to give permission to be experimented upon, nor do fossils or ribozymes. The legal sanctity of the self and the right to know and consent to experiments on our persons is part of our secular legal code. This code is rooted in ancient English law and can trace its ethical roots to Aristotle and beyond. Contrary to popular belief, people understood ethical behavior centuries before Christ or Buddha came on the scene.
The main difference between science-based reasoning and religious reasoning is that those rooted in science like me will admit 1) I have been wrong before, 2) I may be wrong now; and 3) I will be wrong again. Evolution may be disproved, it may be baloney, it has problems. Much of cosmology is based on general relativity and may be flawed. String theory, the darling of particle physics is collapsing, and medical science has reached a standstill in many areas (as comedian Chris Rock observed, doctors cured polio and then seem to give up). Retrospective analysis of fossil records and the study of distant galaxies are inexact endeavors to be sure. When we finally look under that last rock, we may yet find God. Science is littered with the wreckage of good theories gone bad (phlogiston, alchemy, bloodletting, the ether, psychosurgery). But, in the end, the errors are usually recognized and corrected.
Likewise, I've made many mistakes in my life and, if I was afraid of looking foolish, I wouldn't put on a wetsuit. I like to verbally spar with people, but readily admit I will venture into areas wherein I have inadequate knowledge.
But the deeply religious are NEVER wrong and NEVER in doubt. They know the answers yesterday, today and tomorrow, for themselves and everyone else. And history has shown and will show again that that viewpoint isn't always divine. It can be very, very dangerous.
And with that, I sign off. It's been a fun discussion, but people are set in their opinions and I'm done stirring this soup.
Back to the wordless world under the waves....