Who cares what Tom Clark, of the Center for Naturalism -- which implies not only that he's constitutionally intellectually dishonest, but also that he's also professionally intellectually dishonest -- thinks?
For, after all, the very question as asked is intellectually dishonest -- he simultaneously assumes and asserts that there is something "wrong" with making a religious-based anti-abortion argument.
Attorney Wesley J Smith has very effectively countered "The Culture of Death's arguments." He does not argue from a religious stand point.
I feel natural law is an effective platform from which to opppose the pro-death movements. Natural Law was not originally rooted in any particuliar religious system.
3 comments:
Who cares what Tom Clark, of the Center for Naturalism -- which implies not only that he's constitutionally intellectually dishonest, but also that he's also professionally intellectually dishonest -- thinks?
For, after all, the very question as asked is intellectually dishonest -- he simultaneously assumes and asserts that there is something "wrong" with making a religious-based anti-abortion argument.
Amusingly enough, Nat Hentoff -- who is an atheist -- is a long-time foe of the abortion regime.
Attorney Wesley J Smith has very effectively countered "The Culture of Death's arguments." He does not argue from a religious stand point.
I feel natural law is an effective platform from which to opppose the pro-death movements. Natural Law was not originally rooted in any particuliar religious system.
HHH
Yes. In particular, I think the ethics of hospitality found in some postmodernist projects give reason against the violence of abortion.
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