23 08, 2019

Untangling popular “pro-choice” claims and arguments concerning abortion

By |2019-09-20T00:03:38+00:00August 23rd, 2019|Practice, Theory|9 Comments

I favor the pro-life position on the abortion issue, all the while realizing that many good and decent people disagree with me. Why do they disagree? It seems they are influenced by popular claims and arguments favoring the pro-choice view. I intend no disrespect to anyone in saying this, but I think that many popular claims and arguments favoring the choice for abortion consist of knots of illogic that should be untangled.

23 08, 2019

Philosophical Arguments for Abortion

By |2019-09-20T00:03:55+00:00August 23rd, 2019|Practice, Theory|0 Comments

Arguments for ethical and legal conclusions on the topic of abortion are often pursued dialectically, with positive arguments developed in response to contrary positions and objections. Many people say they just “feel” that abortion is wrong or their “opinion” is that it’s not wrong. But complex issues require informed, fair and honest critical thinking, not just mere “feelings” or “opinions.”

18 07, 2019

A Search for Meaning: The Hemingway Hero & Fifty-Grand

By |2019-08-08T14:39:49+00:00July 18th, 2019|Arts & Letters|4 Comments

Pinker points to both the origin and function of a code of conduct that became the Western view of masculinity. ... the biological realities of the male species could be best and most productively served through the attainment and development of specific virtues. 

11 01, 2019

Plato’s Crito: When should we break the law?

By |2019-03-27T18:14:49+00:00January 11th, 2019|Arts & Letters, Justice, Theory|0 Comments

Plato’s Crito describes a conversation that takes place in 399 B.C.E. in an Athens prison, where Socrates awaits execution.Not long before, an assembly of more than 500 Athenian citizens convicted Socrates of corrupting the youth and impiety, essentially failing to respect the gods of the city.

9 03, 2018

On the Biblical God: A Brief ‘Transreligious’ Reflection

By |2019-03-28T03:48:47+00:00March 9th, 2018|Theory|3 Comments

The God of the Bible – or, better, God as he is literally depicted in the Bible – does not exist. The evidence for this is overwhelming. Perhaps the most telling is, simply, that if such an entity existed he would make it clear to us.

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