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Do you have a pet? If so, you think he's intelligent or do you think he won't jump off a 10 story building because he is scared of heights?
Didn't Greg Oden's dog die just that way?
barfo
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Do you have a pet? If so, you think he's intelligent or do you think he won't jump off a 10 story building because he is scared of heights?
Didn't Greg Oden's dog die just that way?
barfo
Do you have a pet? If so, you think he's intelligent or do you think he won't jump off a 10 story building because he is scared of heights?
His dog was blind.
http://www.sbnation.com/nba/2012/5/9/3009738/greg-oden-portland-trail-blazers-interview
"The saddest part for me: his blind dog died when it went through a hotel balcony window and fell several stories to its death."
Many people develop a fear of heights later in life. Probably that's true of chocolate too
You wouldn't jump off a cliff without a parachute to rocks far below. Because you are born with the fear you'd die if you did so.
You have the right to breathe the air.
This just makes my point. Your examples of liking sex & fear of heights ARE feelings/instincts. Humans are certainly born with such things, as they are (often) born with the instinct that they are entitled to certain rights.
However instinctively FEELING that you have rights, and objectively possessing the intrinsic property of rights are entirely different things. When you stipulate the latter you are actually proposing a metaphysical property independent of any subjective standard of rights. That's a monumental step philosophically.
Admittedly it is one some very smart philosophers do take, but only based on treating such things as morals or rights as Platonically real in the same sense as some do with numbers or mathematical axioms.
After watching a concert, a movie or a rocket taking off, your mind experiences an intense rupture.
You mean right, or ability? Does a drowning person have the right to breath air? If he does, why isn't he exercising that right?
You mean right, or ability? Does a drowning person have the right to breath air? If he does, why isn't he exercising that right?
All I was pointing out is you are born with the fear of heights, love of chocolate, fear of loud noises, and to do what makes you happy.
Except you are referring to things that are instincts, feelings, abilities, and desires as unalienable rights, which doesn't make sense.
Nobody or government can tell you to stop breathing. They can kill you which is another thing entirely.
Unalienable right: Life. To breathe. Congress couldn't pass a law against breathing, could it?
You're born with it as you are with instincts.
It sure seems like the desire for life and happiness is universal. Even in a monarchy, where an evolved society places ownership of every person and thing in the crown, the people breathe and eat chocolate.
The state might pass a law against those rights, but those cannot be taken away even in that case. The people breathe and eat chocolate regardless of the law.
You're still referring to desires, abilities etc., not objective rights.
When the founding fathers cited unalienable rights they were making a subjective moral judgment about what rights they thought humans should have based on their own values, not actually citing intrinsic physical properties humans are born with such as desires or abilities.
I am a lifelong acrophobe. I don't even like stepladders.
My cat is intelligent but has no fear of heights. She evolved to climb trees. We evolved to come down from trees. She also has no fear of darkness since she can see in very little light. Humans, who can't see in the dark, fear it.
I am absolutely referring to objective rights.
Read the part about monarchy, which talks about the monarch's rights. The monarch can't prevent people from breathing (life) or eating chocolate (liberty and happiness).
The only people who can't enjoy these objective rights are those who are brain dead or otherwise incapacitated so they can't.
Our government with all the $trillions (and spending that year after year) can't prevent people from doing heroin.
You think I mean abilities when I mean rights.
Interestingly, the Atheism religion is one of the least tolerant religions in our country.
You're obviously using the word "right" semantically to mean ability, NOT entitlement as was meant in the DoI. This is such a simple thing I feel like you're just yanking my chain here.
Atheists are generally just intolerant of bad arguments for theism, not of theists. I'd be surprised if any atheist in this forum gives a fuck that it says IGWT on our money.
They are rights because the government can, in theory restrict them but never granted them in the first place.
What the founders did was state the obvious. Their invention was government that respected these innate rights.
