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by nantes 3450 days ago
I am not religious in any reasonable sense of the word. What possible reason can you give that your religion should have any sort of say in what care is available to me or, much more importantly, my children?

And, while you're at it, please answer my original question rather than throwing out strawman arguments.

> why should my employer get to decide whether I'm opted in or out of a particular thing based on religion?

1 comments

I am also not religious (and generally agnostic about the so-called supernatural), but it seems pretty obvious to me why religious beliefs play a major role in the debate over abortion. It all comes down to my favorite subject: the Explanatory Gap.

Setting aside arguments that abortion is permissible even if the fetus has a right to life (e.g. Thomson's "A Defense of Abortion"), for many people the crux of the matter is whether or not a fetus is a living human being. The problem is that current science cannot tell us exactly when a clump of cells becomes conscious; we don't fully understand consciousness, so assigning it to a given object can be contentious. We simply have no good way of knowing when there is a person "in there", so to speak.

Since science cannot answer this question, religion has filled the void with beliefs about when someone's life actually begins. If we understood consciousness and could detect when it "starts", I suspect this debate would be much less dramatic.

>I suspect this debate would be much less dramatic.

Not when pro life means human life begins at conception.