“I'm a lawyer. I understand the value of precision.”
It’s not hard to tell a sophist… There is a fundamental distinction between you and I. Ideally, when two scholars meet and argue they argue over what is true, correct, and accurate. They have a commitment only to absolute veracity. One (or both) of them will be wrong but they argue with the firm belief that they are correct and with the goal only of showing the truth clearly.
When two lawyers meet it is a different matter entirely. Lawyers often have no interest in the truth; the truth tends to interfere with good lawyerly work. When two lawyers argue a case they do so before a judge, or a judge and a jury. The verdict (which means truth- from veritas) is *never* decided by the lawyers. The verdict is always in the hands of a judge or a jury of peers. One (or both) of the lawyers will be wrong, but they will still be duty bound to make their case appear to be right even if it is wrong. All a lawyer does is attempt to make something appear to be true, whether there is any truth to it or not. They have no power to declare a verdict (truth) and, often, no interest in finding what is true.
So when you tell me that you belong to a profession that practices, not truth seeking, but the art of persuasive rhetoric (often with the goal of convincing someone of believing something that is not true) I’m afraid it does little to convince me of either your desire or your capacity for truth… I find it hard to believe that someone who belongs to a profession that is synonymous with hypocrisy and all other types of dishonesty and specious reasoning could really be committed to unerring precision… But then, as any good sophist would, you never said that did you? You only said that you “understand” the value of precision, not that you *actually* value it yourself… The school of semantics generally tends to make poor logicians, but eloquent sophists…
“If the popular usage of abortion is a medical procedure and the argument pertains to that medical procedure then the point of language is satisfied.”
Wrong again. The term abortion is, technically, an exact and specific term. In the lay persons vocabulary it has become extremely muddled and confused. The point of language is to help humans communicate in a clear and lucid manner, or close to it as we can achieve, and having a term that can be equally applied to two diametrically opposed processes at the same time does *not* satisfy that. It violates all the rules and purposes of language.
It can mean:
A woman’s body naturally disposing of a non-viable attempt at life creation.
A woman’s body being threatened by a failed attempt at creating a life and the need for medical intervention that results in the loss of the fetus’s life but the saving of the mother’s life.
A healthy viable fetus being killed by the mother artificially creating-simulating an unhealthy situation in which the body no longer has the resources to create-carry the child.
A healthy viable fetus being killed at any time during the pregnancy, from conception till just before birth.
A healthy viable fetus being killed during the birthing process.
In short there is a host of things which this may mean. It is not enough to say that “I am opposed to abortion!” In every debate or discussion I’ve ever heard on the subject the pro-choice advocate always pulls out the, “What about when a woman’s life is in danger” card. And it instantly halts or problematizes the debate. When or if that fails the pro-choice advocate reverts to the same argument Lucaspa made: “God designed women to have abortions! Take it up with him!”
In my state Planned Parenthood is running a radio advertisement about a married mother of three who had an abortion. The child, on the far chance it survived, would have been born with no sensory abilities and serious brain damage. But if the mother didn’t have medical assistance in the abortion process she would have died leaving behind a husband and three children. The conclusion to the ad ran something like this: “Protect a woman’s right to an abortion, because no politician has a right to tell you what you can do with your body.”
The ad was both emotionally and logically well put together, but the conclusion was false. It falsely lumped a lifesaving-natural (albeit medically assisted) process in with all other types of abortion.
No reasonable Christian simply says: “I’m opposed to sex!” or “I support sex!” The term is too vague and inexact. Rather we subdivide sex into multiple categories to make the debate more easily understandable and to make our position more exact and clear. We divide the topic into: consensual vs. non-consensual, of age or underage, married or unmarried, adulterous or faithful, gay or straight, vanilla or not, &c… Now sex has been around since the beginning of time, and we’ve come to understand that it is essential to subdivide it into categories and be exact with our wording, “I’m opposed to sex” vs. “I’m opposed to gay sex.” It is the only way to make the debate clear and not confused.
“Abortion” (in the modern sense) is a new thing to our societies (arguably the world), and no one has of yet come to see the importance for terming it appropriately as we have with the various types of sex. But it is essential for those same reasons that we make our stance and our terms more clear and exact so as to not distract from the debate.
The problem is : “the popular usage of abortion is [both] a medical procedure [that] the argument pertains to [as well as a natural process] [and] the point of language is not satisfied because the same term is simultaneously being applied to [and equated with] radically different and opposite things.”
“Nothing is meaningfully accomplished by altering the usage since no one is arguing over natural, spontaneous abortions.”
Wrong again. People *are* constantly arguing over natural and spontaneous abortions and saying that because they are a fact of life, and a necessary one for the survival of the human species, then abortions in general need to be supported. They say that abortions are a God designed-approved process and therefore no Christian has the right to argue with them or make them illegal. Listen to any Planned Parenthood rhetoric. As long as the two are so incorrectly equated with one another, because we have no term to differentiate them, the Christian cannot logically say they are opposed to Abortion because it is an impossibility. You seem intent on willfully ignoring this point. You might understand the difference here, and some people on the forum might understand the difference but the *public* in general does not understand the difference. It is for the public in general that we must make it clear what the difference is.
“Once you change the words so that the popularly understood up means off to one side instead of actually up then a balloonist will necessarily become confused by your commands until you've moved his language.”
Once again, your reasoning is specious, a false analogy proves nothing. The point is not to change the language to something it is not, but rather to something it *is* but is not recognized as such. Up means up, to the side means to the side. These are terms that are accurate and fulfill the point of language. There is no need to change the balloonist’s vernacular. However the term “abortion” is incorrectly used in the common vernacular. If a woman says “I had an abortion” and it means either “I terminated a healthy and viable fetus using an artificial medical process” or “I had a natural miscarriage of a non-viable fetus” that is a problem… It’s like saying “I really [insert word] you” in which the inserted word could mean “I love you” or “I hate you.”
Once again: You should *never* have the *same* word mean two *opposite* things.
“What Lucaspa is mistaking doesn't take an alteration of the usage to account for. He isn't confused on terms. He's confused on a deeper issue concerning the nature of God and the world and on what constitutes humanity and has adopted an arbitrary standard for determining it.”
Wrong again. He is confused on both, but the incorrect usage of terms lends his mistaken view of the nature of God some credibility. Clear terms make clear debates. Using a word to mean two contradictory things is not acceptable in debates, it always confuses things, whether you chose to acknowledge it or not.