David Livingston–Getty ImagesJoaquin Phoenix and Emma Stone attend the premiere of “Irrational Man” in Los Angeles on July 9, 2015.
Leave it to Woody Allen to make a movie that doubles as a philosophy lecture
Depending on your tolerance for the existential anguish that defines so many of Woody Allen’s characters, a philosophy professor is either the perfect protagonist for one of his movies, or the worst. In the director’s new film Irrational Man (out July 17), Joaquin Phoenix is the latest actor to take the lead, with Allen now outsourcing roles he once played himself to younger actors carrying out onscreen affairs with actresses even younger still (in this case, it’s Emma Stone).
Phoenix’s Abe Lucas is a reputed but heavy-drinking philosophy professor whose morose detachment elicits lust—both intellectual and sexual—from faculty and students alike. After a series of personal misfortunes and a few too many nights wrestling with long-dead existentialists, he has come to possess what his student Jill (Stone) describes as a “bleak view of existence.” He’s also come to seriously question whether his chosen discipline isn’t merely “verbal masturbation,” a “theoretical world of bulls–t” that’s no match for the trials of real life.
As Abe navigates his feelings for Jill, the advances of his colleague Rita Richards (Parker Posey) and a disturbing plan to inject purpose into his meaningless existence—by murdering a perfect stranger to improve the life of another stranger—hardly ten minutes pass without hearing him name-drop a philosopher. Though Philosophy 101 isn’t a prerequisite for the film, a refresher on the thinkers whose theories connect the plot’s dots will keep audiences in step with Abe’s evolving existential circumstances.
Immanuel Kant: None of these philosophers can be summarized in a tidy paragraph—least of all Kant—but of all the 18th century philosopher’s work on metaphysics, epistemology, ethics and aesthetics, his notion of a categorical imperative is the one referenced most frequently in Irrational Man. The concept on morality and reason, introduced in 1785, states that one must “Act only according to that maxim by which you can, at the same time, will that it should become a universal law.” Practically speaking, the moral thing to do in a situation is the action that would be universally moral no matter the circumstances. The action’s consequences are inconsequential, because the morality exists in the act itself.
The categorical imperative also suggests that one can never lie to another person, for any reason, even if the asker is a murderer seeking information to help carry out a killing. Abe chooses to ignore the categorical imperative, making a decision the morality of which is explicitly wrapped up in the specifics of the circumstance—one which, if universalized, would spell disaster. Allen, for his part, told the New York Times he believes the concept to be limited: “The problem with the categorical imperative is that you always try to use it in these trivial life decisions… The truth is there are decisions you make in life where you can’t go by it, it’s not a reliable thing.”
Søren Kierkegaard: Often considered the father of existentialism, Kierkegaard, like Allen, was rather preoccupied with death—possibly because his parents and all but one of his siblings died by the time he was in his mid-twenties. He is attributed with the term “angst,” a human condition linked to the terror that results from our freedom of choice. In facing this “dizziness of freedom,” he believed, humans are overwhelmed by possibilities—to jump or not to jump, for instance—but we also reach a deeper self-awareness.
Abe references Kierkegaard’s The Sickness Unto Death, which the philosopher wrote under the pseudonym Anti-Climacus in 1849. For the Christian existentialist Kierkegaard, this sickness was, in a word, despair, which he believed resulted from failing to align with God’s plan for oneself. Phoenix’s Abe is certainly characterized by some kind of despair—but his antidote, rather than seeking out a god, is to play one himself.
Martin Heidegger: That Abe references Heidegger with derision, in the same breath as “fascism,” isn’t surprising given the German philosopher’s affiliation with the Nazi Party. Though he made significant contributions in the realms of existentialism, political theory, hermeneutics and other fields, his anti-Semitic writings have come to contaminate his reputation.
Abe’s equation of Heidegger with fascism, in a breezy aside, is a bit of an oversimplification. Heidegger was concerned with what it means to be, as he explored in his seminal 1927 work, Being and Time. While fascism presupposes a dictator ruling over a faceless crowd, Heidegger’s thoughts on being encourage accepting the inevitability of death as motivation to live for oneself, and acknowledging other people as ends rather than means. Still, Heidegger’s adherents today grapple with the cloud that hangs over his career.
Jean-Paul Sartre: A key 20th century figure in existentialism, phenomenology and Marxism, Sartre wrote that we are “condemned to be free.” Free will exists, he believed, and humans must acknowledge that freedom and make meaning of our existence as we go along, for meaning does not exist just because we exist. We must not live in accordance with a set of preordained meanings (capitalism, for example), for to do so falsely removes the burden of our own freedom.
Abe quotes Sartre as having said that “hell is other people,” which is, in a way, a misquote, or at least an oft-misinterpreted line. It comes from a 1944 play by Sartre, “No Exit” (Sartre, therefore, penned but did not himself utter the words), and is often misinterpreted to mean exactly what it implies. Sartre said that what he actually meant is that our own self-judgment is colored by how we perceive others to judge us. Abe seems immune to such a notion, as he justifies his actions without regard for the potential judgment of others.
Hannah Arendt: It bears mentioning that Arendt, though often labeled a philosopher, described herself as a political theorist, as she dealt with men (and women) in the plural, as opposed to “man,” singular. She wrote on many subjects, from totalitarianism to revolution to the nature of freedom, but one of her best known works is Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil (1963), and this reverberating catchphrase— “the banality of evil” —is the concept invoked by Allen in Irrational Man.
The phrase describes a phenomenon Arendt observed in Adolf Eichmann and other Nazis who claimed that in carrying out the Holocaust, they were simply following orders and doing their jobs, which in their views abdicated them of responsibility. Arendt wrote that even under a totalitarian regime, moral choice remains. Eichmann, rather than acting on evil impulses, acted in an unthinking manner: a bureaucrat incapable of comprehending the consequences of his actions on his victims. As far as the banality of evil plays out in Abe’s world, his decision to do evil does not originate from outside of himself, nor is he a cog in the regime—he just chooses to create his own framework of morality and evil.
Simone de Beauvoir: Though she produced work on a wide array of subjects, de Beauvoir’s most influential writing is The Second Sex, a 1949 treatise on the oppression of women, which is often credited with inspiring second-wave feminism. In the book, de Beauvoir traces the position of women through the perspectives of biology, psychology, social structures, history, religion and politics, concluding, among other things, that “it is not women’s inferiority that has determined their historical insignificance: it is their historical insignificance that has doomed them to inferiority.”
Abe and Jill can both quote de Beauvoir from memory, though the way Jill’s character is written—her whole world revolves around her infatuation with her professor—shows she’s not exactly a living embodiment of the philosopher’s ideas. De Beauvoir’s writings on ethics, and the responsibility of individual human beings to their fellow humans, are actually much more relevant to the themes explored in Irrational Man.
As to the feminism of Allen’s works, that’s a topic for another day.
Dr. Francis Schaeffer: Whatever Happened to the Human Race Episode 1 ABORTION
Published on Jan 10, 2015
Whatever Happened to the Human Race?
Abortion
Dr. Francis Schaeffer
Dr. Francis schaeffer – The flow of Materialism(from Part 4 of Whatever happened to human race?)
Dr. Francis Schaeffer – The Biblical flow of Truth & History (intro)
Francis Schaeffer predicted July 21, 2015 would come when the video “Second Planned Parenthood Senior Executive Haggles Over Baby Parts Prices, Changes Abortion Methods” would be released!!!! Al Mohler wrote the article ,”FIRST-PERSON: They indeed were prophetic,” Jan 29, 2004, and in this great article he noted: . “We stand today on the edge of a […]
I just wanted to note that I have spoken on the phone several times and corresponded with Dr. Paul D. Simmons who is very much pro-choice. (He is quoted in the article below.) He actually helped me write an article to submit to Americans United for the Separation of Church and State back in the […]
On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner Dr. […]
_______________________ Very good article on Francis Schaeffer. Tom Wolfe. Peter Singer!! Presuppositional Life and Learning Posted on November 19, 2013 by Dr. Steven Garber Francis Schaeffer. Tom Wolfe. Peter Singer. I spent the morning with the Capitol Fellows thinking about these three men, and their ideas. The first one I studied and studied with many […]
The Staple Singers Part 1 click to enlarge Mavis Staples From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Mavis Staples Staples performing in Brooklyn, New York in 2007 Background information Birth name Mavis Staples Born July 10, 1939 (age 74) Origin Chicago, Illinois, U.S. Genres Rhythm and blues, soul, gospel […]
Francis Schaeffer noted, “In this flow there was also the period of psychedelic rock, an attempt to find this experience without drugs, by the use of a certain type of music. This was the period of the Beatles’ Revolver (1966) and Strawberry Fields Forever (1967)…The psychedelic began with their records REVOLVER, STRAWBERRY FIELDS FOREVER, AND […]
The Staple Singers Part 1 Mavis Staples to give concert at Christ Church in Little Rock Posted by Lindsey Millar on Fri, Sep 6, 2013 at 2:48 PM click to enlarge Whoa. One of the greatest soul divas OF ALL TIME is coming to Little Rock next month. Christ Church Little Rock is hosting Mavis […]
In my last post I demonstrated that George Bernard Shaw was a vocal communist and that probably had a lot to do with his inclusion on the cover of SGT PEPPER’S but today I will look more into more this great playwright’s views. Did you know that Shaw wrote the play that MY FAIR LADY […]
Transcript and Video of Francis Schaeffer speech in 1983 on the word “Evangelical” _____________ SOUNDWORD LABRI CONFERENCE VIDEO – Names and Issues – Francis A. Schaeffer Published on Apr 20, 2014 This video is from the 1983 L’Abri Conference in Atlanta. The full lecture with Q&A time has been included. The lecture was also previously […]
Surgeon General of the United States In office January 21, 1982 – October 1, 1989 President Ronald Reagan George H. W. Bush Francis Schaeffer Founder of the L’Abri community Born Francis August Schaeffer January 30, 1912 Died May 15, 1984 (aged 72) I truly believe that many of the problems we have today in the USA are […]
My good friend Rev. Sherwood Haisty Jr. and I used to discuss which men were the ones who really influenced our lives and Adrian Rogers had influenced us both more than anybody else. During the 1990′s I actually made it a practice to write famous atheists and scientists that were mentioned by Adrian Rogers and […]
“With respect to those meanings of ‘human’ that are relevant to the morality of abortion, any fetus is less human than an adult pig.” – A tweet from Richard Dawkins, echoing philosopher Peter Singer, who has made the same comparison.
Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR
“With respect to those meanings of ‘human’ that are relevant to the morality of abortion, any fetus is less human than an adult pig.” – A tweet from Richard Dawkins, echoing philosopher Peter Singer, who has made the same comparison.
(Dawkins is probably the world’s most famous, or infamous, proponent of atheism, but a belief in atheism need not entail the pro-choice position on the ethics of abortion that Dawkins holds. Indeed, that position is contravened by science and reason accessible to people of any or no faith, independent of any religious teaching or texts. (See here.)
A clarification must be made regarding Dawkins’ use of the term “human.” It can be used in a biological sense to mean a living human organism—a member of the species Homo sapiens—and in that sense the fetus, from the beginning of his or her existence at conception, is a full-fledged human being, like you and me only at an earlier developmental stage, while the pig is not and never will be. But Dawkins uses “human” in a different sense to refer to certain characteristically-human qualities that he considers morally relevant with respect to how a being ought to be treated—qualities that may not be possessed by all human beings (those who have yet to acquire them, or who have lost them, are excluded from serious moral regard) and that may be possessed by some non-human animals (such as pigs).
Dawkins went on to further discuss abortion and clarify his position. He considers the ability to experience pain the decisive factor: Only beings who can feel pain deserve the sort of moral respect that would preclude killing them. Only when an unborn child is developed enough to feel pain is abortion (presumably) morally impermissible.
But this position does not seem defensible. Surely we may not kill people as long as we do so in a painless fashion. So it must be, as Dawkins puts it, the ability to feel pain that counts. But what about people who are under anesthesia or temporarily comatose? What about people with the condition called congenital insensitivity to pain? They cannot experience pain. Do they not still have a right to life? Imagine a person whose brain has been surgically altered to prevent the experience of pain. Are these people not still people?
Even normal, adult human beings who can suffer pain have that ability in varying degrees. Does that mean that our moral worth, our right not to be killed, is also a matter of degree? Are some people more valuable than others? Philosopher Christopher Kaczor writes:
“The kung fu master can put his arms around a burning cauldron, endure the searing of flesh, and carry the weighty object. The proverbial princess cannot stand the pea under her multiple mattresses. Many men cannot bear the least discomfort, and many women endure childbirth without anesthetic. Certain injuries and diseases greatly hinder the human capacity for pain, as do drugs of various kinds, as do differences in degrees of concentration and experience. … Our experiences of pains and pleasures are conditioned by our prior experiences, beliefs, and habits. Since no two human persons have the same experiences, beliefs, and habits, no two human persons have equal capacities for pleasure and pain, and therefore human persons do not have equal rights” [if rights depends on the ability to feel pain, which Kaczor rejects].
This is not to say that pain and suffering are morally irrelevant—clearly they matter a great deal. But it is just as clear that the ability to experience pain is not a necessary criterion for having a right to life or for deserving the kind of moral respect that precludes killing for socio-economic reasons. Nor can the ability to experience pain serve as the basis for equal dignity and rights.
Dawkins will have to rethink his position. (In the meantime, he can at least support current legislation in the United States to stop the dismemberment and killing of unborn children developed enough to feel pain.)
Editor’s note. Mr. Stark is Communications Associate for MCCL, NRLC’s state affiliate. This first appeared at prolifemn.blogspot.com.
Dr. Francis Schaeffer: Whatever Happened to the Human Race Episode 1 ABORTION
Published on Jan 10, 2015
Whatever Happened to the Human Race?
Abortion
Dr. Francis Schaeffer
Dr. Francis schaeffer – The flow of Materialism(from Part 4 of Whatever happened to human race?)
Dr. Francis Schaeffer – The Biblical flow of Truth & History (intro)
Francis Schaeffer predicted July 21, 2015 would come when the video “Second Planned Parenthood Senior Executive Haggles Over Baby Parts Prices, Changes Abortion Methods” would be released!!!! Al Mohler wrote the article ,”FIRST-PERSON: They indeed were prophetic,” Jan 29, 2004, and in this great article he noted: . “We stand today on the edge of a […]
I just wanted to note that I have spoken on the phone several times and corresponded with Dr. Paul D. Simmons who is very much pro-choice. (He is quoted in the article below.) He actually helped me write an article to submit to Americans United for the Separation of Church and State back in the […]
On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner Dr. […]
_______________________ Very good article on Francis Schaeffer. Tom Wolfe. Peter Singer!! Presuppositional Life and Learning Posted on November 19, 2013 by Dr. Steven Garber Francis Schaeffer. Tom Wolfe. Peter Singer. I spent the morning with the Capitol Fellows thinking about these three men, and their ideas. The first one I studied and studied with many […]
The Staple Singers Part 1 click to enlarge Mavis Staples From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Mavis Staples Staples performing in Brooklyn, New York in 2007 Background information Birth name Mavis Staples Born July 10, 1939 (age 74) Origin Chicago, Illinois, U.S. Genres Rhythm and blues, soul, gospel […]
Francis Schaeffer noted, “In this flow there was also the period of psychedelic rock, an attempt to find this experience without drugs, by the use of a certain type of music. This was the period of the Beatles’ Revolver (1966) and Strawberry Fields Forever (1967)…The psychedelic began with their records REVOLVER, STRAWBERRY FIELDS FOREVER, AND […]
The Staple Singers Part 1 Mavis Staples to give concert at Christ Church in Little Rock Posted by Lindsey Millar on Fri, Sep 6, 2013 at 2:48 PM click to enlarge Whoa. One of the greatest soul divas OF ALL TIME is coming to Little Rock next month. Christ Church Little Rock is hosting Mavis […]
In my last post I demonstrated that George Bernard Shaw was a vocal communist and that probably had a lot to do with his inclusion on the cover of SGT PEPPER’S but today I will look more into more this great playwright’s views. Did you know that Shaw wrote the play that MY FAIR LADY […]
Transcript and Video of Francis Schaeffer speech in 1983 on the word “Evangelical” _____________ SOUNDWORD LABRI CONFERENCE VIDEO – Names and Issues – Francis A. Schaeffer Published on Apr 20, 2014 This video is from the 1983 L’Abri Conference in Atlanta. The full lecture with Q&A time has been included. The lecture was also previously […]
Surgeon General of the United States In office January 21, 1982 – October 1, 1989 President Ronald Reagan George H. W. Bush Francis Schaeffer Founder of the L’Abri community Born Francis August Schaeffer January 30, 1912 Died May 15, 1984 (aged 72) I truly believe that many of the problems we have today in the USA are […]
My good friend Rev. Sherwood Haisty Jr. and I used to discuss which men were the ones who really influenced our lives and Adrian Rogers had influenced us both more than anybody else. During the 1990′s I actually made it a practice to write famous atheists and scientists that were mentioned by Adrian Rogers and […]
Peter May rightly notes, “Peter Singer is arguably the most famous and influential modern philosopher, offering the most radical challenge to traditional Judeo-Christian values.”
Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR
Dr. Francis Schaeffer: Whatever Happened to the Human Race Episode 1 ABORTION
Published on Jan 10, 2015
Whatever Happened to the Human Race?
Abortion
Dr. Francis Schaeffer
Dr. Francis schaeffer – The flow of Materialism(from Part 4 of Whatever happened to human race?)
Peter Singer is arguably the most famous and influential modern philosopher, offering the most radical challenge to traditional Judeo-Christian values. It has been said of him, that as an original and influential moral pioneer, he surpasses any philosopher since Bertrand Russell. On his website he says, ‘My work is based on the assumption that clarity and consistency in our moral thinking is likely, in the long run, to lead us to hold better views on ethical issues.’
Born in Australia in 1946, Peter Singer is the son of Jews who fled from Vienna to avoid persecution from the Nazis. His grandparents and other relatives, who stayed behind, were killed. His mother was a doctor. His father, a keen animal lover, was a businessman. Studying initially in Melbourne, Singer went on to obtain a B.Phil in Philosophy at Oxford, where he also developed his concerns for the well-being of animals. Subsequently, he taught in Oxford, New York, Colorado and California. He then returned to Melbourne to become Professor in Human Bioethics. In 1999 then became Professor of Bioethics at the Centre for Human Values at Princeton University.
Peter Singer is influential, not least because he is a prolific writer on his subject of ethics and related areas of philosophy. His best known book, Animal Liberation: A New Ethic for Our Treatment of Animals (1976),[1] gave birth to the worldwide animal rights movement. Widespread contemporary interest in vegetarianism and in militant animal rights campaigning has flowed from it. He has written many other books, a major entry on ethics in Encyclopaedia Britannica and countless journal and review articles, as well as editing influential journals. Much of what follows is focused on his book How Are We To Live?[2] with various references to other writings.
His broad perspective
Singer is an atheist who very easily dismisses Judeo-Christian ethics as being out of date and irrelevant: ‘We have no need to postulate gods who hand down commandments to us because we understand ethics as a natural phenomenon.’[3]He asks, ‘What do I think of as a good life in the fullest sense of that term? This is an ultimate question.’[4] The choice is ours because, in Singer’s view, ethical principles are not laws written up in heaven. Nor are they absolute truths about the universe, known by intuition. The principles of ethics come from our own nature as social, reasoning beings. So he writes, ‘We are free to choose what we are to be, because we have no essential nature, that is, no given purpose outside ourselves. Unlike say, an apple tree that has come into existence as a result of someone else’s plan, we simply exist, and the rest is up to us’.[5]
His principle reason for rejecting the Christian God is the existence of suffering in the world. In particular, he dismisses the idea that mankind is distinct from other animals by being ‘made in the image of God’. Hence the ‘Sanctity of Human Life’ argument, which hangs on that distinctive, goes out of the window. All that remains are ‘Quality of Life’ issues. This leads him to the utilitarian principle of ‘The greatest happiness for the greatest number’, which undergirds so much modern political thought.[6] Pleasure (or, rather, ‘preference satisfaction’) becomes the greatest good; suffering and pain the only evils. Utilitarianism, therefore, invites an examination of the consequences of our actions, studying the effects of our choices on others. Our actions themselves have no intrinsic moral value – what matters is what happens. Our intentions count for nothing; the starting point is preference not idealistic motivation. Reducing ethical choices to a concern for personal preferences and useful consequences sounds like a simplification of life’s moral dilemmas. However, the ethical process involved in arriving at such a decision can be extremely complicated. He writes:
I must, if I am thinking ethically, imagine myself in the situation of all those affected by my action (with the preferences that they have). I must consider the interests of my enemies as well as my friends, and of strangers as well as family. Only if, after taking fully into account the interests and preferences of all these people, I still think the action is better than any alternative open to me, can I genuinely say that I ought to do it. At the same time I must not ignore the long-term effects of fostering family ties, of establishing and promoting reciprocal relationships, and of allowing wrongdoers to benefit from their wrong doing. [7]
Abortion and infanticide
Suffering is, of course, more than just the experience of pain. It has to do with self-conscious awareness of suffering, involving the memory of past freedom from suffering, understanding the causes of suffering, and anticipating the future implications and possible options. An unborn child cannot suffer in this way – and, of course, cannot be said to have personal preferences, whether or not they could ever be expressed. If other people have preferences that the unborn child should not survive, and assuming the procedure can be done painlessly, there remains no moral barrier to terminating the pregnancy. So in his view:
Those who regard the interests of women as overriding the merely potential interests of the foetus are taking their stand on a morally impregnable position.[8]
Furthermore, the situation is essentially unchanged for the newborn child, who does not understand what life is about and therefore can have no preference in the matter. If no one else has a preference that the child should live, infanticide within the first month of life can be morally justified. Here Singer introduces his ethic ofreplaceability. A child may not be wanted for various reasons, such as timing, gender or congenital disease. The decision-making process can be profoundly influenced if the death of an unwanted child subsequently allows the parents the freedom to have a wanted child who would replace it. Such ethics have not endeared him to the disabled community in general. They fear that his views support discrimination against them. Neither have they gone down well in Germany with its painful memories of the eugenics movement for genetic purity.
Euthanasia – voluntary & non-voluntary
Singer’s overthrow of the ‘Sanctity of Human Life Ethic’, replacing it with a ‘Quality of Life Ethic’, comes most sharply into focus when considering voluntary euthanasia. This is most fully discussed in his book, Rethinking Life and Death, where he offers some new rules:[9]
Firstly, we should not see all human lives as of equal worth but recognise that some are more valuable than others. Such judgements should be made on the basis of the individual’s capacity to think, relate and experience. Patients in a persistent vegetative state have none of these faculties. Without consciousness, life has no value. In cases of brain damage making it impossible for the patient to express a preference, this principle obviously opens the door to non-voluntary euthanasia.
Secondly, the taking of human life is not a moral issue in itself; the consequences of the action determine the ethical rightness of it. The preferences of the individual – if they can be expressed – are of central importance.
Thirdly, suicide is not intrinsically wrong. An individual’s desire to die should be respected. Hence, it is ethical for a doctor to assist a suicide in fulfilling the patient’s considered preference.
Animal liberation and vegetarianism
Singer distinguishes human beings in the biological sense from persons, who are rational and self conscious beings. He has no basis for seeing human beings in a different category from other animals. In general, humans have more intelligence and greater self-awareness, but some humans lack these faculties. In the newborn they are undeveloped; in the severely brain damaged they are lost; and in the dementing they are fading day by day. They are humans, but not persons. Some adult animals, however, are remarkably intelligent. They are persons, though not human.
More important for Singer is the division between sentient creatures, which can experience pleasure and suffering, and non-sentient creatures which cannot. Most – but not all – humans come in the first category, as do many animals. Hence the protection afforded to persons should be extended to such non-humans. The division between these categories is not always obvious.[10] Some animals even seem to demonstrate a moral awareness by altruistic behaviour. He cites dolphins helping injured dolphins to breathe, wolves taking food back to the pack, chimpanzees calling others when they find ripe fruit, and gazelles putting their own lives at risk by warning of predators.[11]
The focus of Singer’s concern about animals is the human tendency to think in terms of species. While sexism and racism assert the superiority of one sex or race over another, speciesism asserts that humans are superior to other animals. Such discrimination, in Singer’s view, is indefensible.[12] His philosophy not only rules out all cruelty to self-conscious, sentient beings, which includes adult mammals, but also rules out their killing. Fur coats and leather shoes cannot then be justified, and neither, in general, can eating meat.[13] If animal experimentation can ever be justified, then it must be equally justifiable to perform such experiments on severely mentally-retarded human adults, or normal infants who are not aware of what is being done to them. [14]
Sexuality
‘The moral case for acceptance of sexual relationships between consenting adults that do not harm others is … clear-cut,’ he writes.[15] As long as the consequences of sexual acts fulfil the preferences of those involved and do not harm others, sexual ethics are of little or no importance. In his view, the important ethical issues in the world today are the fact that racial hatred stops people living together, that people are starving in an affluent world, that animals are bred in factory farms, and that we are damaging the ecological system of our planet. He writes:
Once it is generally understood that ethics has no necessary connection with the sexually-obsessed morality of conservative Christianity, a humane and positive ethic could be the basis for a renewal of our social, political and ecological life.[16]
In a review article entitled Heavy Petting,[17] Singer asks what is wrong with human sexual activity with animals. The argument that bestiality is unnatural because it cannot lead to procreation is not good enough, he says, because many widely practised sexual activities, which are seen to be natural, cannot lead to procreation either. Isn’t bestiality cruel and harmful? Not necessarily. Can animals meaningfully give consent to sex? Well, sometimes they initiate it, as for instance a dog rubbing its genitals against a human leg. If the animal shows a preference and there are no harmful consequences, there appear to be no grounds in Singer’s ethical framework to object.
World poverty
Singer castigates Christians for their attitude to world poverty.[18] He sees a major discrepancy between their passion for the sanctity of life argument as it relates to the embryo, the unwanted infant and the terminally ill, and their failure to take seriously – in his view – Christ’s teaching about possessions and the needs of the poor. He sees Christians being concerned for those who express no desire to live while ignoring the lives of countless people who long to hang on to life. Christ’s teaching to the rich young ruler is certainly stark, and the wealth of western Christians is disturbingly great.
Critique of Singer on Christianity
Singer finds it easy not to take Christianity seriously, He writes:
Once we admit that Darwin was right when he argued that human ethics evolved from the social instincts that we inherited from our non-human ancestors, we can put aside the hypothesis of a divine origin for ethics.[19]
He has not written a substantial critique of Christianity, but his general antipathy is clear. He does not understand the dynamics of the gospel of grace, and so has a ‘salvation by works’ understanding of Christian theology, where ethical behaviour is driven by self-interest in rewards [20] and fear of punishments.[21] He is left with ‘a man of straw’ to knock down – or rather, marginalise.
As we have seen, central to his concerns is speciesism and the Judeo-Christian view that mankind is made uniquely in the image of God. He emphasises the Bible’s view that humanity has been given dominion over the animals. This he always describes in terms of dominating rule, never as responsible, caring stewardship. Christians, however, do not believe that animals are their possession, to do with as they think fit. Singer emphasises Genesis 1:28 which speaks of ‘rule’ but ignores Genesis 2 which introduces the ideas of a ‘duty of care’ and also companionship. In fact, there are many references in the Bible to the well-being of animals, which Singer chooses to ignore. These passages qualify and describe how ‘dominion’ over the animals is to be expressed.[22]
In the New Testament, Jesus pointed to God’s provision for the birds, but in saying that people are more valuable than they are, he is clearly not saying that they are without value before God.[23] Singer clearly does not like the way that Jesus cast out demons and sent them into a herd of pigs,[24] but he ignores the significance of Christ challenging the legalism of the Pharisees by asking, ‘If one of you has a son or an ox that falls into a well on the Sabbath day, will you not immediately pull him out?’[25] Graham Cole comments that juxtaposing a child at risk and an ox at risk indicates the expanse of Christ’s circle of compassion.[26] Cole also notes that in his letters, Paul describes God’s ultimate purposes for the whole of creation[27] which Singer fails to consider. In other words, Singer’s treatment of Scripture is misleading and unbalanced, if not unethical. He selects proof texts to support his argument, without trying to see them in their wider context.
Critique of Singer’s utilitarianism
There are several well-documented difficulties with utilitarian philosophy.[28]
1. Consequences
The intellectual challenge of chess is to think through the consequences of a move and predict the knock-on effects. A move you think is brilliant may prove a short cut to being caught in checkmate. The game must be played slowly. The difficulty is that we cannot cope with too many possible alternatives, which is why most of us play chess badly! Only God can see the future; the rest of us have to settle for shrewd guesses. One amusing story about Singer is that he fed a vegetarian diet to his cat – with the result that the cat became very skilled at catching mice! According to Craig and Moreland, the consequences by which the action is to be judged have, ‘an uncertainty that paralyses moral decision-making.’ Furthermore, it ‘brings to centre stage a tentativeness about duty that is not conducive to the development of conviction and character’.[29]
Consider the consequences of sexual activity. Commonly regarded as harmless pleasure, it is far from easy to predict the implications of a given sexual encounter, either emotionally, physically or socially. The consequences of an unwanted pregnancy should be obvious enough, but are frequently overlooked. Many, presumably to their great surprise, have found themselves quickly addicted to a new sexual partner or a new sexual behaviour that becomes very destructive to them and their families. Sexually transmitted diseases – often leading to infertility or cervical cancer – occur commonly and may be incurable, but they rarely seem to be anticipated. The single greatest cause of pain and suffering in the world today is due to the devastation brought by the sexual transmission of HIV, which does not even feature in Singer’s list of ‘the crucial moral questions of our day’.[30] How could he overlook it? We do not know how the virus crossed from monkeys to humans – it could even have occurred through bestiality; whatever happened, the consequences could not have been imagined. Less surprising is his failure to even begrudgingly acknowledge that the only practice that could resolve the HIV epidemic (and do so largely within a generation) is the biblical ideal of one sexual partner for life. How can he think that sexual ethics are irrelevant?
2. Happiness
Each attempt to explain the principle of utilitarianism presents its own difficulties. The best known description is that it seeks ‘the greatest happiness for the greatest number’. Two issues immediately arise that may well be in conflict.
Imagine that I have £1,000,000 to give away. If I was concerned for the greatest happiness, I might decide to give it all to one person and make him very happy indeed. However, if I was concerned for the greatest number, I might give £1 to each of a million people. Many would not even consider thanking me! Yet one might think that giving away money would be among the simpler moral decisions.
But there is a second, more fundamental problem. What exactly is happiness? And if I knew, how might I obtain it and then hold on to it? Those who experience the most intense happiness find they cannot maintain it. It inevitably fades. Similarly, those who experience the deepest tragedies seem, in the passage of time, to recover and once more find things to smile about. It is an extraordinary feature of life that some of the poorest people are among the most contented, while some of the wealthiest are among the most wretched. This is true of individuals, but it is also true of societies: ‘Ghana, Mexico, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States all share similar life satisfaction scores despite per capita income varying ten-fold between the richest and the poorest country’.[31] If happiness is so poorly correlated to wealth, the same study, among others, shows that it is strongly correlated to the traditional family unit. The divorce rate in Britain has quadrupled since 1970, and currently 40,000 children a year are prescribed anti-depressants. Therefore, one might suppose that the morality of actions that undermine the family unit, cannot be advocated on utilitarian grounds – again underlining the central importance of sexual ethics for human well-being.
3. Reductionism
Preference consequentialism seems a flat earth way of doing ethics. The whole process is reduced to a two-dimensional view of life: our actions are evaluated only in terms of preferences and consequences (whether or not they are actually predictable or measurable). There is no recognition of ultimate goodness, no acknowledgement of the importance of motive and intent, no significance attached to the agonies of conscience or the depths of moral revulsion, no sense of overall meaning and purpose, no exploration of the nature of self-denying love rather than ‘preference satisfaction’, no realisation of the need for forgiveness, no understanding of the fallibility of human moral character and no basis for considering justice. Nor does Singer allow the subtle influences of our relationships in moral decision making, even though his own rationality proved an insufficient guide in dealing with his mother’s death from Alzheimer’s disease.[32] His tough talk about euthanasia evaporated in the face of the personal reality. Morality is evaluated only on our preferences and the consequences of our actions, butmost of us realize that there is rather more going on here as we make our choices.
In his letter to the Romans, Paul teaches that certain truths about right behaviour are instinctive. We don’t need to be taught them, but if we suppress such intuitive awareness, it will affect our rational grasp of ethical judgements.[34] In Paul’s phrase, we will become ‘futile in our thinking.’
Several aspects of Singer’s teaching cause deep intuitive revulsion – not just in Christians, but in people who make many different assumptions about the nature of truth and ethics. Singer claims the taboos are falling one by one [35] (late abortion, infanticide in the first month of life, non-voluntary euthanasia and bestiality are four such categories, which he clearly advocates). However, there are some taboos he seems reluctant to discuss. Given his grounds for justifying sexual activities between consenting adults, how can he raise adequate objections to promiscuity or, indeed, prostitution?[36] And what about incest, if there are no harmful consequences and both parties desire it? As there is no internationally agreed age at which children become adults, he is also left without strong grounds for condemning paedophilia. Why is he so quiet about that explosive subject? Is it not another major, modern, ethical issue? What has he got to say about it? Chuck Colson has written:
Every rationale that Singer employs to justify (sexual) activities with animals can be applied to relations with children. Actually, the case is stronger since the “physical similarities” Singer identifies are greater in the case of children.[37]
5. Is it liveable?
Gordon Preece maintains that preference utilitarianism is actually unliveable: Singer’s demanding universal utilitarianism is much more opposed to individual pleasure and almost infinitely guilt-inducing compared to Christianity.[38] The problems of the entire world are set before us. And it is not just the greatest happiness for the greatest number of humans which must direct our moral choices, but of all sentient mammals. The task is overwhelming.
Of course, the demands of world poverty distress us all. Historically, however, it has never been like this. In apostolic times, for instance, a church community might learn from a traveller about a distant fellowship experiencing hard times, and collect some money to help them. In general, they remained entirely ignorant of the human condition worldwide. For the most part, people lived in small, self-contained communities within which they learned to carry one another’s burdens.[39] In such communities, the New Testament asserts our primary responsibility for our immediate family,[40] but then to care for widows and orphans,[41] to show hospitality to strangers[42] and, as opportunity arises, to do good to everyone.[43]But in all this, the family is central. As the fundamental building block of society, it is without rival. Certainly states should provide welfare, but who would prefer institutionalized care? Any philosophy or political policy which damages or undermines the integrity of the family unit, as Singer does in dismissing the importance of sexual ethics, undermines the central structure of care in the community throughout the world. (I think immediately of my patients: a man struck blind in his 30s from Multiple Sclerosis, cared for by his wife and 10 yr old daughter; a single mother helped by her grand-parents to care for her teenage daughter with Cystic Fibrosis; the mutual care a 90 yr old couple give to each other, supported by their children; an awkward old man living alone in a caravan, scooped up and taken home by his caring nephew.) Singer’s quest for a renewal of our social and political life, disconnected from traditional sexual ethics, is a pipe-dream.[44]
Today, however, the tragedies of the world find their way onto the screens in our living rooms. We are not absolved responsibility for how we respond,[45] but the New Testament is realistic saying that we should ‘not grow weary of doing good … as we have opportunity.’[46] We are not to lay up treasures on earth but in heaven,[47] and hard choices face each of us. For all that Christians say in criticizing our consumerist society, we still drive expensive cars, make our homes very comfortable and fly around the world for pleasure with seemingly little concern. So we should take note of Singer’s serious challenge for Christians to behave Christianly.[48]
Yet utilitarianism gives us no respite. If we were to take Singer at face value, our lives would be minimalist. We could hardly waste money buying books of any sort; education would be basic and presumably prevent the sort of expensive researches which might lead to significant benefits for the world’s poor. We could forget about the arts and entertainment – luxuries no one should afford. In order to remain sane with such pressing demands, Singer apparently gives away 20% of his income. This is impressive, and certainly puts many Christians to shame. [49] But given the needs of the world, the figure is quite arbitrary. If you have a large income, far more than enough to supply your basic needs, why not make it 50%? However, on consequentialist thinking, any such self-inflicted poverty/misery is endured to bring the greatest amount of happiness to the greatest number. Is it defeating the primary objective of happiness to advocate miserly restraint? So we return to some very basic questions. Perhaps we should not give away more than we are happy to give, so that we don’t add to the pot of suffering. We are told, ‘God loves a cheerful giver’.[50]
At the end of the day, we can understand the idea of acting morally towards the people we meet. It is quite possible, if more difficult, to act morally to those we do not know. Acting morally to everyone in the world is quite beyond us, but acting morally and equally to every sentient mammal robs morality of any real meaning. The best we can do is respond as and when we have the opportunity. Christians have grounds for believing that God is ultimately responsible for his world, but has put us in caring and supportive family units so that we might be agents of his mercy and compassion.
The point of view of the universe
Jesus took as the central plank of his ethical teaching, the Old Testament commandment, ‘You should love your neighbour as yourself.’[51] Not surprisingly, he was then asked the crucial question, ‘Who is my neighbour?’ In answering it, Jesus told one of the world’s greatest stories: ‘A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho …’[52] The despised foreigner from Samaria is cast as the rescuer, going out of his way to help the injured man at significant personal inconvenience, risk and cost – he is the true neighbour. Singer sees the commandment, with Christ’s explanation as to who our neighbour is, as a universal ethic. It is also expressed as Christ’s ‘golden rule’ that you should, ‘Do to others what you would have them do to you.’[53] Singer claims it lifts us from our subjective, personal point of view to a wider, objective perspective, encouraging equal consideration of interests, ultimately even what he calls ‘the point of view of the universe’.[54] In supporting this idea, he appeals to ‘all the major ethical traditions’, naming Rabbinic Judaism, Hinduism and the teaching of Confucius, whom he claims ‘appear to have reached the same position independently of each other.’[55] He does not mention the Koran, which has no similar statement, nor any other religion.
What he fails to notice is that Christ alone puts the golden rule in the positive form. The other three all say in effect that you should not do to others what you would notwant them to do to you.[56] The Rabbinic version says, “Do not do to your neighbour what is hateful to you; this is the whole law, all the rest is commentary”, which seems a far cry from the tone and intention of the Old Testament commandment. Confucius justified his saying with self-interest: “What you do not wish upon yourself, extend not to others. Then there will be no resentment against you, either in the family or in the state.” This, it seems, is the wisdom of the world. It is a recipe for detachment. It concerns what you shouldn’t do, not what you should do. It presumably, in Christ’s story of the Good Samaritan, enabled the priest and the Levite to pass by on the other side. What Christ taught was quite unique. We cannot pass by. We are under obligation to treat others as we would wish to be treated.
In the modern world of instant communications about the most awful disasters, Christ’s golden rule may seem overwhelming. However, acknowledging our failings before a merciful God, finding his forgiveness, realising that he understands our limitations, opening our selves up to his good purposes, realizing, as Jesus taught, that ‘each day has enough trouble of its own’,[57] and also that this is God’s world and not ours, the Christian is not overwhelmed – either by guilt or the size of the task. We are called to do good according to the opportunity we have, knowing that ‘to him whom much is given, much is required.’[58] So Christ’s way is quite possible, but Singer’s is crushing.
Conclusion
In dismissing Christianity, Singer recognises that he has been unable to find a higher ethic than Christ’s, but is less than persuaded that he has found a compelling alternative as a basis for such ethical thinking. He writes:
Ethical truths are not written into the fabric of the universe … If there were no beings with desires or preferences of any kind, nothing would be of value and ethics would lack all content.[59]
However, there are not only the subjective values of each individual. He writes:
The possibility of being led, by reasoning,[60] to the point of view of the universe [i.e. Christ’s golden rule] provides as much ‘objectivity’ as there can be … it is as close to an objective basis for ethics as there is to find.[61]
Again he concedes:
It would be nice to be able to reach a stronger conclusion than this about the basis for ethics.[62]
Unfortunately, he does not explore the objective, rational evidence that an ultimate moral being exists, who has uniquely revealed his own character as the basis for our ethics. The existence of God, for instance, can be argued on the basis of the very existence of moral values. As philosopher William Lane Craig expresses it:[63]
If God does not exist, objective moral values do not exist.
However, evil exists
Therefore objective moral values exist – namely, some things are evil
Therefore God exists
By creating humans in his image, God not only gives us an inherent foundation for our moral values, he also equips us with the intelligence we need to make moral and rational choices. Had Singer acknowledged the uniqueness of Christ’s golden rule, seeing it as ‘the point of view of the universe’ just might have been a clue to the unique authority of Christ the Teacher! Without such an understanding, Singer is left floundering when he writes about the meaning and significance of human life:
The possibility of taking the point of view of the universe overcomes the problem of finding meaning in our lives.[64]
He concludes:
Most important of all, you will know that you have not lived and died for nothing, because you will have become part of the great tradition of those who have responded to the amount of pain and suffering in the universe by trying to make the world a better place.[65]
As the violins fade, we might well ask, ‘Is that enough to live by?’
References
[1] He has recently updated the subject in In Defence of Animals: The Second Wave (Blackwells, 2005)
[2] Peter Singer, How Are We To Live? (Oxford University Press, 1993)
[3] Peter Singer, Ethics, (Oxford Readers (OUP), 1994) p.5
[4] Peter Singer, How are we to live? (Opus (OUP), 1993) p.9
[6] Singer stands in the tradition of the utilitarianism of Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832) and John Stuart Mill (1806-73). For more information, see New Dictionary of Christian Ethics and Pastoral Theology under ‘Bentham’ and ‘Mill’, or http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Bentham and www. wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Stuart_Mill (accessed on 25 January 2006)
[9] Peter Singer, Rethinking Life and Death. (Melbourne 1994) pp. 190–198
[10] Singer says that people write to him with their questions – ‘whether I think prawns can feel pain,’ for example (Singer, How are we to live? p. 191
[22] For instance, there are laws for the well-being of animals (e.g. Deut. 25:4). The wisdom literature teaches that, ‘A righteous man cares for the needs of his animal’ (Prov. 12:10). Singer also fails to notice God’s compassion expressed in the story of Jonah: ‘Nineveh has more than 120,000 people living in spiritual darkness, not to mention all the animals. Shouldn’t I feel sorry for such a great city?’ (Jon. 4:11).
[31] E. Crooks and S. Briscoe, ‘How to be Happy’, FinancialTimes, 27 December 2003, as reported by Dean Giustini, British Medical Journal, 24 December 2005
[32] Apparently, when Singer’s mother was suffering from advanced Alzheimer’s Disease, he paid for her nursing care himself but did not advise euthanasia. He defended this by saying that his sister’s preferences had been an important factor. See Stuart Jeffries, ‘Moral Maze’, The Observer, 23 July 2005 –books.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,12084,1533705,00.html (accessed on 30 January 2006)
[36] The use of prostitutes in UK has apparently doubled in the past 10 years, especially among young men who buy sex much as they would any other leisure activity. (Survey reported in Journal of Sexually Transmitted Diseases, December 2005)
[49] Recent evidence has shown that Christians are not as mean as Singer implies. A survey of 1,200 evangelical Christians shows that they give away nine times as much as the average householder in the UK, donating, on average, 12% of their net income annually (reported by Ruth Gledhill, The Times, 4 January 2006)
[60] Singer wrongly asserts that others got there by reasoning. Jesus said he taught what the Father gave him to say (John 12: 49), and Christians, too, understand it by revelation through the Spirit-inspired gospel accounts of Jesus’s life and teaching. No-one, it seems, got there by reason alone.
Francis Schaeffer predicted July 21, 2015 would come when the video “Second Planned Parenthood Senior Executive Haggles Over Baby Parts Prices, Changes Abortion Methods” would be released!!!! Al Mohler wrote the article ,”FIRST-PERSON: They indeed were prophetic,” Jan 29, 2004, and in this great article he noted: . “We stand today on the edge of a […]
I just wanted to note that I have spoken on the phone several times and corresponded with Dr. Paul D. Simmons who is very much pro-choice. (He is quoted in the article below.) He actually helped me write an article to submit to Americans United for the Separation of Church and State back in the […]
On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner Dr. […]
_______________________ Very good article on Francis Schaeffer. Tom Wolfe. Peter Singer!! Presuppositional Life and Learning Posted on November 19, 2013 by Dr. Steven Garber Francis Schaeffer. Tom Wolfe. Peter Singer. I spent the morning with the Capitol Fellows thinking about these three men, and their ideas. The first one I studied and studied with many […]
The Staple Singers Part 1 click to enlarge Mavis Staples From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Mavis Staples Staples performing in Brooklyn, New York in 2007 Background information Birth name Mavis Staples Born July 10, 1939 (age 74) Origin Chicago, Illinois, U.S. Genres Rhythm and blues, soul, gospel […]
Francis Schaeffer noted, “In this flow there was also the period of psychedelic rock, an attempt to find this experience without drugs, by the use of a certain type of music. This was the period of the Beatles’ Revolver (1966) and Strawberry Fields Forever (1967)…The psychedelic began with their records REVOLVER, STRAWBERRY FIELDS FOREVER, AND […]
The Staple Singers Part 1 Mavis Staples to give concert at Christ Church in Little Rock Posted by Lindsey Millar on Fri, Sep 6, 2013 at 2:48 PM click to enlarge Whoa. One of the greatest soul divas OF ALL TIME is coming to Little Rock next month. Christ Church Little Rock is hosting Mavis […]
In my last post I demonstrated that George Bernard Shaw was a vocal communist and that probably had a lot to do with his inclusion on the cover of SGT PEPPER’S but today I will look more into more this great playwright’s views. Did you know that Shaw wrote the play that MY FAIR LADY […]
Transcript and Video of Francis Schaeffer speech in 1983 on the word “Evangelical” _____________ SOUNDWORD LABRI CONFERENCE VIDEO – Names and Issues – Francis A. Schaeffer Published on Apr 20, 2014 This video is from the 1983 L’Abri Conference in Atlanta. The full lecture with Q&A time has been included. The lecture was also previously […]
Surgeon General of the United States In office January 21, 1982 – October 1, 1989 President Ronald Reagan George H. W. Bush Francis Schaeffer Founder of the L’Abri community Born Francis August Schaeffer January 30, 1912 Died May 15, 1984 (aged 72) I truly believe that many of the problems we have today in the USA are […]
My good friend Rev. Sherwood Haisty Jr. and I used to discuss which men were the ones who really influenced our lives and Adrian Rogers had influenced us both more than anybody else. During the 1990′s I actually made it a practice to write famous atheists and scientists that were mentioned by Adrian Rogers and […]
What is the impact of worldview on our culture and our society? Are we alarmists to suggest that we are engaged in a war between two worldviews–Christianity and Humanism that may determine the fate of our lives on earth and for many, in their lives to come? A worldview assumes statements about where we came from, what is wrong with our world, and what needs to be done to fix it, to be true. These two worldviews provide antithetical answers to these questions. Today, in the United States and in many Western world countries, the humanistic worldview has the upper hand.
Worldview influences our day to day living. Francis Schaeffer has communicated the point throughout our study that “people function on the basis of their worldview more consistently than even they themselves may realize. The problem is not outward things. The problem is having, and then acting upon, the right worldview–the worldview which gives men and women the truth of what is.” The effects of worldview spread throughout society. To understand the practical consequences of worldview on our culture and society we will consider its force on the value we place on human life, the family and morality. In this session we will look at the consequences of worldview on human life.
What is the meaning of life? What is the meaning of human existence? What is the value of human life? These are among some of the most difficult and perplexing questions that our culture struggles to answer. Consider the key problems of our time that revolve around these questions of the value of human life. Abortion, euthanasia, genetic engineers, cloning, assisted suicide, are difficulties whose answers will depend on the value one gives to a human life. These answers will depend on how one answers the question of where we came from.
From the perspective of Christianity and Judaism, life is a miracle, a sacred gift from God. Man and woman created in the image of God. If life is a gift from God, then, He, as our creator, establishes the boundaries of when we live and when we die.
Humanism suggests several possible answers to where life came from and none these answers consider God. A chance biological accident, a big bang, millions of years spent evolving from a little germ to become a big germ, or nothing created from nothing becoming something. Today, millions accept the Humanist view of where we came from, that man and life, is an accident.
How we understand, the origin of life is crucial in determining what we believe about whom we are, the value of life and the reason for man’s existence. What we understand about the origin of life has become the “defining debate of our age.” The Christian’s conviction about the worth of life is driven by the biblical revelation of man’s origins. Realize that one does not have to be a Christian or a Jew to hold to this belief. For centuries, those raised in a culture of Judeo-Christian traditions, understood life to have value because all life was made in the image of God. However, today, we are now living in a culture of death rather than a culture of life.
At the foot of the culture of death is the belief that man is an accident, a machine that has a useful purpose but when he can no longer fill that useful purpose that his life is no longer worthwhile–destroy it. From the womb with the unborn to the bed of the old, the sick, the dying, the disabled, the weak, and the defenseless, by denying the value of life that has been created in the image of God, we now follow the path of pragmatism and utilitarianism and destroy life when it becomes a practical matter to do so. How else can one understand how assisted suicide (euthanasia) is a protected constitutional right in one state and paid for occasionally by the state’s Medicaid program? Infanticide is now being openly advocated and practiced by many doctors around the world.
If man is the judge of all truth and not God, as Rene’ Descartes believed, God is irrelevant and if God is irrelevant, the morality and social order that are based on a belief in God are irrelevant as well. The “death of God” brings the “death of morality.” Whether it is the utopia promised by Sigmund Freud when man learned to release his “impulses” or the drug culture of the 60’s, or the absolute freedom from biblical values, the disposing of life has come to have no ethical consequence in our culture. Schaeffer uses Roe versus Wade (1973) as an example of the results of culture that no longer sees life but “choice” as important. How else can we explain that the Supreme Court arrived at the conclusion that a “human fetus” is not a person? The Court had to argue that although the fetus is biologically human, it is not a person. Does this remind you of the parsing of the word “is” by the prominent linguist “who shall not be named?”
A famous test case occurred in 1982 in Indiana, when an infant known as Baby Doe was born with Down syndrome. Children with Down syndrome typically suffer some retardation and other difficulties; while presenting a great challenge to their parents and families, they often live joyful and relatively independent lives. As it happened, Baby Doe also had an improperly formed esophagus, which meant that food put into his mouth could not reach his stomach. Surgery might have remedied this problem, but his parents and physician decided against it, opting for painkillers instead. Within a few days, Baby Doe starved to death. The Reagan administration responded to the case by drafting the ‘Baby Doe guidelines,’ which mandated life-sustaining care for such handicapped newborns. But the guidelines were opposed by the American Medical Association and were eventually struck down by the Supreme Court.
It appears, in this case, the baby was murdered because it was retarded.
Peter Singer of Princeton University argues that infanticide should be seen as an ethical option and an essential part of a woman’s reproductive choice. Singer argues that parents may have a responsibility to terminate the life of a child born with serious genetic abnormalities or physical disabilities. According to Singer, human dignity is not inherent in every human, but is achieved when one demonstrates specific human abilities such as the capacity to communicate and to relate to others. In a book coauthored by Singer in 1985, he says: “We think that some infants with severe disability should be killed.” How, does a professor, who holds one of the most respected chairs in bioethics at one of our leading universities, have such a cavalier attitude about taking the life of a fellow human being?
Yet it is not just a problem in the United States. In 2006 it was reported that the government of the Netherlands is now considering what many think to be unthinkable–the creation of legal standards for pediatric euthanasia. According to the London Times, a committee will soon be set up to regulate the practice, which doctors have quietly been performing for years in the Netherlands.
The London Times article suggests that the Netherlands would likely issue regulations similar to the Groningen Protocol, a document drawn up in 2004 by the Groningen University Medical Center to establish internal guidelines for its euthanasia program that ended the lives of 22 disabled newborns from 1997 to 2004.
According to Colleen Campbell, a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, theGroningen Protocol declared a newborn subject to euthanasia if “his diagnosis and prognosis are certain,” his suffering is “hopeless and unbearable,” and his quality of life is “very poor,” according to the child’s parents and “at least one independent doctor.” What do we do when the “quality of life” used in considering to let a baby die includes things like race, ethnicity, and family income?
Peter Singer pictured below:
Return for a moment to Professor Singer, who advocates allowing parents to kill disabled babies because they are “nonpersons.” Professor Singer believes that one is a nonperson until they are rational and self-conscious. Singer does not stop here, he goes on to advocate the killing of any people, of any age, who are deemed incompetent, if their families decide that their lives are not worth living. What do you think will happen to a culture that popularizes such beliefs?
The battle being fought here is not abortion or infanticide or euthanasia, the battle is about worldview. A worldview that believes in God and the sanctity of life versus a worldview that believes in the autonomy of man, the individual’s right to do as they see fit. The argument for the autonomy of man is couched in terms like compassion, patients’ rights, and there are few voices willing to stand and defend the defenseless. We are in a rush to get the defenseless, the unborn, the unproductive, the infirm, the disabled and the aged out of our way so we can get back to living life as it was meant to be lived without all these useless lives being in our way or draining our resources. Is it not ironic that “a supposedly exalted view of human reason has led to a degraded view of life?” The Christian worldview remains rooted in the “imago Dei,” the image of God in us. It is by the biblical doctrine of creation that the Christian understands that life has value, that life has a worth that is not to be traded for convenience. Life does have meaning and value.
An example, of what our future world might be like, is given us in a strangely prophetic novel written in 1932 by Aldous Huxley, Brave New World (BNW). Brave New Worldtouches on much that we have spoken of in Francis Schaeffer’s How Should We Then Live? BNW stresses the State’s control over new and powerful technologies. The State uses its rigid control over sexual mores and reproductive rights to control society. Reproductive rights are controlled through an authoritarian system which, sterilizes about two-thirds of women, requires the rest to use contraceptives, and surgically removes ovaries when it needs to produce new humans. The act of sex is controlled by a system of social rewards for promiscuity and lack of commitment. The process is to ensure a perfect species capable of living in perfect harmony. It promotes a society that is free from all the encumbrances of family and child rearing as those are handled by the state. By using an all-purpose drug and free sex, the State strives to provide an environment where the pursuit of happiness is virtually guaranteed. Life is perpetual bliss and when life becomes a burden or inconvenient, it is ended.
Today, we live in our own BNW. Genetic engineering has almost reached the point that we can create people without defects–this is the final expression of man’s autonomy. By developing artificial wombs to house fertilized eggs, we have come perilously close to attaining the moment when our capabilities exceed our moral and ethical reach. Most of us would support assisted reproduction if it were used to aid in restoring a natural function but what about when it involves something that goes way beyond natural function. How do we deal with the capability of a woman being impregnated by her son-in-law and gives birth to her daughter’s child? How should we handle the disposal of fertilized eggs that could become fetuses? How should we deal with surrogate parenthood?
The future of the world does not lie in the test tube or artificial wombs. The future of the world does not lie in a government focused on providing complete happiness for its citizens. The future of the world does not lie in removing the infirm, the aged, the ugly, the disabled, the dying. The future of mankind lies in the simple truth that mankind was created in the image of God and that life was and is a gift from God–not man. Life has worth, value, meaning, only because we are created in God’s image. Woes be on us when the day comes and man is created in his own image.
Dr. Francis Schaeffer – The Biblical flow of Truth & History (intro)
Francis Schaeffer predicted July 21, 2015 would come when the video “Second Planned Parenthood Senior Executive Haggles Over Baby Parts Prices, Changes Abortion Methods” would be released!!!! Al Mohler wrote the article ,”FIRST-PERSON: They indeed were prophetic,” Jan 29, 2004, and in this great article he noted: . “We stand today on the edge of a […]
I just wanted to note that I have spoken on the phone several times and corresponded with Dr. Paul D. Simmons who is very much pro-choice. (He is quoted in the article below.) He actually helped me write an article to submit to Americans United for the Separation of Church and State back in the […]
On November 21, 2014 I received a letter from Nobel Laureate Harry Kroto and it said: …Please click on this URL http://vimeo.com/26991975 and you will hear what far smarter people than I have to say on this matter. I agree with them. Harry Kroto _________________ Below you have picture of 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner Dr. […]
_______________________ Very good article on Francis Schaeffer. Tom Wolfe. Peter Singer!! Presuppositional Life and Learning Posted on November 19, 2013 by Dr. Steven Garber Francis Schaeffer. Tom Wolfe. Peter Singer. I spent the morning with the Capitol Fellows thinking about these three men, and their ideas. The first one I studied and studied with many […]
The Staple Singers Part 1 click to enlarge Mavis Staples From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Mavis Staples Staples performing in Brooklyn, New York in 2007 Background information Birth name Mavis Staples Born July 10, 1939 (age 74) Origin Chicago, Illinois, U.S. Genres Rhythm and blues, soul, gospel […]
Francis Schaeffer noted, “In this flow there was also the period of psychedelic rock, an attempt to find this experience without drugs, by the use of a certain type of music. This was the period of the Beatles’ Revolver (1966) and Strawberry Fields Forever (1967)…The psychedelic began with their records REVOLVER, STRAWBERRY FIELDS FOREVER, AND […]
The Staple Singers Part 1 Mavis Staples to give concert at Christ Church in Little Rock Posted by Lindsey Millar on Fri, Sep 6, 2013 at 2:48 PM click to enlarge Whoa. One of the greatest soul divas OF ALL TIME is coming to Little Rock next month. Christ Church Little Rock is hosting Mavis […]
In my last post I demonstrated that George Bernard Shaw was a vocal communist and that probably had a lot to do with his inclusion on the cover of SGT PEPPER’S but today I will look more into more this great playwright’s views. Did you know that Shaw wrote the play that MY FAIR LADY […]
Transcript and Video of Francis Schaeffer speech in 1983 on the word “Evangelical” _____________ SOUNDWORD LABRI CONFERENCE VIDEO – Names and Issues – Francis A. Schaeffer Published on Apr 20, 2014 This video is from the 1983 L’Abri Conference in Atlanta. The full lecture with Q&A time has been included. The lecture was also previously […]
Surgeon General of the United States In office January 21, 1982 – October 1, 1989 President Ronald Reagan George H. W. Bush Francis Schaeffer Founder of the L’Abri community Born Francis August Schaeffer January 30, 1912 Died May 15, 1984 (aged 72) I truly believe that many of the problems we have today in the USA are […]
My good friend Rev. Sherwood Haisty Jr. and I used to discuss which men were the ones who really influenced our lives and Adrian Rogers had influenced us both more than anybody else. During the 1990′s I actually made it a practice to write famous atheists and scientists that were mentioned by Adrian Rogers and […]
I spent the morning with the Capitol Fellows thinking about these three men, and their ideas. The first one I studied and studied with many years ago, when I was the age of the Fellows– dropping out of college, living in communes in California and Europe, asking questions that college couldn’t answer.
The other two I began reading years later. Wolfe is a novelist, a storyteller who is captured by the soul of America, and decade by decade he writes one more time about who we are, and how we live—from “The Right Stuff” to “Bonfire of the Vanities” to “A Man in Full” to “I Am Charlotte Simmons” to “Back to Blood.” But he is also an essayist, and the piece for today was “Sorry, But Your Soul Just Died,” first published in Forbes, in which he takes up the sociobiologist E.O. Wilson, arguing against his materialist determinism and his reductionist view of human beings, viz. “The fix is in—we’re wired and that’s it.”
And Singer is a professor of philosophy at Princeton University, best known for his utilitarian ethics. In the one of the most ironic and tragic moments in the history of higher education, he was chosen to lead Princeton’s Center for Humane Values. The New Yorker article we drew on was titled, “The Dangerous Philosopher,” as Singer has widely written that those unable to contribute to society should be “let go,” euphemistically speaking. As a film of an earlier generation put it, “They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?” Except of course, when it’s your mother—and then you choose otherwise. You will need to read it yourself.
I had asked the Fellows to read them together, but especially Wolfe and Singer in light of Schaeffer. While most of us don’t think about “presuppositions” in our daily discourse, their reality is the stuff of life for everyone everywhere. We do see the world in distinctive ways. We do make choices about what matters and doesn’t matter because we believe some things do matter, and some things don’t matter. Schaeffer called those beliefs, presuppositions; Dooyeweerd called them “prê-theoretical commitments.” Either way, we all think by them, choose by them, and live by them.
I showed a film short by a friend, Brian Godawa, “Cruel Logic,” to begin class. Part of a longer film, it is a brilliant story about the way that beliefs shape behavior. In the most simple terms, Godawa allows us to ponder presuppositions, taking us into a sordid story of a psychopath who forces a University of California professor known for his utilitarian ethics– undergirded by his pre-theoretical commitment to materialistic determinism –to “own” his beliefs. Hold onto your chair as you watch this.
Atheism/Evolution PUT TO THE TEST – “Cruel Logic” Short Film
Uploaded on Jan 22, 2012
This short film, called Cruel Logic, which was written and filmed by Brian Godawa of http://www.godawa.com/ is a perfect example of what atheism/evolution would look like if taken to its natural conclusions. EVERY Atheist is so inconsistent and would act just like this professor, if put in the same situation.
The Fellows did well, taking the insights and commitments of each one seriously, asking hard questions where they should, and pushing themselves to answers when possible.
When all is said and done, I want them to learn to read well, both the meaning of their own beliefs about life and death, meaning and responsibility, God and the world, but also the culture that is theirs, full as it is of hope and horror, of longings that make or break the possibility of human flourishing. When our three hours was done, I smiled, knowing that we were further up and further in to the task of learning to read with the eyes of our hearts—which is what the truest leaning always is, because it is what presuppositional learning always is, seeing and hearing from our hearts as we do.
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___________________________________________________________________________ Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY” Whatever…HTTHR ___________________ Woody Allen on Ingmar Bergman and the death. Woody Allen et Marshall McLuhan : « If life were only like this! » What Makes Life Worth Living? – Answered by Woody Allen. ______________ Diane Keaton et Woody Allen What Makes Life Worth Living? _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Dr. Francis Schaeffer – […]
___________ Francis Schaeffer pictured below: ____ Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode 8 – The Age of Fragmentation NoMirrorHDDHrorriMoN In the book HOW SHOULD WE THEN LIVE? Schaeffer notes: Especially in the sixties the major philosophic statements which received a wide hearing were made through films. These philosophic movies reached many more people than philosophic writings […]
In this post we are going to see that through the years humanist thought has encouraged artists like Michelangelo to think that the future was extremely bright versus the place today where many artist who hold the humanist and secular worldview are very pessimistic. In contrast to Michelangelo’s DAVID when humanist man thought he […]
________________ Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode VII – The Age of Non Reason Francis Schaeffer- How Should We Then Live? -8- The Age of Fragmentation Joseph Rozak· https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LEmwy_dI2j0 ___________________________ ___________________________ ___________________ Miles Davis and Andy below: ______________________ Dali and Warhol below: ________- __________________ Francis Schaeffer with his son Franky pictured below. Francis and Edith (who passed away in 2013) opened L’ Abri in 1955 in Switzerland. How Should […]
_________ John, Yoko and Warhol pictured below: ________________________ The Clash meets Warhol: ______________________ ________________ ________ Andy Warhol and members of The Factory: Gerard Malanga, poet; Viva, actress; Paul Morrissey, director; Taylor Mead, actor; Brigid Polk, actress; Joe Dallesandro, actor; Andy Warhol, artist, New York, October 9, 1969 (picture below) _____________________ Francis Schaeffer “BASIS FOR […]
Recently I got to see this piece of art by Andy Warhol of Dolly Parton at Crystal Bridges Museum in Bentonville, Arkansas: Andy Warhol, Dolly Parton (1985) Synthetic polymer paint and silkscreen ink on canvas 42 x 42 in. (106.7 x 106.7 cm) ___________ Susan Anton, Sylvester Stallone and Andy Warhol pictured […]
How Should We Then Live The Age of Non Reason Scott87508 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode 8 – The Age of Fragmentation NoMirrorHDDHrorriMoN Francis Schaeffer pictured below: ___________ Francis Schaeffer has written extensively on art and culture spanning the last 2000 years and here are some posts I have done on this subject before : Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 10 “Final Choices” , episode 9 […]
________ Today I am looking at Jacob Bronowski and his contribution to spreading the thought of Charles Darwin to a modern generation. The artist Ellen Gallagher is one of those in today’s modern generation that talks about how evolution is pictured in his art works. What are some of the observations that Francis Schaeffer […]
Dr. Francis schaeffer – The flow of Materialism(from Part 4 of Whatever happened to human race?) Dr. Francis Schaeffer – The Biblical flow of Truth & History (intro) Francis Schaeffer – The Biblical Flow of History & Truth (1) Dr. Francis Schaeffer – The Biblical Flow of Truth […]