Jumi
Well-Known Member
If you(not speaking about just you but in general) don't wish to have bodily autonomy yourself then perhaps you are fine with others not having it either. Otherwise you're going to have to accept that others have as much right to it as yourself regardless of how much stronger you are from an infant or a weak and poor outcast. It's a bleak picture to me if the weak are deemed unfit to live.Religion and philosophy do heavily overlap, and this is a debate thread. So, again, I propose, why is it morally wrong to cause harm to something alive? And if you could, without the usual run of the mill positions of bodily autonomy. Just because everybody says it doesn't make it correct.
Like I said, it's a moral code. That is it's the one at the base of any healthy society. You might wish to debate it from some view outside, such as those title themselves philosophers today are wont to, but it doesn't change the fact that it's morally wrong to harm or kill other self-ordered units without reason.