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If so, there might be a way to bind them to the view_context. Or I could definitely pass the view_context explicitly as the first parameter.

#307·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·CriticismCriticized11 pending criticism

Does that mean they wouldn’t have access to the view_context? If so, calling helper methods from inside these class methods wouldn’t be possible.

#305·Dennis HackethalOP revised over 1 year ago·Original #304·CriticismCriticized11 pending criticism

Does that mean they wouldn’t have the view_context? If so, calling helper methods from inside these class methods wouldn’t be possible.

#304·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·CriticismCriticized11 pending criticism

Hiccdown methods should live in Rails helpers as class methods. That way, the problem described in #302 is solved – methods can be referenced unambiguously:

ProductsHelper.index
StoresHelper.index
#303·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticized33 pending criticismsArchived

Hiccdown methods should live in Rails helpers as instance methods.

#302·Dennis HackethalOP revised over 1 year ago·Original #300·Criticized22 pending criticismsArchived

That isn’t a good idea because Hiccdown methods often share the same conventional names (index, show, etc), which can and does lead to conflict.

#301·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticism

Hiccdown methods should live in Rails helpers.

#300·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticized11 pending criticismArchived

I’m pro abortion but I have some pro life in me.

Banning the abortion of a zygote seems ridiculous. So does aborting a seven-month-old fetus.

Why not go with: you can abort until the nervous system develops.

Clearly, an embryo without a nervous system can’t be sentient and thus can’t be a person, right? And as long as it’s not a person, it doesn’t have any rights.

According to https://www.neurosciencefoundation.org/post/brain-development-in-fetus, “an embryo’s brain and nervous system begin to develop at around the 6-week mark.” And: “At as early as 8 weeks (about 2 months), you can see physical evidence of the brain working (the electric impulses) as ultrasounds show the embryo moving.”

This idea is for viable pregnancies only. Other considerations may apply for non-viable ones.

#299·Dennis HackethalOP revised over 1 year ago·Original #104· Battle tested

Clearly, a fetus without a nervous system can’t be sentient and thus can’t be a person, right?

It’s not considered a fetus until week 9, at which point the nervous system has already begun building.

The correct word to use here is ‘embryo’.

#298·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticism

If an already-born person is deadly ill, that doesn’t mean you can kill them. Why should that be any different for an unborn person?

#279·Dennis HackethalOP revised over 1 year ago·Original #278·Criticism

If an already-born person is deadly ill, that doesn’t mean you can kill them.

#278·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·CriticismCriticized11 pending criticism

What happens if only one of two twins is non-viable but abortion would kill both?

#277·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticism

I’m pro abortion but I have some pro life in me.

Banning the abortion of a zygote seems ridiculous. So does aborting a seven-month-old fetus.

Why not go with: you can abort until the nervous system develops.

Clearly, a fetus without a nervous system can’t be sentient and thus can’t be a person, right? And as long as it’s not a person, it doesn’t have any rights.

According to https://www.neurosciencefoundation.org/post/brain-development-in-fetus, “an embryo’s brain and nervous system begin to develop at around the 6-week mark.” And: “At as early as 8 weeks (about 2 months), you can see physical evidence of the brain working (the electric impulses) as ultrasounds show the embryo moving.”

This idea is for viable pregnancies only. Other considerations may apply for non-viable ones.

#276·Dennis HackethalOP revised over 1 year ago·Original #104·Criticized11 pending criticism

I have addressed this issue separately – it’s a separate idea. #274

#275·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticism

For non-viable pregnancies, where a doctor reasonably predicts that the baby will die during pregnancy or shortly after, abortions should be allowed throughout the entire pregnancy to avoid unnecessary suffering for parents and child.

#274·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticized22 pending criticismsArchived

This take does not address the issue of non-viable pregnancies.

Imagine being pregnant and looking forward to becoming a parent. However, during a routine diagnostic test, your doctor tells you your pregnancy isn’t viable; at birth, your baby will likely not survive long outside the womb. Because you live in a state like Texas that has recently banned abortion with few exceptions, you now need to carry this pregnancy to term, carrying the grief of a non-viable fetus and likely endangering your own life in the process.

#273·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·CriticismCriticized11 pending criticism

Appeal to the supernatural

#272·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticism

Some say that there’s a soul from the moment of conception; that the soul has a right to life.

#271·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticized11 pending criticismArchived

The heartbeat has no particular epistemological or moral relevance.

#270·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticism

Some people say the demarcation point should be the heartbeat.

#269·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticized11 pending criticismArchived

Defensive force and security services are productive endeavors.

Retaliatory force is only part thereof, and defense involves the employment of scarce resources, thus economic principles apply. (Logan Chipkin)

If the government tries to step outside the free market, that’s tantamount to pretending there’s magically no scarcity for the government. But in reality, the government still has to attract talent to fill government jobs, pay that talent, and use scarce resources. If it tries this without the error-correction mechanisms the free market provides, it will do anything poorly.

#267·Dennis HackethalOP revised over 1 year ago·Original #11·Criticism

Two people out in international waters, or in space, or anywhere else with no government, can still have consensual interactions. For example, they can decide to share a sandwich. That’s still consensual if neither party has a preference that arbitrarily steamrolls over the other.

#266·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticism

There are already consensual interactions between people that are nonetheless unregulated. Sex, for instance.

#265·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticism
#242·Dennis HackethalOP, over 1 year ago·Criticism

This seems like a response to another idea (presumably #230 and/or #232), rather than a top-level idea itself. I suggest you move this idea and break it up if necessary. Mark it as a criticism to whatever ideas you end up criticizing.

But first, familiarize yourself with the current state of the discussion. Ensure that you’re making new points. These sound like points others have made before you. Read the entire discussion before you continue. If these points are indeed duplicates, either think of new criticisms or address existing criticisms. Don’t repeat the same ideas if you can’t address preexisting issues with them.

#240·Dennis HackethalOP revised over 1 year ago·Original #235·Criticism