FACTOID #151: The five countries with the highest coffee consumption are also the five countries whose citizens trust one another the most. Coincidence? Probably.
Playing god refers to someone supposedly taking on the role of a god for human purposes. Alleged acts of playing god may include, for example, deciding who is to live or die, in a situation where not everyone can be saved. Usually the expression is used to invoke a precautionary principle or to suggest that someone should refrain from a controversial action. An example of this is to decide whether a person in a PVS should live or die. This article discusses the term God in the context of monotheism and henotheism. ... The precautionary principle states that if an action or policy might cause severe or irreversible harm to the public, in the absence of a scientific consensus that harm would not ensue, the burden of proof falls on those who would advocate taking the action. ... Look up Controversy in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ... The acronym PVS can stand for more than one thing: PVS Specification and Verification System Principal variation search This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
Anti-science is a term applied to individuals who are claimed to oppose science or the scientific method. ... Anti-intellectualism describes a sentiment of hostility towards, or mistrust of, intellectuals and intellectual pursuits. ... Since the beginnings of mechanization and even industrialization, there has been a strand of opinion which rejects, objects to, or has been highly critical of the costs of the changes that these trends brought about. ... Bioethics is the ethics of biological science and medicine. ... Morality refers to the concept of human ethics which pertains to matters of good and evil âalso referred to as right or wrong, used within three contexts: individual conscience; systems of principles and judgments â sometimes called moral values âshared within a cultural, religious, secular, Humanist, or philosophical community; and codes... George Edward Moore The naturalistic fallacy is an alleged logical fallacy, delineated by British philosopher G. E. Moore in his seminal Principia Ethica (1903). ... Posthuman Future, an illustration by Michael Gibbs for The Chronicle of Higher Educations look at how biotechnology will change the human experience. ...
External links
BBC - Religion & Ethics - Human Cloning: We should not play God
Monroe, Irene. Playing God with the Human Race
International Theological Commission. Communion and Stewardship: Human Persons Created in the Image of God
God explains the rules to Bruce in a second meeting, after he has played around with his unbelievable powers for a while: 1) he should not tell anyone that he is God, and 2) he cannot go beyond human free will.
God answers: "Welcome to my world, son; if you come up with an answer to that one, you let me know." This is the first moment that Bruce realizes the limits to his powers.
God is absent, for example, in these movies, and humans do take over God's role, but their relationship to animals is very different.
The different realms God is said to have exclusive rights over have been anything involving when someone might die or come into being, any way to affect the characteristics of someone as they come into being, and other issues related to life and death.
The "playingGod" argument has ceased to be a moral argument itself, as it was supposed to be.
Simply saying something is playingGod adds nothing to the discussion and really does seem to me to be mere rhetoric, unless it's a point about our limited knowledge, which can effectively be made without using such unclear terminology.