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Discussion and Debate
Discussion and Debate
Ethics & Morality
Ethics of a hypothetical technology, the molecular assembler
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<blockquote data-quote="com7fy8" data-source="post: 77656795" data-attributes="member: 331347"><p>Well, if you make it unethical for it to do anything not ethical . . .</p><p></p><p>I don't think it would be wrong to heal people and bring ones back to life. But it would be an issue, who comes back and who doesn't. Ones could get desperate to rob money and whatever to save their own children.</p><p></p><p>But that would not be the fault of the technology.</p><p></p><p>It would be wise to depend on God, trust Him for however things would work out.</p><p></p><p>"He who loves his life will lose it," Jesus says in John 12:25. So, using such technology could bring certain people to swifter loss, if they were using it with loving their lives. It might not be so guaranteed, after all. But that would not be the technology's fault.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="com7fy8, post: 77656795, member: 331347"] Well, if you make it unethical for it to do anything not ethical . . . I don't think it would be wrong to heal people and bring ones back to life. But it would be an issue, who comes back and who doesn't. Ones could get desperate to rob money and whatever to save their own children. But that would not be the fault of the technology. It would be wise to depend on God, trust Him for however things would work out. "He who loves his life will lose it," Jesus says in John 12:25. So, using such technology could bring certain people to swifter loss, if they were using it with loving their lives. It might not be so guaranteed, after all. But that would not be the technology's fault. [/QUOTE]
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Ethics & Morality
Ethics of a hypothetical technology, the molecular assembler
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