Seems to me like there's a lot of stuff God doesn't want you to do that's possible. Adultery, creating carved images, stealing stuff, boiling goats in their mothers milk, Having Gods before that one, misusing the name of God, pretty much everyone has to work on the sabbath these days, really easy not to honor your mother and father, coveting is super easy, killing is pretty much how we all got here...
So we live in a world where sin is allowed by the laws of physics, but that doesn't mean it's something approved of by God.
So does that mean animal-human hybrids are something God would like or dislike?
No fuckin clue.
Leviticus 19:19 says not to breed different kinds of cattle, but most Christians don't think mules are evil (and the clothing you're wearing right now is almost certainly made up of several types of material, just check the washing label).
I do think that pre-epistemologically, creating something that's a little bit closer to a human than an animal is awfully squicky. How close do you get before you've created something that is effectively a human and must be treated like a human?
Even genetically modifying a pig to produce human-compatible organs might give some people a bit of squickiness. Like, you want to have body parts from a pig sewed inside of you? You know we slaughter and eat pigs (even though that's technically banned too) -- would you have a nice ham from the pig that gave you your new liver? The other thing being, the sort of feeling of profanity of using the liver (or god forbid stomach) of the pig to devour its own meat. Like, that's squicky, right?
Again, who knows? Maybe catgirls are God's plan for us!
So we live in a world where sin is allowed by the laws of physics, but that doesn't mean it's something approved of by God.
So does that mean animal-human hybrids are something God would like or dislike?
No fuckin clue.
Leviticus 19:19 says not to breed different kinds of cattle, but most Christians don't think mules are evil (and the clothing you're wearing right now is almost certainly made up of several types of material, just check the washing label).
I do think that pre-epistemologically, creating something that's a little bit closer to a human than an animal is awfully squicky. How close do you get before you've created something that is effectively a human and must be treated like a human?
Even genetically modifying a pig to produce human-compatible organs might give some people a bit of squickiness. Like, you want to have body parts from a pig sewed inside of you? You know we slaughter and eat pigs (even though that's technically banned too) -- would you have a nice ham from the pig that gave you your new liver? The other thing being, the sort of feeling of profanity of using the liver (or god forbid stomach) of the pig to devour its own meat. Like, that's squicky, right?
Again, who knows? Maybe catgirls are God's plan for us!
- replies
- 3
- announces
- 0
- likes
- 2