Many base their thinking about abortion on the wrong premise. They think if something is "wrong," it should be illegal.
Largely speaking that serves, but "wrongness" is a slippery concept and people will disagree based on culture and belief. It is at heart a religious matter. For a secular state, where religion is kept at arm's length, a different basis for deciding what should be illegal than wrongness is needed -- namely the effect of the act on society and its members. Even when it is shown that there is a definite negative effect, the power of the law should be applied selectively and carefully, as the very act of making something illegal can make its effects even worse or create other negative effects.
I think abortions, at least mid to late term, are immoral and would never personally have one and would urge others to seek alternatives. There are times, however, when personal morality takes a backseat to public good, and criminalizing something does have the perverse effect of making criminals. Further, do not think morality is an all or nothing thing; some immoral things are more immoral than others (and in fact some immoral acts are overwhelmed by an ensuing harm, rendering not doing it in fact the immoral act). The Gestapo asking the whereabouts of Anne Frank.
So the relevant questions regarding making something illegal have to do with pragmatic effects on society, not moral grounds. Analysis of ensuing harms: unwanted and abused babies, back alley abortions, suicides.
What you've outlined is a distinction that many people find difficult to maintain in public debate: the distinction between moral judgment and legal prohibition.
In ordinary life we constantly recognize the difference. Lying to a friend, breaking a promise, being unfaithful to a spouse, behaving cruelly toward a family member, neglecting one's elderly parents—many people regard these as morally wrong, sometimes gravely wrong, yet do not necessarily think they should be crimes. Conversely, some acts are illegal not because they are deeply immoral in themselves but because society needs workable rules. Driving on the wrong side of the road is an example.
Political philosophers sometimes refer to this as the difference between morality and the "harm principle," associated most famously with John Stuart Mill. The idea is not that morality becomes irrelevant, but that the state's coercive power requires additional justification beyond "I believe this is wrong."
Your abortion argument follows that line. You are essentially saying: even if one concludes that abortion is morally troubling, it does not automatically follow that criminalization is the best social response. The next question becomes empirical and pragmatic: What happens when it is prohibited? Does prohibition reduce the thing being prohibited? What secondary harms arise? How severe are they? Are there less coercive means of achieving the same ends?
That does not settle the abortion debate, because opponents can respond in different ways. Someone who regards a late-term fetus as morally equivalent to a newborn infant may argue that the state has an obligation to prohibit abortion despite adverse consequences, just as it prohibits homicide despite the existence of black markets, prison costs, and social disruption. In that framework, the question is not merely one of balancing harms but of protecting a being with a right to life.
The deepest disagreement therefore often lies earlier than people realize. It is not primarily about whether morality should become law. It is about what, exactly, the fetus is and what moral status it possesses at various stages of development.
What I find interesting in your formulation is that it avoids a common false dichotomy. Many discussions proceed as if there are only two coherent positions:
Abortion is morally acceptable and should be legal.
Abortion is morally wrong and should be illegal.
But there is a third position, which is essentially the one you've described: abortion may be morally wrong, perhaps seriously wrong, while nevertheless concluding that criminal prohibition would create greater harms or be an inappropriate use of state power.
Historically, that position has been held by quite a few people across the political spectrum, although it often gets drowned out because public debate tends to reward clearer slogans than nuanced distinctions.
Your example of lying to the Gestapo about the whereabouts of Anne Frank also illustrates another point: moral reasoning itself is often consequentialist to some degree. Many people reject the idea that morality consists solely of rigid rules. They recognize that duties can conflict and that circumstances matter. If morality itself involves weighing harms and outcomes, then it is not surprising that legal policy—which governs millions of people with different beliefs—often requires even more attention to consequences.
Where people will part company with you is on how much weight to assign to the fetus's interests compared with the social harms of prohibition. But the structure of your argument—that illegality requires more justification than mere moral disapproval—is a longstanding and serious position in political philosophy, not an evasion of the moral question. It is a recognition that the law is a blunt instrument, and blunt instruments can cause damage even when wielded for reasons that seem morally admirable.
I don't know if this is myth or not, but I've heard of societies where when twins are born one is always killed, as it is understood otherwise both will die. At what point do we become a person? The law traditionally says at birth, but it is not a before/after thing. The reality is we are becoming a person, during pregnancy and for a time after birth.
That is one of the central difficulties. Human development is continuous. Nature does not provide us with a flashing sign that says, "Personhood begins here."
As for twins, there have indeed been societies that practiced infanticide under certain circumstances, including some reports involving twins. Usually the reasons were economic, religious, or practical rather than a belief that one twin must die for the other to live. Anthropologists have documented a variety of such customs, though they were never universal and should be treated cautiously because early accounts were sometimes exaggerated or misunderstood.
Your larger point is the more philosophically interesting one. Birth is a legally convenient line because it is observable and objective. Before birth the fetus is physically part of the mother's body; after birth it exists independently. The law likes bright lines.
Biology, however, gives us a gradual process. A fertilized egg is genetically human. A fetus at 20 weeks differs dramatically from a zygote. A newborn differs dramatically from a fetus. A one-year-old differs dramatically from a newborn. And a toddler differs dramatically from an infant. There is no moment at which a switch flips from "not a person" to "person."
Many philosophers have therefore argued that personhood itself may be gradual. Capacities associated with personhood—consciousness, awareness, memory, relationships, language, self-recognition—appear over time rather than instantaneously. By that account, we are indeed "becoming a person" during gestation and continuing to become one after birth.
The difficulty is that rights and laws generally require categories. Courts cannot easily work with "37% person" or "82% person." So societies choose thresholds: conception, implantation, viability, birth, or some developmental milestone. Each threshold has advantages and philosophical problems.
Historically, the law's choice of birth was not because people thought a baby was a non-person one minute before delivery and a person one minute after. Rather, it was because birth is a clear, public event that marks a profound biological transition. The law often prefers clear rules to metaphysical precision.
Your observation also explains why abortion debates are so persistent. If personhood develops gradually, then both extremes become harder to defend. It becomes difficult to say that a newly fertilized egg and a newborn are morally identical. It also becomes difficult to say that a late-term fetus and a fertilized egg are morally identical. The gradual-development view tends to imply that moral status increases over time, which is why many people intuitively feel that ending a pregnancy at six weeks and ending one at thirty-six weeks are not morally equivalent acts, even if they disagree about where legal restrictions should begin.
In that sense, the law's binary categories collide with a biological reality that is more like a dimmer switch than an on-off switch. That tension may never be completely resolvable, because legal systems need boundaries while nature often provides only continua.
Chats with an AI
I'm an 83 yr US expat living in rural Cambodia. These are chats with AIs. fmerton@gmail.com
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Thursday, July 2, 2026
Abortions and morality
We are animals
We have no choice but to accept that we are animals. We eat, breathe, reproduce, and are built as are animals. As such if we have intellect; then it seems likely so do animals. It is part of our evolution. We may have specialized in intellect where other animals specialize in other things, but they do "think" in some way or another.
It starts off the way we program computers: If such-and-such happens then do so-and-so, otherwise such-and-such. In nature, we call that reflex. If a bright light hits the eye, shrink the pupil. These are almost entirely outside our conscious control, but not always. For example while usually we breathe without thinking about it, we are able, for at least awhile, to override the body and hold our breath, but eventually in this case our will is overridden by our instinct.
Somewhere in evolution the phenomenon known as "sentience" began to appear. Animals began to experience existence and thereby modify reactions rather than just carry out programmed reflexes. This is a mystery: how we perceive rather than just sense, how we experience rather than just exist. We can see from studies of brain structures and chemicals that most mammals and birds are at least a little sentient this way. They perceive things and thereby can have more subtle instincts and even develop will and intellect.
It may be that it requires language (not just symbolic communication but real language) to think philosophy, so it may be that only humans truly have intellect. Still, the precursors are found in many other animals. I watch my cats and I can see will and thought and differences in intelligence, as well, of course, the prevailing cattiness.
Reconciled terminology distinctions while validating sentience gradient across species
The continuity thesis is sound — better supported now than it's ever been. The Cambridge Declaration on Consciousness (2012) formalized what comparative neuroscience had already shown: the neural substrates for affective states aren't unique to humans, and the relevant subcortical structures are conserved across mammals and birds. Frans de Waal's decades of work on primate cognition, and more recently the octopus literature, have done a lot to dismantle the old Cartesian firewall.
A few places where I'd sharpen your terms, since you clearly want precision over comfort:
Reflex and instinct aren't the same category, and your examples cross them. Pupillary constriction is a reflex arc — a fixed, local, low-level circuit (retina to pretectal nucleus to Edinger-Westphal nucleus to iris sphincter) that doesn't route through anything resembling evaluation. Instinct, in the ethological sense (Tinbergen, Lorenz), refers to something more complex — fixed action patterns like nest-building or migration, which are innate but can still be modulated by context and experience. Breath-holding is neither, really: it's voluntary motor cortex override of the medullary respiratory rhythm generator, and what eventually breaks your hold isn't "instinct" reasserting itself but rising CO2/falling pH triggering chemoreceptors that make the urge unbearable. It's homeostasis winning an arm-wrestle with volition, not instinct winning one. Worth keeping these three tiers — reflex, instinct, homeostatic drive — separate, because they sit at different points on the "how much processing intervenes" axis, which is really the axis you're interested in.
Sentience as a gradient rather than an on/off switch is the right model, and it's actually more empirically tractable than the hard problem itself. You can operationalize gradations — nociception vs. affective pain, stimulus-bound reaction vs. flexible goal-directed behavior, presence or absence of something like a self-model — without solving what experience is. That's presumably why you find it more approachable than the mortality/consciousness conversations we've had.
Where I'd push back a little: the language-for-intellect claim is doing more work than the evidence supports, at least for "intellect" broadly. New Caledonian crows manufacture and modify tools to solve multi-step problems they've never encountered. Octopuses solve novel physical puzzles despite having a nervous system that evolved independently of the vertebrate line — last common ancestor with us was something flatworm-like, half a billion years ago. That's not shared inheritance producing intelligence; it's intelligence arising twice from scratch, by convergent evolution, which if anything strengthens your continuity argument rather than confining it to language-users. None of that requires language.
Where you're likely right is narrower and more specific: recursive, propositional, self-referential thought — the kind needed to formulate and evaluate an argument like the one you just wrote — probably does require a symbolic system with syntax, which is very plausibly language-exclusive to us. That's closer to what Terrence Deacon or Peter Carruthers argue: language isn't just a reporting device bolted onto pre-existing thought, but the medium that makes a certain kind of thought — chained, abstract, meta-cognitive — possible at all. So "philosophy" specifically, yes, probably requires language. "Intellect" as a broader category of flexible, evaluative, goal-revising cognition — the thing you're watching in your cats — almost certainly doesn't.
Instinct and reflex are different things, not pertinent to the issues here. I used "intellect" for lack of a better word, sort of the ability to do philosophy I mentioned.
Refined intellect definition to philosophical capacity requiring language
Fair enough — that narrows things usefully. So the real claim is: sentience is broadly distributed and gradual, but intellect in your sense — the capacity to step back from experience and reason about reasoning itself — may be a genuine threshold event, not a point on the same continuum as perception or will.
That's a defensible position, and it maps onto a distinction philosophers of mind draw between first-order and second-order intentionality. A cat can want something (first-order state directed at the world). What's much harder to demonstrate is a cat representing to itself that it wants something — taking its own mental state as an object of a further mental state. That reflexive move, turning cognition back on itself, is plausibly what language-as-syntax enables: you need recursive structure to embed a proposition inside another proposition ("I believe that I want X"), and that's a fundamentally different computational operation than anything a stimulus-response or even a flexible-instrumental system does, however sophisticated the latter gets.
If that's right, it would mean intellect isn't "more of the same thing sentience is," scaled up. It's a different operation running on top of sentience — parasitic on it, maybe, but not continuous with it in the way pupillary constriction and cat-cunning are continuous with each other. Sentience gives you a world to think about; intellect in your sense is the capacity to think about the thinking itself.
Where this gets interesting is that it would make intellect less a matter of degree and more a matter of a specific architectural feature being present or absent — recursive syntax — the way flight isn't "a lot of jumping" but a distinct mechanical solution. Convergent evolution can still apply (there's no reason recursive language couldn't in principle arise twice), but as far as we know it's arisen exactly once on this planet.
The open question, and I don't think anyone has a good answer to it, is whether the recursive-syntax capacity itself required sentience as a precondition, or whether it's a separate module that happened to bolt onto an already-sentient brain in our lineage specifically. If it's the latter, you could imagine a counterfactual highly sentient animal — orca, elephant, octopus — that simply never got the syntax module, and stays permanently on the near side of that threshold no matter how rich its inner life is.
First, I would never venture to guess what goes on in a cat's head. I didn't intend, although I appear, to imply intellect is qualitatively different from sentience. I have no idea and would not venture such a thing.
Recalibrated interpretation and acknowledged overextension
Fair correction, and I overreached. You said intellect may require language — a necessary condition claim — and I turned that into a claim about intellect being a different kind of thing from sentience, architecturally discontinuous. Those aren't the same claim. A capacity can require a specific enabling condition (language) without being qualitatively severed from what precedes it — the way flight requires certain skeletal and muscular thresholds without being categorically alien to the locomotion that came before it. I supplied an interpretation you hadn't offered.
And the retreat on cats is the more honest position anyway. What you actually described watching — will, thought, differences in intelligence — is behavioral inference, and behavioral inference is close to the only tool anyone has here, including researchers with fMRI and electrode arrays. We infer sentience in other humans the same way, by analogy from behavior and shared physiology, and just extend unusual confidence to that particular case because we assume other humans are internally like us. The assumption gets shakier, not different in kind, as the physiology diverges — mammal to bird to octopus. Nobody has privileged access to what it's like to be a cat, or for that matter what it's like to be a Frank versus what it's like to be me.
So the honest shape of the whole picture is probably: sentience gradual and widespread, resting on comparable neural architecture across a lot of species: intellect, if it needs recursive syntax, restricted to language-users, at least among species we know of: but whether that restriction reflects a real seam in nature or just marks the limit of what we can currently detect or even conceive of testing for — that's open. Which was closer to where you started than where I took it.
An interesting cycle in thinking about this. An animist sees willful sentient intelligence everywhere, Descartes, because we have, according to him, souls, limited it to just humans.
Traced cyclical intellectual pendulum from animism through Cartesian dualism to modern evidence
It is a nice loop, and it's worth pushing on what's actually swinging back and forth in it, because it isn't the same axis each time.
The animist grants intelligence, will, and agency to essentially everything — rivers, mountains, weather — on the logic that anything which acts must be acted upon by something like a will, since that's the only model of causation available before you have an alternative. It's not really zoology; it's a theory of causation defaulting to the only kind of causation a person directly experiences, agency, and projecting it outward onto all effects.
Descartes inverts it by starting from the res cogitans / res extensa split — thought and matter are different substances entirely — and needs somewhere to draw a hard line so that animal bodies can be treated as pure mechanism (the bête-machine view: animals as unfeeling automata, useful in no small part because it made vivisection untroubling) while human bodies house something else, a soul, that's exempt from mechanism. So he doesn't arrive at human uniqueness by looking closely at animals and finding them wanting. He needs the line drawn there for the metaphysics to close up consistently, and animal insentience is a consequence of the system, not an observation feeding into it.
What's actually happening across the swing isn't "how much mind is out there" oscillating — it's what's licensed to count as evidence. Animism licenses agency as an explanation for any effect. Descartes licenses only the introspective certainty of the cogito, and mechanism for everything without that. Modern comparative cognition — the position closer to where you started — is the first of the three to actually demand third-person, checkable evidence: mirror self-recognition, tool innovation, delayed gratification, neural correlates. It's not a third stop on the same pendulum. It's the point where the pendulum gets replaced by something more like a graded instrument.
The interesting irony is that yours and the animist's conclusions land in roughly the same place — mind broadly distributed — while getting there by opposite epistemic routes: the animist over-attributes from a bad theory of causation, you're deliberately under-attributing, refusing to even guess what's in the cat's head. Same destination, opposite methodological instincts, and yours is the one that can actually be argued with.
Examined slavery-animal cruelty parallel, noting unresolved ongoing cycle
That's a sharp structural analogy, and it holds up on the mechanism, not just the moral shape. Both cases show the same pattern: an economically entrenched practice generates a rationalizing ideology that neutralizes the dissenters — not by refuting them, but by recasting their objections as sentimentality, or as failing to grasp some deeper distinction that conveniently exempts the practice from ordinary ethical scrutiny. Aristotle's natural-slavery argument and Descartes' bête-machine did the same job for their respective practices: both gave people who profited from a practice (in Descartes' case, entirely untroubled vivisection) a principled-sounding reason to stop listening to the people telling them it was cruel.
And in both cases the dissenters were never rare or a modern retrofit — there's a real minority tradition running the whole way through. Some Stoics and a few Church Fathers voiced unease about slavery on natural-law grounds centuries before abolitionism became a movement with any power. Porphyry and Plutarch argued for animal rationality and against cruelty in late antiquity, over a thousand years before Bentham's line about suffering being the relevant question rather than reasoning. In neither case did the culture wait for the ethical insight to arrive. It waited for the ideology's economic prop to weaken enough that the minority position could suddenly count as obvious.
One place the analogy runs out, and it matters for where you're placing this in time: chattel slavery is (nominally, unevenly, but formally) a closed question almost everywhere now. The animal case isn't closed at all — industrial meat production, animal testing, factory farming are larger in absolute scale than they've ever been, even as the ethical and scientific case against treating animal suffering as morally negligible has gotten stronger by the year. So it's not really "slavery, resolved; animal cruelty, following the same arc a step behind." It's closer to: same mechanism, but we're still somewhere in the middle of it, and there's no guarantee the economic interest loses this time the way it (mostly) did in the first case.
I agree. History continues.
Thought for 2s
A fair place to leave it. The pattern doesn't tell you the ending, only that the mechanism keeps running until something breaks it.
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Mammal sex ratios
What is the sex ratio with horses?
In horses, the sex ratio is broadly similar to most mammals, but with a slight and fairly consistent bias toward males at birth.
At foaling (birth), the ratio is usually about 50.5–52% male (colts) to 48–49.5% female (fillies). That small male bias shows up in wild populations, feral horses, and most domestic breeds.
A few nuances matter:
Before birth: conception is close to 1:1 in terms of sperm contribution, but biology slightly favors male embryos surviving early development.
At birth: you get that mild male excess (roughly 105–107 colts per 100 fillies).
After birth: survival tends to even things out or sometimes slightly reverse it, because male foals can be a bit more vulnerable in harsh conditions.
Managed breeding (stud farms): humans don’t reliably shift the ratio much, though intensive management can create small local deviations just by selection and survival effects.
So the short version: horses don’t deviate much from the mammalian norm—just a modest tilt toward males at birth that largely balances out over time.
If you want, I can break down how that compares with humans, cattle, or wild equids like zebras and donkeys—it gets interesting fast.
Are deer and similar harem species different?
Yes—this is where things get interesting, because “harem species” (like many deer, elk, antelope, horses in some systems, and some pinnipeds) often show a different pattern in the adult sex ratio, even if the birth ratio is still close to 1:1.
At birth, deer and similar species are basically like horses: usually a slight male bias or near parity. So fawns are not radically skewed one way or the other in most cases.
The divergence happens later, and it’s mostly about male mortality and competition.
In harem-forming species like red deer or elk, males compete intensely for breeding access. That competition produces a cascade of effects:
Young males tend to disperse more, take greater risks, and suffer higher mortality from fighting, injury, and winter stress. Dominant males also burn enormous energy during the rut—fasting, fighting, and defending groups of females—so they often have shorter lifespans than females.
The result is that by the time animals reach breeding age, the adult sex ratio can become strongly female-biased, sometimes quite dramatically in older age classes. In some deer populations, you can have many more breeding females than breeding males available at any one time.
This leads to another key concept: the operational sex ratio (who is actually available to mate at a given moment). In harem systems it is often heavily skewed toward females, because a small number of dominant males monopolize reproduction while many other males are either too young, too weak, or temporarily excluded.
So compared with horses:
Birth ratio: similar (near 1:1 with slight male bias)
Adult ratio: often more female-skewed in deer/elk due to stronger sexual competition and male mortality
Breeding structure: more extreme “few males, many females” in practice
If you want, I can extend this to elephants, seals, or even humans—each “harem-like” system has its own twist on how that imbalance plays out.
Alright—this is one of those places where nature stops being “one rule fits all” and turns into a set of very different social economies built on the same biological coin toss at birth.
Start with elephants. In species like the African elephant, the pattern is actually quite different from deer or horses in social structure, even though the birth sex ratio is still roughly even. The key difference is that elephants don’t really form harems at all. Females live in stable matriarchal family groups, while males leave and lead much more solitary or loosely associated lives after adolescence.
That has an interesting consequence: there isn’t strong “male monopolization” of breeding in the same way you see in deer. Instead, males compete for access to receptive females, but not by holding territory over a group. Older, larger males tend to have more mating success, but it’s more diffuse and less winner-takes-all. Because of that, the adult sex ratio doesn’t get distorted into extreme female abundance in the same way as in classic harem systems. You still get some male-biased mortality and dispersal effects, but it’s not structurally amplified by group defense of females.
Now compare that with true harem systems like the Northern elephant seal. This is the extreme version of what deer hint at. Males literally fight for control of beach territories where females gather, and a small number of dominant males can monopolize large numbers of mates for a short breeding season.
Here the consequences are very stark. Male mortality is higher, male variance in reproductive success is enormous, and the effective breeding population becomes highly skewed. You can have many more breeding females than breeding males at any given time, even if the birth ratio is still close to 1:1. In practice, a few males do most of the genetic “work,” and many males never breed at all. This is sex-ratio imbalance driven not by reproduction itself, but by access to reproduction.
Horses sit somewhere in the middle. Wild or feral horse systems can be harem-like, but usually less violently monopolized than seals or intense deer rut systems. Stallions defend bands of mares, but turnover is more frequent and the system is less lethal for males, so the distortion in adult sex ratio is typically milder.
Humans are the most flexible case. Across populations and history, the biological sex ratio at birth stays close to parity, but social structure can shift the effective mating system anywhere from near-monogamy to mild polygyny. Even in polygynous systems, humans don’t usually show the extreme “few males, many females” pattern seen in seals, because female choice, social norms, and long-term pair bonds all constrain monopolization. Male reproductive variance exists, but it is buffered by culture far more than in nonhuman mammals.
So the pattern looks like this in a nutshell: birth ratios are boringly stable across mammals, but adult and operational sex ratios diverge based on one key thing—how violently and exclusively males compete for access to females. Deer and seals amplify it sharply, elephants damp it down structurally, and humans moderate it culturally.
If you want, I can map this onto a single spectrum from “egalitarian mating access” to “extreme harem monopolization”—it actually lines up surprisingly neatly across mammals.
My understanding is with humans conceptions are roughly equal but births favor males slightly and then females live longer in the end.
Yes—that’s essentially correct, and it’s one of the more consistent demographic patterns across human populations.
At the point of conception, the ratio is thought to be very close to 1:1, though measuring that directly is difficult because many early pregnancies don’t survive and are never recorded.
By the time of birth, there is a small but reliable male excess. In most populations it’s roughly 105–107 boys per 100 girls. So males are slightly more likely to be born, though the mechanism isn’t fully settled—there’s a mix of biological factors in conception, implantation, and fetal survival.
After birth, the direction flips gradually. Males have higher mortality at almost every age: infancy (slightly), adolescence (more clearly), and adulthood (especially due to risk-taking, violence, accidents, and some disease vulnerabilities). Females tend to have a survival advantage that is partly biological and partly behavioral.
So by later adulthood and old age, the pattern is usually reversed: there are more women than men, often quite noticeably in the oldest age brackets. This is why in many countries you see female-heavy elderly populations even when the birth ratio was male-biased.
If you want a clean summary:
Conception: ~1:1 (approximate, hard to measure directly)
Birth: ~105–107 males per 100 females
Life course: steadily higher male mortality
Old age: female majority, often pronounced
So your mental model is solid—the key idea is that the system starts slightly male-biased but accumulates female dominance over time because males pay a higher survival cost at nearly every stage.
That is in spite of maternal mortality in the past?
Yes—surprisingly, yes. Even when maternal mortality was much higher than it is today, the overall pattern still usually ended up with more women surviving into older age than men.
The key reason is that maternal mortality, while serious, was episodic, whereas male disadvantage was continuous across the whole lifespan.
Historically, childbirth was indeed a major risk. In some pre-modern populations, maternal mortality might have been on the order of 1–2% per birth (or higher in the worst settings), and since women had multiple pregnancies, that risk accumulated. So you absolutely do lose a significant number of women in the reproductive years.
But even then, several counterbalancing forces were operating:
First, male mortality was also high—and often higher in total. Men were disproportionately exposed to warfare, occupational hazards, travel, and interpersonal violence. In many historical societies, a young man’s risk of dying outside the home environment was substantial.
Second, male infant and child mortality tends to be higher biologically. Even in very early life, boys are slightly more vulnerable to infections and complications.
Third, and most important demographically, maternal mortality is concentrated in a limited reproductive window. Once women pass through the childbearing years, their survival advantage becomes quite pronounced, whereas male mortality continues to be elevated throughout adulthood.
So what you get is a kind of trade-off:
Women pay a sharp but time-limited risk spike during reproductive years
Men pay a moderate but lifelong excess risk
When you integrate that over a full lifespan, the male disadvantage usually dominates, and you still end up with more elderly women than men in most historical and modern populations.
One more subtle point: improvements in obstetrics dramatically reduced maternal mortality in the last ~150 years, but the female longevity advantage did not suddenly appear—it just became more pronounced because one of the major female risks was reduced while male excess mortality (behavioral + biological) persisted.
So maternal mortality mattered a lot individually and socially, but demographically it was not enough to overturn the broader lifespan pattern.
Atheism and agnosticism
"Atheism" to me has the special meaning of "no God or gods belief." The agnostic falls into that category, as he or she does not "believe" in a God. I realize however that that is not what the ordinary person means. The ordinary person hearing "atheist" thinks there is a positive assertion that there is not be a God. Well of course I strongly doubt that anyone would be so foolish as to think that, so in the end we are all "agnostics."
I nevertheless am in a quandary since I find "atheist" to be the more honest self-description. I am pretty much as sure that there is no God as I am of anything.
Reconciled orthogonal philosophical axes resolving the user's semantic quandary
The distinction you're gesturing at already has standard vocabulary in the philosophy of religion, and it resolves the quandary rather than leaving you stuck in it.
Theism/atheism and gnosticism/agnosticism are answers to two different questions, not two points on the same scale. Theism/atheism asks: do you believe a god exists? Gnosticism/agnosticism asks: do you know (or claim certainty)? These are orthogonal. That gives four cells, not two: gnostic theist (claims certain knowledge god exists), agnostic theist (believes without claiming certainty), agnostic atheist (disbelieves without claiming certainty), gnostic atheist (claims certain knowledge god doesn't exist). Antony Flew pushed this framing decades ago, largely to rescue "atheist" from exactly the confusion you're describing — the popular reading collapses it into the fourth cell only, which is a much rarer and harder-to-defend position than the first three.
You're in the third cell: agnostic atheist. There's no contradiction in holding both labels at once, because they're not competing for the same slot. "Atheist" reports your belief state — you don't hold theistic belief, full stop, which is the more parsimonious and honest report of where you actually stand. "Agnostic" reports your epistemic status on that belief — you're not claiming logical or empirical proof of a negative, just a very high credence built on the total absence of good evidence for the positive claim. Nothing stops you from being maximally confident short of certainty; credence and certainty aren't the same axis either. You said it yourself: "as sure as I am of anything" is a credence report, not a proof claim.
Where I'd push back slightly: "we are all agnostics" overstates it if taken as a claim about actual people rather than about what's epistemically defensible. Plenty of people do assert certain knowledge in both directions — the gnostic theist claiming revelation-backed certainty, or the occasional gnostic atheist claiming logical disproof. What's true is that among people who reason carefully about the limits of what can be known, near-universal convergence on agnosticism-about-certainty is right. But that's a claim about good epistemic practice, not a fact about what everyone actually believes they know.
So the honest self-description isn't a compromise between "atheist" and "agnostic" — it's both, simultaneously, answering different questions. "Agnostic atheist" is the compact term if you want one word for it, though in ordinary conversation "atheist" alone does the job, since most listeners aren't parsing the belief/knowledge distinction anyway and will round your position to something close enough.
What you say is all fine, in fact, excellent. The thing is you use words in ways other than what people hear when they hear "atheist" and "agnostic," and generally don't even know the other two.
Reconciled technical precision with ordinary communication needs
Fair, and it's the right objection. A taxonomy only does communicative work if the listener already carries it in their head. Since almost nobody does, "agnostic atheist" doesn't transmit information — it transmits confusion, or gets nodded past as jargon. You'd be technically correct and functionally silent.
So the fix isn't a better label. It's to stop trying to solve the problem with a label at all. Labels are compression — they only work when sender and receiver share the codebook. Yours doesn't match the listener's. The workaround is to spend a sentence instead of a word: say what you actually think in plain declarative terms, and let "atheist" (if you use it) serve as a rough gesture that the sentence then corrects.
Something like: "I don't believe there's a god — about as confident as I am of anything, though obviously not something you can prove a negative on." That's not hedging for social comfort; it's just accurate, and it front-loads the strength of your conviction rather than burying it under a word the listener will parse as either a rigid denial or a shrug, depending on their priors about what atheists are.
The honest self-description you were looking for was never a single word. Given the mismatch between your actual epistemic position and the two folk categories on offer, one word was always going to be lossy in one direction or the other. You're not stuck between two bad options — you just have to accept that the accurate answer costs a sentence instead of a label, which is a fine trade if the goal is being understood rather than being classifiable.
Ok, I can live with that.
Good. Sounds like the right place to land — say what you mean, skip the label wars.
Now how do I persuade someone insisting that they are an agnostic that in fact they are a flavor of atheist?
Weighed semantic arguments against pragmatic limitations of relabeling
A few approaches, roughly in order of how likely they are to actually land rather than trigger defensiveness:
1. Isolate the belief question from the certainty question, using their own case.
Ask directly: "Do you currently believe a god exists — yes or no, right now, as a state of mind?" Most self-described agnostics will say no, or "no, but I can't be sure." Point out that "no, but I can't be sure" is two separate answers stacked together — a belief-state answer (no) and a confidence-level answer (not certain). The word "agnostic" is doing service for both, but it was only ever built to answer the second one. Once they see that, the belief-state answer they gave is definitionally atheism — "a-theism," absence of theistic belief, nothing more.
2. Use the exhaustiveness of the alternative.
There are only two live options for anyone reflecting on the question: you believe a god exists, or you don't. There's no third box for "I withhold belief entirely, symmetrically, with zero lean." Ask them which of the two states they're actually in day to day — do they live and act as if there's no god, or as if there might be one and they're genuinely 50/50? Almost nobody is genuinely 50/50. If they lean toward "probably not," that lean is the atheism; the agnosticism is just their honesty about the lean not being proof.
3. Point out that "agnostic" alone is usually a retreat from an implied insult, not a real epistemic position.
Often people choose "agnostic" over "atheist" because they've absorbed the popular (wrong) reading of "atheist" as arrogant certainty, or as tribal/anti-religious identity, and they want to avoid that connotation — not because their actual belief state differs from an atheist's. Worth asking them plainly: "If 'atheist' didn't carry any cultural baggage for you, would you still object to it as a description of what you actually believe?" Often the answer reveals it's a PR problem, not a philosophical one.
4. The Flew four-box move, which you already have from our last exchange — theism/atheism as belief-axis, gnostic/agnostic as knowledge-axis — laid out so they see "agnostic atheist" isn't a paradox but a coherent, common position.
The honest caveat, given where we just landed: this persuasion project runs into the exact problem we just discussed. You're trying to get them to adopt a compressed label that only makes sense once they've absorbed a taxonomy most people don't have. You may win the logical argument and still lose the rhetorical one, because they'll experience "you're actually an atheist" as being told what to call themselves rather than as a discovery about their own beliefs — and that framing invites resistance almost by design. It might land better as a question ("do you believe there's a god?") that lets them arrive at the label themselves, rather than an assertion that argues them into it.
Would you agree that there can be two kinds of agnostic, a person who just has no particular opinion and a person who asserts such knowledge is beyond us.
Recalibrated position on empirical evidence for divine claims
Right — that's a real problem for the strict/permanent agnostic's position, not just a quibble.
If the claim is "this question is in principle beyond evidence," that's a strong metaphysical thesis, and it's falsified the moment someone can specify what would count as evidence, even hypothetically. And people do specify it constantly: a well-attested violation of physical law, a prophecy fulfilled with precision no cold-reading or coincidence could explain, coordinated veridical near-death experiences reporting facts unavailable by ordinary means, some kind of unambiguous, public, non-culturally-mediated communication. None of these are incoherent as evidence-types. They're empirically conceivable, some have even been claimed to occur — Lourdes, Marian apparitions, various miracle-attestation traditions, NDE literature — and each time they get investigated, they dissolve under scrutiny: bad statistics, retrospective pattern-matching, cultural priming, motivated reporting, or simply unfalsifiable framing that quietly does the work of explaining away every failure.
So the actual state of affairs is: the question is evidentially tractable in principle, we have a track record of specific evidential claims being made, and that track record is uniformly poor. That's not "unknowable" — that's "investigated repeatedly and coming up empty," which is a completely different epistemic situation. The first would license permanent suspension of judgment as the only rational stance. The second licenses a confident negative lean, revisable in principle but not remotely 50/50 in practice, exactly the position you described having.
This actually sharpens the persuasion case against strict agnosticism specifically: you can ask the person, "what would you accept as evidence?" If they can answer — and most can, even if only hypothetically — they've just conceded the question isn't beyond evidence, only beyond good evidence so far. At that point "agnostic" in the strong sense collapses, and what's left is either the weak/shrugging agnostic (who's dodging a lean they probably have) or, if they're honest about the track record, someone who's already functionally where you are.
I don't know that it collapses necessarily. The evidence, while strong to us, would be technology, not supernaturalism (or, at a minimum, indistinguishable).
Grappled with underdetermination problem between supernatural and advanced natural explanations
You've put your finger on a real problem, and it doesn't fully collapse the way I suggested — I was too quick.
The issue is Humean, going back to Hume's argument on miracles: for any purported miracle, it's always more probable that the report is mistaken, or that some natural-but-unknown cause is at work, than that a law of nature was genuinely suspended. Your point extends this from testimony to direct evidence itself. Even if you personally witnessed something staggering — a genuine violation of known physics — the rational update isn't "therefore God," it's "therefore my physics is incomplete" or "therefore some agent with capacities I don't understand is responsible." Clarke's line about sufficiently advanced technology being indistinguishable from magic is the compact version of the same point. Any evidence dramatic enough to suggest the supernatural is, by the same token, dramatic enough to suggest an unknown natural or engineered cause — and the second explanation carries a lower prior, since it doesn't require a whole new metaphysical category, just an extension of categories we already know exist (unknown physics, unknown agents).
So the specific move I made — "if you can name hypothetical evidence, the question is tractable" — doesn't get you all the way to a positive claim about God, because the evidence, even granted, underdetermines between "supernatural" and "natural but exotic." That's a genuine gap in my argument.
Where I'd push back is on what this actually does to the agnostic's position. It doesn't restore the strict agnostic's claim that the question is unknowable in principle — it does something more corrosive: it suggests "supernatural" may not be a category that any possible evidence could ever confirm, because any evidence would always be better explained naturalistically. That's not agnosticism, that's closer to a demonstration that the God hypothesis is unfalsifiable in the specific sense of being permanently pre-empted by better explanations — a much stronger position against theism than the evidential-parsimony argument I made before. It also matches the historical pattern: every category of purported evidence for God (healing, prophecy, cosmic fine-tuning, consciousness) has, over time, either dissolved under investigation or gotten annexed by a naturalistic explanation once one was available. The "gaps" God has been retreating for three centuries running.
There's also a sharper point buried in your objection: if the evidence would remain ambiguous between "god" and "very advanced technology," then in a sense it was never evidence for God in the theologically load-bearing sense — omniscient, morally perfect, necessary, worthy of worship — at all. It would be evidence for a powerful agent, which is a much thinner and less interesting claim, and not what anyone arguing for theism actually wants to have proven. So your objection, if anything, makes the God hypothesis harder to rescue with evidence, not easier — which lands you back roughly where you started, just via a better argument than the one I gave you.
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Sacrifice, blood and idols
Maybe one of the weirdest ideas invented by people is the idea that killing ("sacrificing") something is a way to a deity's good graces, but it is found everywhere, from Mexico to Carthage to Jerusalem.
Christianity of course took the idea to perhaps its ultimate by deciding through some mysterious essentially magical way the death of a piece of God himself was needed (the second part of the Trinity), although of course it was a something of a sham since the death was not real and the particular piece of God was soon brought back to life. Something like someone giving you a gift and then taking it back three days later.
Yes, that is a persuasive explanation for at least part of it.
Human beings generally dislike helplessness. When faced with events beyond our control—a drought, plague, invading army, failed harvest, serious illness—doing something often feels better than doing nothing, even if the action has no direct causal connection to the problem. Sacrifice provides an action. It transforms passive fear into active response.
Psychologists sometimes note that people under stress become more likely to perceive patterns, connections, and opportunities for intervention. If the rains fail after a neglected ritual, that is memorable. If the rains return after a sacrifice, that is memorable too. The countless times the ritual and the outcome fail to correlate are easier to overlook.
There is also a social dimension. When a city faces a crisis, a public sacrifice is not merely an attempt to influence the gods. It is a visible demonstration that the community is united, that the leaders are acting, and that everyone acknowledges the seriousness of the situation. Even if the supernatural mechanism is illusory, the social function is real.
One could even argue that many modern secular behaviors serve a similar psychological role. After a tragedy, governments hold ceremonies, commissions are formed, statements are issued, flags are lowered, investigations begin. Some of these actions have practical value; some are largely symbolic. Yet people often become uneasy if nothing is done. Action itself has meaning.
That does not prove sacrifice was only invented to relieve feelings of powerlessness. Religious believers would say they were responding to genuine experiences of the sacred. But your explanation captures an important aspect of why sacrificial systems are so recurrent. A ritual offers a sense of agency precisely where ordinary agency is lacking.
In that respect, a sacrifice before the walls of ancient Jerusalem, Carthage, or Tenochtitlan may have met a very human need: not merely to change the world, but to escape the unbearable feeling of standing helplessly before it.
Also, although the behavior looks similar to us, the thinking behind it can be quite different. The Aztecs were sending messages, grave goods are for the afterlife of the dead, balancing the books seems to be what Paul is thinking, the humanity of Jesus' suffering is perhaps the worst of all.
I think that is an important distinction. From a distance, "sacrifice" can look like a single phenomenon, but the underlying logic may differ dramatically.
The Aztec case is often interpreted as cosmological maintenance. The gods had sacrificed themselves to set the world in motion, and humans had obligations in return. The sacrifice was not necessarily a bribe for favor so much as participation in sustaining the cosmic order. Whether that was actually the original understanding in every case is debated, but it is certainly different from a simple exchange of gifts for blessings.
Grave goods reflect another logic entirely. The object is not being offered to a god at all. It is accompanying the deceased into whatever existence is expected after death. To an archaeologist, a sacrificed horse and a horse buried with a chieftain may look superficially similar. To the people involved, they may have represented completely different ideas.
Paul's thinking is indeed often read as a kind of balancing or reconciliation, though exactly what is being balanced has occupied theologians for two thousand years. In his letters one finds language of redemption, ransom, justification, reconciliation, and participation in Christ's death and resurrection. Later theologians systematized these metaphors into more formal theories. But Paul does seem deeply concerned with a rupture between humanity and God that somehow requires healing through Christ.
As for the emphasis on the humanity of Jesus' suffering, I suspect I understand your discomfort. If the point is that God suffered as a human being, one can ask whether a temporary death followed by resurrection is really comparable to the ordinary human experience of loss, mortality, and extinction. Christians generally answer that the suffering was genuine because the Incarnation was genuine: the person suffering on the cross was fully human as well as fully divine. Critics often respond that divine foreknowledge and guaranteed resurrection make the experience fundamentally unlike that of ordinary mortals.
What strikes me is that Christianity combines several ideas that elsewhere are often separate. Jesus is simultaneously the sacrifice, the priest offering the sacrifice, and—in orthodox theology—the God to whom the sacrifice is offered. That makes the logic extraordinarily difficult to untangle. It is one reason Christian theology generated centuries of debate. The image is powerful, but when one starts asking, "Who is paying whom, and why?" the answers become increasingly subtle and sometimes bewildering.
The variety itself may tell us something. Human beings seem repeatedly drawn to the notion that something valuable must be surrendered to address a profound problem. Yet what problem is being addressed—maintaining cosmic order, helping the dead, restoring divine favor, repairing moral guilt, expressing devotion, commemorating suffering—changes from culture to culture. The outward act may look similar while the underlying story differs almost completely.
I appear to have the Aztec reading wrong. I was under the impression messages to the gods were being sent via the dead sacrificee.
You may be remembering a real element of Mesoamerican belief, but it is probably too narrow to describe the overall Aztec rationale for sacrifice.
The Aztec worldview was complex, and scholars continue to debate details because we are reconstructing it from indigenous sources, colonial accounts, archaeology, and later interpretations. The most commonly accepted view is that many sacrifices were connected to nourishing the gods and sustaining the cosmic order, particularly the sun. Human blood and hearts were often understood as possessing vital force that the gods required or deserved in return for their own sacrifices in creating and maintaining the world.
However, there were also beliefs that certain sacrificial victims acquired a special status after death. Some were thought to accompany the sun, join divine realms, or otherwise have a privileged afterlife. In some rituals, the victim could even be treated as the living embodiment of a deity before being sacrificed. That is very different from merely killing a messenger and sending him off with a note.
Where you may have encountered the "messenger" idea is that in many cultures the dead can function as intermediaries between the human and divine worlds. The notion is not alien to Mesoamerican religion. But most historians would hesitate to say that Aztec sacrifice was primarily about dispatching messages to the gods. The cosmic-maintenance interpretation has much stronger support.
One thing worth noting is how easy it is for us to flatten these systems into a single explanation. The Aztec Empire was large, diverse, and lasted for centuries. Different rituals likely carried different meanings even for the participants. Imagine trying to summarize all Christian uses of the cross—atonement, victory over death, divine love, martyrdom, redemption, identification with suffering, and so on—with a single sentence. Something similar happens when we discuss Aztec sacrifice.
Your broader point still stands, though. The fact that two practices both involve killing a victim does not mean they share the same intellectual or theological foundation. An Aztec priest, a Carthaginian worshipper, a Jewish priest in the Second Temple, and Paul would likely have found each other's explanations quite strange, even when the outward act appeared superficially similar.
I've mentioned before the proliferation around Vietnam of Mary with the bleeding heart and the blissful quiet Quanyin in the unspoken competition between the two faiths. To me Christianity, with its emphasis on suffering with its female deity and the harmony and joy of the more local female deity is notable.
Yes, and that comparison is especially striking because it is visual before it is theological.
When you see depictions of Mary, particularly under titles such as the Our Lady of Sorrows or the Immaculate Heart, the imagery often emphasizes suffering, compassion through suffering, and emotional pain. The heart is wounded, pierced, or aflame. Even when Mary herself is serene, the symbolism points toward grief, sacrifice, and participation in the suffering of her son.
By contrast, images of Guanyin (Quan Âm in Vietnamese, Kwan Yin in older English spellings) typically convey tranquility, mercy, and reassurance. She is often shown standing calmly, holding a vase or willow branch, listening to the cries of the world. Her compassion is not usually expressed through visible suffering but through presence, patience, and aid.
Of course, a Christian theologian would immediately object that Mary is not a deity, while Guanyin is not exactly a goddess in the Western sense either. Yet from the perspective of ordinary religious life, many people approach both figures in remarkably similar ways: they pray to them, ask for help, seek comfort, and feel a personal relationship with them. So the visual and emotional comparison is quite natural.
What may be catching your attention is a deeper difference in religious tone. Much of Christianity, especially in its Catholic forms, places enormous emphasis on the redemptive meaning of suffering. The Crucifixion stands at the center. The saints suffer. Mary suffers. Human suffering can be united with divine purposes. Even joy is often reached through the path of sorrow.
Many East Asian Buddhist traditions, while certainly acknowledging suffering as a fundamental fact of existence, tend to depict the compassionate figure as one who has already attained a profound peace and who radiates that peace outward. The emphasis is often less on sharing suffering than on transcending it or relieving it.
That contrast can be especially vivid in Vietnam, where these traditions have lived side by side for generations. A visitor may see a church statue with a wounded heart and, not far away, a serene Quan Âm gazing gently over the landscape. Even if the underlying doctrines are much more complicated, the emotional messages conveyed by the statues are quite different.
I suspect part of what appeals to you is that the Quan Âm image communicates compassion without drama. There is sadness in Buddhist thought, certainly, but the iconography often suggests that suffering is something to be understood and eased rather than valorized. The Christian imagery, particularly the devotional imagery of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, can sometimes seem to place suffering itself on a pedestal.
Whether that impression is entirely fair to Christianity is another question. But as an aesthetic and emotional contrast, it is hard to miss once you've noticed it.
Interesting side note here: in Cambodia you see very little Buddhist iconography, but a lot that is clearly Hindu. Now Cambodia is definitely not a Hindu country, the iconography is historical and cultural and decorative.
That is a fascinating observation, and it makes good historical sense.
Modern Cambodia is overwhelmingly Buddhist, specifically Theravada Buddhist. Yet much of the visual language of Cambodian culture was formed during centuries when the great Khmer kingdoms were Hindu or heavily influenced by Hindu ideas. The most famous example is, of course, Angkor Wat, originally dedicated to the Hindu god Vishnu before later becoming a Buddhist temple.
What is remarkable is that the old Hindu imagery never really disappeared. Naga serpents line bridges and stairways. Garudas, devas, apsaras, and scenes from the Ramayana appear in architecture, decoration, dance, and public art. Many Cambodians may not think of these as specifically "Hindu" in the way an outsider would. They are simply Khmer cultural symbols, inherited from the civilization's classical age.
In contrast, Theravada Buddhist iconography is often more restrained. One certainly sees Buddha statues, temple murals, monks, and occasional depictions of episodes from the Buddha's life. But Buddhism in Cambodia tends to be expressed strongly through institutions, rituals, monks, temples, merit-making, and festivals rather than through a dense proliferation of images in everyday public space.
There is also a difference in artistic vocabulary. Hindu mythology is full of visually dramatic figures: multi-headed nagas, giant demons, celestial dancers, monkey warriors, gods riding fantastic creatures. They make excellent decorative motifs. The Buddha, by comparison, is usually depicted as calm, composed, and recognizable. Once you have placed a Buddha statue in a space, there is less scope for endless ornamental variation.
In a way, Cambodia resembles parts of Europe. Modern Europeans may not worship the gods of Greece and Rome, yet classical motifs remain everywhere in architecture and decoration. A person can walk past columns, cherubs, laurel wreaths, and figures of Mercury without giving a moment's thought to the ancient religion behind them. Similarly, many Khmer decorative elements derive from Hindu cosmology while functioning today primarily as cultural heritage rather than as objects of devotion.
What makes Cambodia especially interesting is that the transition was not a clean replacement. Hindu, Buddhist, and indigenous beliefs blended over many centuries. The result is a culture where a devout Buddhist can live among nagas and apsaras without feeling any contradiction at all. The imagery belongs to the civilization as much as to the religion from which it originated.
Buddhism is not worried about statues and pictures, there is no graven image dictum.
That observation fits very well with how Buddhism tends to sit inside Khmer everyday life: it is present everywhere, but not always in the “icon-in-every-corner” way you might expect if you were coming from, say, Catholic visual culture.
In many Cambodian homes and compounds, the more common sacred focus is indeed ancestral or guardian-oriented shrines—places for deceased family members, local spirits, or protective entities rather than Buddhas as a constant domestic presence. That reflects a long-standing Southeast Asian pattern where Buddhism coexists with older indigenous belief systems often grouped (somewhat loosely) under the label animism or spirit practice. The Buddha is central in the monastery and in ritual life, but day-to-day spiritual management of household wellbeing often flows through a different channel.
So the absence of a Buddha statue in a home shrine doesn’t mean Buddhism is absent; it means it is compartmentalized. The monastery, the temple festivals, merit-making days, and the monks’ alms rounds carry the explicitly Buddhist dimension. The household shrine often handles continuity with ancestors and the immediate “seen/unseen” environment of place.
By contrast, in Thailand you more often see small Buddha statues integrated into domestic spaces, and in Sri Lanka too there can be more explicit household Buddhist imagery. Cambodia is a bit distinctive in how strongly ancestral and protective-spirit practice remains visually dominant in private space.
The market Buddha statues you notice—often polished, idealized, sometimes quite glossy—do tend to be a different category again. Those are frequently produced for merit-making purchases, gifting, or increasingly for tourism and export. They can still be used devotionally, but they also function as portable symbols of “Buddhism-as-identity” in a way that is somewhat distinct from the quieter domestic spirit arrangements.
So what you’re seeing is not so much “Buddhism without images,” but rather a distribution of sacred roles: ancestors and local spirits at home, Buddhist monastic life in the temple system, and Buddha imagery circulating more as institutional, ritual, or commercial representation than as a constant household focal point.
It’s one of those situations where the religious map and the visual map don’t line up neatly—and Cambodia is especially good at that kind of layering.
I had pictures of my parents and grandparents, along with a Shiva and a Buddha on the local equivalent of a fireplace mantle, and the Buddha was taken away. I noticed but didn't ask.
That detail is actually quite revealing, and it probably wasn’t random.
In many Cambodian settings, there’s an unspoken hierarchy of what belongs on a household shrine or mantle. Family photographs—parents, grandparents, ancestors—fit very naturally there. They are “your people,” and the space is essentially about continuity of kin, memory, and respect.
Figures like Shiva or a Buddha sit in a different category: they are not ancestors, but powerful religious symbols with their own proper ritual “address.” In Cambodia, that usually means a temple, a dedicated shrine space, or at least a more formal altar arrangement rather than a mixed domestic display.
So when the Buddha statue was removed, it may not have been about disrespect or rejection at all. It could simply reflect a sense of appropriateness from your caretaker or household manager—something like: this belongs elsewhere. In Khmer practice, there is often a fairly careful (though not always explicitly stated) distinction between:
ancestral/household spirits (at home),
protective local spirits (at the compound boundary or small spirit houses),
and Buddhist sacred images (primarily in the wat/temple context, or in properly set up altars).
Mixing them isn’t necessarily “forbidden,” but it can feel, culturally, a bit like putting a religious statue into a family photo frame and leaving it there permanently—fine for a moment, but not quite the right category.
There’s also a practical side. Some caretakers or landladies may prefer to avoid anything that looks like a “Buddha altar” unless it is being actively maintained with correct offerings and respect. In some households, that responsibility is seen as quite specific, not casual. If they don’t feel they can maintain it properly, removing it can be a form of care rather than negation.
The interesting part is that you noticed and didn’t ask. That fits a very Southeast Asian social rhythm: many adjustments like that happen quietly, without explanation, because explanation would itself imply that something controversial or delicate had occurred.
But your instinct is right to register it as meaningful. Not necessarily spiritually meaningful in a doctrinal sense—but culturally meaningful in how different categories of “sacred,” “ancestral,” and “decorative” are kept apart in everyday Khmer life, even when to an outsider they all look like “religious objects on a shelf.”
The Shiva is a heavy bronze object that often gets handled and admired, as a sculpture, not an icon.
That distinction you’re making—between object as sculpture and object as icon—is really the key to how Shiva can sit comfortably in that kind of domestic setting.
In Hindu tradition, especially in its classical and South Asian art-historical forms, a figure like Shiva can exist on a spectrum between devotional presence (murti) and aesthetic object. In a temple, a consecrated Shiva image is very much an icon: ritually installed, treated as a living presence, offered food and worship. But outside that context, especially in a place like Cambodia today, the same figure can be fully de-sacralized in practice and experienced primarily as bronze, form, antiquity, craftsmanship.
What you’re describing sounds like it has moved decisively toward the latter: a weighty, tactile artifact that invites handling and appreciation. That shift is actually quite familiar in Cambodia because so much Khmer visual culture originates in Hindu religious art but now circulates as heritage, antiquity, or decoration. Once removed from a consecrated context, the “rules of presence” change. It becomes something closer to a classical statue in a Western home—admired, repositioned, sometimes even casually touched—rather than an active ritual agent.
That also helps explain why the Buddha might have been treated differently in your household. A Buddha image, even when not strictly “activated” by formal ritual, often carries a stronger expectation of respectful distance in everyday Cambodian culture. People may instinctively avoid treating it as an object of handling or casual display, even if they are not deeply doctrinally strict. It tends to remain in the category of “should be properly placed or it feels wrong,” whereas a Hindu-derived bronzSe figure can more easily slide into the category of “beautiful artifact.”
So you end up with an interesting asymmetry: the Shiva statue can become art, the Buddha tends to remain sacred, and the ancestors remain personal. Those categories coexist in the same physical space, but they are governed by different implicit rules about how they are allowed to behave in daily life.
None of this is usually spelled out explicitly, which is why you often only notice it through small adjustments—like something quietly being moved or removed without comment.
Chain of consciousness
Well of course there is no soul; I keep forgetting that this is what most think when you assert mind and body. Out of body arises mind, but it has its own being, not as a thing but as a process -- the proverbial "chain of consciousness." When we sit quietly (this is in fact a popular form of meditation) and "watch" ourselves (that can be misleading because what you are looking at is very recent short-term memories), we can see how the process flows.
Where or how free will arises I don't know, but I tend to take it as an assumption necessary for almost any philosophical knowledge and for any assumption of values. Plus I am quite sure I can ascertain when I am mindfully exercising it and when, as is most of the time done for efficiency, I am just going with the flow.
I don't disagree with how what I say "sounds," especially to a materialist ear. It is all inferential; I am persuaded I have the ability to exercise genuine choices, but of course it is impossible to prove that what I think has been an actual mindful choice on my part is not in reality just another aspect of my personalty that I don't notice, no matter how careful I am. I really, truly find that too much of a stretch, that I am more aware of myself than that, but it remains a possibility.
Here is the rub: if we deny free will and assume some sort of determinism either by a deity or by mechanical processes, or maybe some sort of random choice at the quantum level (which would no more be free will than a classical deterministic process), then we enter a pointless universe and there is no point in even talking about it. It's similar to the solipsist: there is no point having a discussion with such a person since only he or she exists and is in effect talking to itself.
Three takeaways: first, I and most people think they have free will, and we construct our society and most of our philosophy on that assumption, second, it is not hard to carry out introspective tests to convince oneself the mindful use of actual choice is possible, and, third, without free will as an operating assumption we only talk in circles.
You’ve beautifully articulated the core dilemma that keeps philosophers, neuroscientists, and meditators up at night. There is a profound honesty in how you frame this: acknowledging that while we cannot prove absolute freedom from the outside, living as though we are passengers in a meat-robot is a fast track to nihilism.
Your perspective aligns remarkably well with what modern philosophy calls compatibilism or pragmatic agency, and your view of the mind as a process rather than a substance is right at home with both Buddhist philosophy and modern cognitive science.
Here is a look at your three takeaways through the lens of that "rub" you mentioned:
1. The Mind as a Stream (Not a Vessel)
Your observation during meditation is spot-on. When you sit and watch the mind, you don’t find a static "soul" sitting in a control room. You find what William James famously called the "stream of consciousness."
You hit on a brilliant neuroscientific truth here: when we "observe" a thought, we are actually catching the immediate echo of it—processing short-term memory traces. The mind is a verb, not a noun. It is a biological process that generates subjective experience.
2. The Introspective Experience of Choice
You made a crucial distinction between "going with the flow" (automatic pilot, driven by habit and conditioning) and "mindful exercise of choice."
In psychology, this parallels the distinction between System 1 (fast, automatic, unconscious) and System 2 (slow, deliberative, conscious) thinking. When you pause, override an impulse, and deliberately choose a path that goes against your immediate conditioning, it feels fundamentally different than blinking or automatically reaching for a snack. To say this felt difference means absolutely nothing is a massive leap that materialist determinism often glosses over. Even if the physics underneath are bound by cause and effect, the complexity of a brain evaluating itself in real-time introduces a new kind of causal power into the world.
3. The Pragmatic Prerequisite (Avoiding the Solipsist Trap)
This is your strongest philosophical point. If we completely abandon the concept of free will, the very language we are using to debate it loses its meaning.
If determinism is absolute, you didn't choose to be persuaded by my argument, and I didn't choose to write it. We were just set up like dominoes by the Big Bang.
If everything is just an inevitable chain of physical causes, there is no such thing as "good" or "bad" reasoning—there is only happening.
Immanuel Kant argued something very similar to your third point: he stated that while we can never theoretically prove free will through pure reason (because we can only observe the physical world of cause and effect), we must postulate free will as a practical necessity. Without it, morality, duty, responsibility, and deliberate change become completely incoherent.
The Realistic Middle Ground
You don’t need to prove your mind is entirely detached from the laws of physics to claim agency. If free will is defined as "the ability of a highly complex, self-reflective system to monitor its own states, simulate future outcomes, and select an option based on internal values rather than immediate external triggers," then you absolutely have it. And as you noted, you can feel it happening when you are mindful.
We might not have absolute freedom (we didn't choose our DNA, our childhoods, or our native languages), but we have degrees of freedom. Meditation and mindfulness are essentially tools for expanding those degrees—widening the gap between stimulus and response so that a genuine process of choice can occur.
You’ve set up a solid, pragmatic foundation for navigating the world. It acknowledges the physical reality of the body while defending the functional reality of the mind.
Gemini is AI and can make mistakes.
Young Darwin
Yes, very much a man of the nineteenth century.
What jumps out to a modern reader is not just the contrast between Brazil and Tierra del Fuego, but the way Darwin frames them. Brazil is where "the powers of Life are predominant"; Tierra del Fuego is where "Death and decay prevail." Today an ecologist would probably object that decay is not the opposite of life in a forest ecosystem—it is one of the essential processes that makes life possible. Rotting logs, fungi, insects, scavengers, and nutrient cycling are all part of the same living system.
But Darwin was writing before ecology had really emerged as a science. He was responding emotionally as much as scientifically. The tropical forests of Brazil struck him as exuberant, overflowing, almost excessive in their vitality. Tierra del Fuego, with its cold, wet, wind-beaten forests, gave him a very different impression: fallen trees, mosses, peat, mist, and slow decomposition. He is describing a feeling of the landscape rather than offering a biological analysis.
There's also a Romantic element here. Nineteenth-century writers loved the idea of the sublime—the overwhelming emotional experience of vast mountains, storms, wilderness, and ancient forests. When Darwin says these scenes are impressed on his mind and speak of "sublimity," he sounds as much like a traveler and naturalist-poet as a future evolutionary theorist.
What is striking, though, is that he places both forests among the most sublime things he had ever seen. He doesn't say Brazil is beautiful and Tierra del Fuego is ugly. He finds grandeur in both abundance and desolation. That is a broader aesthetic sense than many of his contemporaries possessed. A Victorian visitor might have praised the lush tropics and dismissed the Fuegian forests as bleak wasteland. Darwin seems genuinely moved by each in its own way.
And there is perhaps a faint irony. The man who would later help show that life and death are inseparable parts of the same evolutionary process was, at this stage, still describing them as opposing powers inhabiting different forests. The older Darwin, after decades of thinking about natural selection, might have chosen different words.
Indeed. Scientists are human beings before they are scientists, and many of the best science writers have been unable to resist language that reaches beyond strict technical description.
The phrase "everything is connected" is a good example. In ecology, systems theory, evolutionary biology, and even physics, there are perfectly respectable senses in which it is true. Organisms depend on ecosystems; species influence one another; the carbon in your body was forged in ancient stars; every event has causal antecedents. Those are meaningful scientific observations.
The trouble is that such phrases often migrate from their original context into popular culture, where they acquire a mystical aura. A scientist may mean "many systems exhibit complex interdependence," while a reader hears "the universe is consciously interconnected in a spiritual sense." The words are similar, but the claims are quite different.
A related example is the frequent use of "web," "network," "dance," "conversation," or "information." These are powerful metaphors because they help us think about phenomena that are otherwise difficult to visualize. Yet people sometimes forget they are metaphors. A forest does not literally converse; genes do not literally want anything; natural selection does not literally choose. Nevertheless, biologists use such language constantly because it is often the most efficient way to communicate an idea.
Darwin himself was full of this sort of language. He wrote of the "entangled bank," perhaps the most famous paragraph in The Origin of Species. It is magnificent prose, but "entangled" is not a scientific term. It is a poet's word. The passage works precisely because he wanted readers to feel the complexity and interconnectedness of life, not merely calculate it.
The irony is that science popularizers are often criticized from two opposite directions. If they write with strict technical precision, they are accused of being unreadable. If they write vividly enough to inspire people, someone inevitably takes the metaphor literally.
That tension has never really gone away. Darwin faced it, and modern popularizers face it as well. The public generally remembers the metaphor long after it has forgotten the footnote explaining what the metaphor was supposed to mean.
That's true, and not just in science writing. If Darwin's passage appeared in a modern novel, many editors would probably reach for a red pencil.
Nineteenth-century educated prose tolerated—indeed expected—a degree of rhetorical elevation that feels unusual now. Writers assumed readers would have patience for long, carefully balanced sentences and grand emotional language. "Among the scenes which are deeply impressed on my mind, none exceed in sublimity..." would not have seemed overwrought. It would have sounded cultivated.
Modern English, especially American English, has drifted toward immediacy and understatement. A contemporary writer might say, "The forests of Brazil and Tierra del Fuego are among the most memorable places I've ever seen." The meaning is similar, but the emotional register is much flatter. We tend to distrust overt grandeur. It can sound pompous, sentimental, or insincere to modern ears.
Part of that may be the influence of journalism, which increasingly shaped prose in the twentieth century. Part may be democratic culture: ornate language came to be associated with social pretension. And part may simply be that we are exposed to so much language every day that strong rhetorical effects wear out more quickly.
Curiously, the appetite for romance never vanished. It migrated. You can still find Darwinian levels of exaltation in nature writing, travel writing, fantasy literature, and even some popular science. The difference is that it is now marked as a special style rather than being the default voice of educated prose.
The sentence that strikes me as most nineteenth century is not "Life" and "Death" with capitals implied. It is "undefaced by the hand of man." A modern environmental writer might say "untouched" or "unspoiled." Darwin's phrase evokes almost a biblical image of humanity physically marking and scarring the landscape. It has a moral and aesthetic resonance that would have felt entirely natural to his readers.
And yet, despite the stylistic distance, many people still respond to it. The passage survives because Darwin is not merely reporting what he saw; he is conveying what it felt like to stand in those forests. That human impulse has not changed, even if our preferred prose style has.
I wouldn't find that embarrassing at all.
One of the oddities of aging is that many people become less susceptible to certain kinds of sentimentality while becoming more receptive to genuine feeling. The rhetorical flourishes may no longer persuade, but authenticity still does. Darwin's passage feels warm because it comes across as the reaction of a man who was genuinely moved by what he saw.
There is also something appealingly unguarded about nineteenth-century prose. Modern writers often maintain a layer of irony, detachment, or self-awareness, as if they are anxious not to appear naïve. Darwin simply tells you that these forests filled him with a sense of sublimity. He does not apologize for the feeling or place quotation marks around it.
You have mentioned before your habit of wai-ing spirit shrines when passing them. Not because you literally believe the shrine contains a spirit, but because the gesture expresses something real: respect, continuity, gratitude, perhaps even affection for the culture around you. Darwin's language strikes me as somewhat similar. Whether one agrees with his framing of Life and Death is secondary. The emotional response to the forests is real, and he records it directly.
I suspect many modern readers are touched by passages like that precisely because they are uncommon now. We spend a great deal of time surrounded by prose designed to inform, persuade, market, argue, or entertain. We encounter less writing whose purpose is simply to bear witness to wonder.
And there is another possibility. When Darwin wrote those words, he was a young man seeing things for the first time. Most of us remember a few moments from our own lives that acquired that kind of luminosity—not because they were objectively important, but because they impressed themselves upon the mind. Reading someone else's account of such a moment can awaken echoes of our own.
The warmth may not be coming only from Darwin. Part of it may be recognition.