Do human beings possess natural rights, rights given by God
that all governments must respect? Or is this plain nonsense?
A recent Pew Research Center survey shows how this
philosophical question comes into play in real-life settings. If ventilators
are in short supply, whom should we service first? Those who are most in need
at the moment? Or those most likely to recover?
The answer, like so many ethical issues, turns on religion.
The majority of those who are religiously affiliated say those who are most in
need of a ventilator should take priority, while the majority of the
unaffiliated (mostly agnostics and atheists) say those who are the most likely
to recover should get it.
Similarly, when questioned about the role of religion in
one's life, religious Americans favor giving the ventilator to those in need at
the moment; those for whom religion does not play a role prefer giving it to
those most likely to recover.
On a related issue, a Pew survey in 2013 found that
religious Americans were the least likely to say suicide is a moral right; the
unaffiliated were the most likely to support it.
A 2018 Gallup poll disclosed that euthanasia and
doctor-assisted suicide varied widely on the basis of religiosity: religious
Americans were the least likely to support these options; the unaffiliated were
the most likely to support them.
In 2010, the British Medical Journal found that atheist and
agnostic doctors, as compared to those who are religious, were almost twice as
likely to decide, by themselves, that it is proper to hasten a person's death
if the patient is very sick.
To put it differently, those who are not religious are more
likely to devalue the sanctity of human life. This is not a desirable outcome
for anyone, especially the vulnerable.
This all traces back to natural rights. Those who take
their religion seriously are more likely to believe in natural rights: they
believe all humans possess equal rights, and that they cannot be overridden on
the basis of utility, or what works best overall. So when ventilators are in
short supply, those who are most in need deserve to get them—we are all equal
in the eyes of God. Their rights should never be subordinate to those who are
the most likely to live.
Those who believe otherwise embrace a utilitarian ethics.
Atheists embrace the utilitarianism as espoused by Jeremy
Bentham. The British philosopher maintained that morality was best served by
providing for the greatest good for the greatest number of people. Such a
philosophy advantages the powerful and the healthy—it can be used to justify
slavery and euthanasia—which is why it is fundamentally an amoral ethics.
Bentham called natural rights "nonsense upon
stilts." Not surprisingly, he was an atheist. For him, the idea that
innocent human life is sacred was chimerical. What counts, he believed, was
serving the best interests of the majority of people, even if it comes at the
expense of others.
Atheism is amoral because its ethics devolves to the
individual. It's all about me, not we. It is this kind of thinking that allows
irreligious doctors to decide whether their patients should live or die.
Ironically, even atheists who are sick would not want to have such a physician.
Society prospers morally when we have more religious
persons, not less. This does not mean that all atheists are immoral or that all
religious persons are moral. But it does mean that society, as a whole, is
better off, generally speaking, when it is populated by people of faith, and
not their atheist counterparts.
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