Xenophon wrote:EAllusion can obviously expand/respond but he has offered up some examples before. The most recent one I could find: viewtopic.php?p=1167078#p1167078
Thanks, but after considering the three 'cabin analogies' given in that post:
1. It might be thought right for you to break into a well-stocked cabin and eat the supplies therein in order to avoid dying of cold and want.
2. It might be thought to be a moral obligation for you to lodge and feed in your well-stocked cabin a stranger who would otherwise die of cold and want.
3. Same as 2. except the person is injured and tiny and has to be carried around on your back all the time.
- I certainly don't find a close parallel with the sick violinist who has been hooked up to your body in order to survive, and even less can I find a close parallel with the experience of a woman who (possibly against her will) finds that her body has begun to be a support system for an increasingly demanding and growing organism, which in all likelihood she will have to continue to care for after it leaves her body.
Indeed, I'd say that that the intimacy and hugely intrusive and demanding nature of that experience is very hard, even well-nigh impossible to parallel with any other experience. And it's one that no man will ever have ...