onacruse,
Gamaliel:
I currently don't know anything about future life, spirit, or resurrection, so I couldn't base a decision on that. Any decision I would make has to based on how sure I am that I'm actually saving their life
I submit, therefore, that your own self-admitted ambivalence disqualifies you from making such decisions for others. To assume that the continued physical existence of the body is all that matters is unwarranted.
I'm not sure exactly what you're saying here. I could see how a true believer might be ambivalent because they could leave it in God's hands and therefore might not worry about what decision they made either way.
For myself, though, I can't figure out where the ambivalence would come from. Since I don't know about any future life, I can't be ambivalent. It's true that I would be more likely to make a decision based on saving the life in front of me, but isn't that just like Jesus' example of the sheep in the pit, or the Samaritan who needed medical attention on the side of the road, or orphans and widows in their tribulation, etc.?
I do know that the belief systems will often create different assumptions, but I'm not sure what practical difference the belief system should make. But the reason I can't see a difference is because the believer has two options to options to consider about the person in front of him: either God will resurrect him or God won't. I have effectively the same two options: either there is a God who will resurrect him or there isn't a God who will resurrect him. The only difference is that the believer probably shouldn't let that knowledge influence him, and I am not able to let such knowledge influence me because I don't have any such knowledge.
Also, it doesn't mean that I assume that the continued physical existence of the body is all that matters. I have to respect that it might matter and that it does matter to the person who doesn't want the blood. Still, if I can override their decision, I will. My decision would be based on my faith in the righteousness or morality of motivation I based the decision on.
Gamaliel