Agustino, I invite you to respond to the host of objections I've raised in this thread. Hopefully my portrayal of your position has been accurate enough to warrant an OP of this length.
Per forum format, I also would like to invite everyone else to comment and discuss!
Cheers for now! — VagabondSpectre
I hope it's allowed within the rules: there are a few posters on here that have a somewhat developed personal philosophy (@apokrisis, Augustino, Banno if he still believes roughly what he believed four years ago), and I want an excuse to eat my bodyweight in popcorn. — fdrake
I consider this post inappropriate and I've flagged it. We'll see if the powers that be agree.
The fact that you set up the discussion to focus on a particular forum member and their beliefs without their participation makes me suspicious that the purpose of the post is to humiliate rather than to enlighten. For you to authoritatively interpret what Agustino believes is insulting and disrespectful. You should stop. — T Clark
So spare me our victim cries; I asked for discussion about the subject matter my OP addresses, and Agustino is more than capable of rising to his own defense. — VagabondSpectre
It's not a question of whether it's appropriate to hold people accountable for their positions on this forum. Of course it is. That's the whole point.
I still think the post is inappropriate for this forum. I am comfortable the moderators can decide. — T Clark
Do you hear that Agustino? I know you won't let him get away with that :D ! — VagabondSpectre
But I read most of the objections to traditionalist morality in this OP, as being the expressions of Western liberal individualism to what it sees as the intrusive and authoritarian morality of Christianity, generally. — Wayfarer
@VagabondSpectre, I consider this post inappropriate and I've flagged it...
... For you to authoritatively interpret what Agustino believes is insulting and disrespectful. You should stop. — T Clark
↪T Clark, Actually now you say that, I do agree, if the mods want to delete this thread including my comment on it, no objection from myself. — Wayfarer
That's because for liberal individualism, when it severs connection from the Judeo-Christian culture that gave rise to it, there is 'no higher truth than self' - nihil ultra ego. In other words, the individual is the sole arbiter of what is right and true. — Wayfarer
As far as what is true goes, the only people who seem be the arbiter of their own reality are those with standards low enough to accept things without evidence, such as creation myths and pseudoscience. — VagabondSpectre
If Agustino responds and says it's ok, — T Clark
It is better to think in terms of final causes instead of purpose. (Purpose is only a specific instance of final causality in conscious agents). Aristotle identified final causes as necessary in order to account for the directionality of all causes towards their effects. If you remove teleology, then you can no longer make sense of induction for example, and then you end up with Hume's problem of induction. Final causes are that in virtue of which causes have a tendency to produce a specific range of effects and only that range. Someone like apokrisis would conceive of final causality as constraints on action, which effectively guide the cause towards the production of a certain limited range of effects, and this is not very far off from the Aristotelian understanding."Telos", Greek for "purpose" is the object of "teleological study"; the study of purpose. — VagabondSpectre
Because you conceive teleology solely within terms of purpose, you only think of man-made objects in your examples. But the moon has a final cause of revolving around the Earth too - it is directed towards the production of this effect and not other effects such as transforming into a cute butterfly.the telos of a watch has to do with keeping track of time, or, the telos of a cup is to hold liquid and be used for drinking. — VagabondSpectre
No, this is a misrepresentation. "Moral good" exists only for agents that possess free will. A watch is not morally good, but it is a good or a bad watch. A moon isn't a good or a bad moon - the distinction doesn't exist because the moon doesn't "choose" its purpose, and its purpose is given by the First Cause, which it follows unaware of it as it were. So it can never be "bad" - it can only be good. That's why the distinction doesn't exist there. It only exists in agents that possess free will.By looking at the "purpose" of a thing, and whether or not the thing in question effectively performs that purpose, Agustino judges whether or not that thing is "morally good". — VagabondSpectre
This is just BS.So, a cup which holds and delivers liquid well is a good and moral cup, and a watch which tells time effectively and accurately is a morally good watch... — VagabondSpectre
Watches and cups have all four causes as well. They have a final cause - their purpose - they have an efficient cause, that which brings them about, they have a formal and a material cause such as they can be directed towards the production of the effects their final cause directs them towards.Discerning the telos of cups and watches is straightforward given that we can appeal to the design (agent or "efficient/moving cause"; the intent of the designer) and purpose ("final cause") which we ourselves have imbued them with. — VagabondSpectre
Here you probably just mean that all the causes are related to the object's final cause in the end. Which is true. That's why the final cause is the "causes of causes".For everything else, Agustino employs the Aristotelian concept of "Formal cause" which roughly means "the form/nature of a particular thing" in order to determine it's end purpose. — VagabondSpectre
I never claimed reproduction is morally obligatory. Not actualising a potency is different than frustrating the said potency by acting contrary to its final cause. Not actualising the potency - not reproducing - isn't immoral.For example: since all life reproduces, Agustino argues that it is inherent to the human form, and therefore inherent to human purpose, and that reproduction is therefore morally obligatory to seek out in order to exist as a morally good human. — VagabondSpectre
Well if we are human, aren't we human in virtue of having something together which is the same? All triangles, whether isoceles, scalene or equilateral have something in common by virtue of which they are triangles and not rectangles. So do human beings. I hope you're not going to reject this, otherwise I will ask you what makes us all human beings ;) .To be human is in Agustino's view to be a creature with a form and telos that is categorically universal to all humans; a set of forms and purposes we all share. — VagabondSpectre
Yes, it is rather that the choice of a free agent to frustrate his potencies is ultimately a choice of self-rejection and abnegation. There's also a reason why the later Christians conceptualised this as disobeying the Will of God. Doing something that frustrates your own nature is equivalent to disobeying the Will of God.To deviate from the standard form is to be broken and to undermine the standard and universal "human purpose", and to frustrate directly these universal purposes is to undermine our direct source of "moral goodness"; it is to be immoral... — VagabondSpectre
What makes you think "Christian" ideas are different from the classical views? They actually are not. All cultures and religions that have ever existed on Earth are remarkably close in their prohibitions and rituals. For example, prohibitions may differ, but they all centre around murder, theft, worship, coveting, and sex.Agustino is notably Christian, but instead of his moral views being directly informed by Christian ideas, it is his moral conclusions (that align with (many?) Christian moral positions?) which supports his acceptance of Christianity itself. — VagabondSpectre
Not really.Is the above an accurate overview of your moral framework? — VagabondSpectre
Yeah, just like the sun could suddenly disappear tomorrow, vanish :B - it's not sufficient to tell me something could be logically plausible, you have to justify why it actually is the case in practice, not only in theory. You tell me acting contrary to human telos could be morally praiseworthy - what do you mean by that? What is acting contrary to human telos? What is human telos? What is moral praiseworthiness and how is it determined? By what criteria do we determine moral praiseworthiness? In arguing this with me, you need to provide an alternative framework. If you cannot solve the same theoretical difficulties that my metaphysics solves without creating new ones, then you have not shown the:It could be that behaving in ways that are contrary to human telos are in fact more morally good or morally praiseworthy — VagabondSpectre
lack of theoretical validity of Agustino's "moral goodness from telos" — VagabondSpectre
Nothing, it is just a good watch.Exactly what makes a functional watch a "morally good" watch instead of just a "good" watch? — VagabondSpectre
Right, because the watch isn't capable of itself to do otherwise. It follows its purpose unawares. Now you're starting to understand that free will is required for morality.Intuitively, functional watches have no moral component of their own; merely performing a designed function does not make a thing worthy of moral consideration or able to offer any. — VagabondSpectre
Generally destroying things for no reason would be irrational and hence immoral yes.If a functional watch was randomly assembled by the pounding of the waves and washed up on shore, would it be immoral to smash that watch given it has no owner? — VagabondSpectre
It's not a prior assumption, it is in its non-strawmanned version a conclusion of a line of reasoning starting with metaphysics.Rationally, "fulfilling of formal ends equates to moral goodness" is a prior assumption without reasoning behind it. — VagabondSpectre
No, I do not claim that being moral can guarantee health and happiness - just that it maximises the chances of health and happiness given whatever your external circumstances are. You may still be very miserable though if your external circumstances aren't much good.The main persuasive appeal of Agustino's entire moral framework is what he claims his positions can offer in practice: health and happiness — VagabondSpectre
Well, you are a biological creature so long as you have a body, so if you ignore your body and biological life you are repressing a side of yourself. Just like if you ignore your spiritual longings you are repressing a side of yourself. That's just an objective fact, which you cannot deny. There is, as Plato would say, a metaxy that must be maintained between matter and spirit.Agustino claims to know that reproduction is a necessary moral objective because of his analysis of biological life, but he can only persuasively argue this is the case by trying to convince you that pursuing it is the best or only way to live a complete and happy life of "actualized potential"... — VagabondSpectre
No, there are many reasons why promiscuity is immoral, and those reasons exist on multiple levels.Promiscuity of any kind is deemed immoral by Agustino because he believes it is counter-productive to forming a life-long heterosexual and monogamous relationship. — VagabondSpectre
You are under a mirage if you think the law is more narrow than the state of nature. Freedom is the law, and the state of nature is precisely slavery.Agustino's strategy of offering happiness is a persuasive one, but since his view of the optimal human lifestyle has become so narrow, he winds up offering moral prescriptions and proscriptions which range from inadequate for a few to inadequate for most in terms of happiness and well-being... — VagabondSpectre
The point that different individuals have different desires that they think will be fulfilling does not invalidate what I've said with regards to a common human nature. It is already a well-known psychological fact that humans are more often than not deceived in what they think will make them happy - in their desires. Desire is indeed, on many psychoanalytical grounds, a blind alley for determining the good. This isn't to say that I think people should be forced to be good - precisely because by being forced they wouldn't be able to be good. Being morally good requires freedom of will as its presupposition. Rather people should question their own desires honestly.Rather than acknowledging the range of variance in human form and human behavior (i.e: what makes different individuals happy/"fulfilled"), Agustino will state that deviations and anomalies from his defined norm are aberrations akin to broken or incorrectly designed watches. On theoretical grounds he argues that such individuals should seek to correct, normalize, or fix themselves to adhere to the standard teleological form, but persuasively this fails utterly because the people who deviate from his very puritanical norms are not made happy or fulfilled by pursuing them rather than their own desires. — VagabondSpectre
I've never stated that. Rather I've stated that lifelong marriage and premarital chastity are the only way to reconcile the otherwise contradictory impulses and tensions that are found in the soul. This means reconciling the biological, spiritual, psychological and social aspects of the human being into a harmonious whole.The assumption that lifelong monogamy and premarital chastity are the best or only methods of successful reproduction ignores the many historical and contemporary social arrangements which do exist and might have different adaptive strengths in different environments. — VagabondSpectre
Yep, that's why that was never my idea :BThe very idea that everyone personally needs to try to reproduce is also counter-intuitive to the adaptive needs of a species in a similar way. — VagabondSpectre
Maybe it may be their personal way of trying to be happy and fulfilled, but how do you know they really are? You'd have to analyse their life by some objective standards, you wouldn't be able simply to take their word for it - they may be repressing certain aspects of their personalities for example.It's their personal way of being happy or "fulfilled" (which again is why this framework holds no persuasive power over them) — VagabondSpectre
>:O In light of what we know about anthropology and psychology, this is so wrong that it's funny. On the contrary, homosexuality in many of its forms is known to arise out of a certain fascination with the rival and model and intensification of desire which decouples it from the biological object and shifts it to the model. The object is always desired because of the model which is imitated. 99% of human sexuality is mimetic. You want that woman because other men want her. You want others to know that you have sex with her. And so forth - it is the others which end up becoming fascinating, not the object. This is because desire always projects a fullness of being onto the other - if the other wants this object it must be because it is really valuable and they know - it must be because this object can grant you a similar fullness of being to the one that you imagine they must be enjoying. And the more you want it, the more they want it. At a certain point of intensity, desire decouples from the object, and attaches unto the model and the rival, since it is perceived that they are the source of the object's value. This is homosexuality - when desire hypostasizes the rival and decouples the normal teleology of the sexual impulse from the biological level onto the mimetic one. In some forms it can be latent - such as in Dostoyevsky's Eternal Husband who is always fascinated with his rival, who always has sex with the women he likes, including his wife.If groups can function more cohesively and successfully by allowing homosexual relationships to exist (for instance), then that might indicate some inherent genetic capacity for it. — VagabondSpectre
Yes, but you've ignored the evolutionary explanation for the great similarities between humans. Namely that the fundamental biological structures that constrain our existence will not change and have not changed for millions of years. The so-called environmental changes you mention have been, so far, minor in comparison to everything that has stayed constant. The need to eat is still there. The need to have sex to reproduce is still there. The need to take care of infants for a very long time is still there. The fragility of life is still there. The need for others to survive is still there. The presence of disease and infirmity are still there. And on and on. These structural needs of our biology remain unchanged, and hence they have solidified in virtually one way of being in certain regards (including the sexual arrangements in this case).The evolutionary explanation for great diversity in every heritable human trait and genetic predisposition is that it increases the chances that at least some individuals in a given group can successfully adapt to a given or changing environment, where overtime the more successful behavioral and genetic regimes become more popular. — VagabondSpectre
It is inherently disordered because it promotes tendencies that are likely to disintegrate the marriage. There is a reason why we observe that statistically, the most stable marriages are those of people who have never had other partners before. Do not underestimate the violent effects upon the psyche of promiscuity and of looking at the other as object. If you look at the first woman as an object, what would prevent you from seeing your wife in the same way? It is now a habit of your mind. "Many people feel that" is just a rationalisation - these same "many people" also divorce at a 50%+ rate.Likewise, the choice to engage in sexual activity prior to monogamy and marriage is not inherently unhealthy; in fact many people feel that not having sex prior to marriage is risky because ideally you marry someone who is sexually compatible with you, and no sex prior to marriage can be a dice roll in that regard. — VagabondSpectre
The is-ought gap does not even exist on my metaphysical framework. It only exits on your Humean and impoverished metaphysics as a problem that you desperately cannot resolve because you have rejected teleology. But in my system of metaphysics, there is no is-ought gap, or better said, there is no gap between facts and values, and hence no gap between is and ought. Values are in-built already into facts, and this has been realised in modern times too by writers like Anscombe or even Phillipa Foot in her essay Natural Goodness. Or MacIntyre for that matter - his genealogy of morality is quite good in the first half or so of After Virtue.it still would not bridge the is-ought gap in an objective or satisfying manner: why should "whatever we evolved to be" become the objective basis for moral values? — VagabondSpectre
I am all for evolving and adapting, but evolution and adaptation need to be intelligent, not blind at the human level. Purposefully trying to enact tendencies which we know are bad since they go against our permanent biological structure which has remained unchanged are useless. Instead, we should focus on variation and adaptation where there is room for it - variation that depends on our immediate and changing environment. Not everything about us needs to change and to vary since there are some unchanging elements in our environment.If Agustino's moral advice was truly followed, mankind would cease evolving and cease adapting. Like the Quakers who believed that the technology and way of life they currently had and loved was the one best way of living, he presumes that anything other than his one good set of standards is imperfect, inferior ,infernal, immoral. — VagabondSpectre
You'll never solve this problem until you look at what the underlying facts are. This is what you refuse to see by saying that they are subjective, and there are actually no facts to see there." how to fairly get along in a world of diverse and sometimes competing subjective desires"... — VagabondSpectre
Yes, the world is diverse and changing, but it is also constant and unchanging in other respects. We still need to eat. That's constant. Babies still require protection for a long time until they can live on their own. That's still constant. Pregnancy still takes 9 months for a woman - that's still constant. And so on so forth. You cannot deny the constancy of these facts of our biological existence, and hence the idea that there is one way to be adapted to these constant facts that is the best way is actually entirely rooted in our evolutionary history.How can you rebut the evolutionary necessity of divergence and deviance, especially in terms of sexual behavior, for adaptive progress? In a static and homogeneous environment we might be able to identify a universal-enough standard for us all to strive toward, but the world itself is diverse and constantly changing; we too must be diverse and constantly changing to continue to reliably exist upon it. — VagabondSpectre
There are no individuals. See this is the problem, you come up with all sorts of unquestioned metaphysical presupposition - like the individual :s . What the hell is the individual?! Desires are learned, most of them aren't inborn.individual happy — VagabondSpectre
No, what would happen is that they would imitate each other's acquisitive desires, since human beings are mimetic, and soon the whole society would erupt in a violent conflict of all against all. Then this violence will transfer unto a victim who is chosen at random from them, who will be deemed responsible for all this conflict and they will all unite against the victim and kill him or her. Then the victim, because of the peace it has brought unto the community, will be sacralized as a god. Then both rituals - re-enactment of the murder - and prohibitions against desire - would be installed in place, and they would be identical to those that you consider to be religion. They would aim at the prevention of unanimous violence.If a group of people are locked in a room, a village, an island, a nation, a planet - whatever - and they all only consider their own individual happiness, then before long their competing and conflicting desires might cause chaos and result in far less happiness and well-being overall (or likely very little for the average individual). — VagabondSpectre
:BHopefully my portrayal of your position has been accurate enough to warrant an OP of this length. — VagabondSpectre
Nah, he's clearly going to love the attention and soak it all in. — Noble Dust
Wait there's a problem here because labelling an activity or a group of people as sinful or immoral isn't persecution, that's just a matter of fact. Persecution is actively mistreating a group of people based on their moral failings (such as stoning gay people), and I would support you in being against that where it happens. Ironically, it is precisely Christianity that has revealed persecution and has always taken the side of the victim, identifying precisely that the victim is likely to come from the category of the sinful. If there was no Christianity, you wouldn't be standing here today condemning the mythological treatment of the victim as deserving death.This traditionalist morality that I can only assume you subscribe to describes those who do not adhere to it as sinful and immoral; it's used to persecute. I'm not against sexual conservatism per se, but I AM against the moral/ideological supposition/enforcement that sexual conservatism is morally obligatory. — VagabondSpectre
There is a reason why we observe that statistically, the most stable marriages are those of people who have never had other partners before. — Agustino
In light of what we know about anthropology and psychology, this is so wrong that it's funny. On the contrary, homosexuality in many of its forms is known to arise out of a certain fascination with the rival and model and intensification of desire which decouples it from the biological object and shifts it to the model. The object is always desired because of the model which is imitated. 99% of human sexuality is mimetic. You want that woman because other men want her. You want others to know that you have sex with her. And so forth - it is the others which end up becoming fascinating, not the object. This is because desire always projects a fullness of being onto the other - if the other wants this object it must be because it is really valuable and they know - it must be because this object can grant you a similar fullness of being to the one that you imagine they must be enjoying. And the more you want it, the more they want it. At a certain point of intensity, desire decouples from the object, and attaches unto the model and the rival, since it is perceived that they are the source of the object's value. This is homosexuality - when desire hypostasizes the rival and decouples the normal teleology of the sexual impulse from the biological level onto the mimetic one. In some forms it can be latent - such as in Dostoyevsky's Eternal Husband who is always fascinated with his rival, who always has sex with the women he likes, including his wife. — Agustino
Thus homosexuality far from being an element that illustrates the stability of a society, is an element that illustrates its instability. That is why in the Bible Sodoma and Gomorrah are shown the be unilaterally destroyed on the background of the inversed scapegoat victim Lot, who alone escapes. The community effectively erupts in violence of all against all as desire spirals out of control and the model becomes more and more rival, and hence violence escalates. Homosexuality is hence a sign of the proximity of violence and the dissolution of all social structure into unanimous violence which eradicates all differences reducing everything to identity, which is exactly why religions have almost universally prohibited homosexuality in an effort to prevent desire from spiralling out of control in their communities.
Obviously, but why aren't they? This clearly would have something to do with promiscuous desires themselves.It could be that those with promiscuous desires just aren't as suited to long-term monogamous relationships as those without them. — Michael
Sure, even in that case the lack of stability would be due to the presence of the desires themselves.It could be that whether or not they act on these desires makes no difference, e.g. someone who wants to sleep around but chooses not to or isn't able to has a less stable relationship than someone who doesn't want to. — Michael
>:O >:O It feels good living in neuroscientific stone age no?This seems like nonsense. Attraction is just due to brain chemistry. — Michael
Right just by chance in some people it is the same-sex body :-} .In most people that stimulation is the opposite-sex body, but in others its the same-sex body (and in some, no kind of body). — Michael
>:O Yeah, sorry, I cannot go through an in-depth analysis of the world's mythologies and religions to point you to thousands of other examples. But I can give you sources which do that if you want.And that's definitely just rubbish, especially given that your "evidence" is a fictional story. — Michael
I will give you credit for one thing. You did say "as far as I can tell".Yeah, have to agree, it's a very weird bit of armchair psychobabble as far as I can tell. — StreetlightX
You cannot even account for why mythology, ritual and prohibitions around things like homosexuality arose in the first place - according to you it must be because your ancestors were retards who couldn't tell their left hand from their right hand, and you're smarter than them. — Agustino
It is better to think in terms of final causes instead of purpose. (Purpose is only a specific instance of final causality in conscious agents). Aristotle identified final causes as necessary in order to account for the directionality of all causes towards their effects. If you remove teleology, then you can no longer make sense of induction for example, and then you end up with Hume's problem of induction. Final causes are that in virtue of which causes have a tendency to produce a specific range of effects and only that range....
...
So if you want to reject this clear metaphysical view which depends on final causality to account for reality, you should propose another one, preferably one which is simpler and can account for all the observable phenomena that we see without producing left-over strands such as is-ought gaps, problems of induction, and the like that cannot be solved.
So I would be careful if I were you with identifying teleology with the study of purpose. It's the study of final causality. — Agustino
Because you conceive teleology solely within terms of purpose, you only think of man-made objects in your examples. But the moon has a final cause of revolving around the Earth too - it is directed towards the production of this effect and not other effects such as transforming into a cute butterfly. — Agustino
No, this is a misrepresentation. "Moral good" exists only for agents that possess free will. A watch is not morally good, but it is a good or a bad watch. A moon isn't a good or a bad moon - the distinction doesn't exist because the moon doesn't "choose" its purpose, and its purpose is given by the First Cause, which it follows unaware of it as it were. So it can never be "bad" - it can only be good. That's why the distinction doesn't exist there. It only exists in agents that possess free will.
So, a cup which holds and delivers liquid well is a good and moral cup, and a watch which tells time effectively and accurately is a morally good watch... — VagabondSpectre
This is just BS. — Agustino
Here you probably just mean that all the causes are related to the object's final cause in the end. Which is true. That's why the final cause is the "causes of causes". — Agustino
Well if we are human, aren't we human in virtue of having something together which is the same? All triangles, whether isoceles, scalene or equilateral have something in common by virtue of which they are triangles and not rectangles. So do human beings. I hope you're not going to reject this, otherwise I will ask you what makes us all human beings ;) . — Agustino
Yeah, just like the sun could suddenly disappear tomorrow, vanish :B - it's not sufficient to tell me something could be logically plausible, you have to justify why it actually is the case in practice, not only in theory. You tell me acting contrary to human telos could be morally praiseworthy - what do you mean by that? What is acting contrary to human telos? What is human telos? What is moral praiseworthiness and how is it determined? By what criteria do we determine moral praiseworthiness? In arguing this with me, you need to provide an alternative framework. If you cannot solve the same theoretical difficulties that my metaphysics solves without creating new ones, then you have not shown the:
lack of theoretical validity of Agustino's "moral goodness from telos" — VagabondSpectre — Agustino
Yes, it is rather that the choice of a free agent to frustrate his potencies is ultimately a choice of self-rejection and abnegation. There's also a reason why the later Christians conceptualised this as disobeying the Will of God. Doing something that frustrates your own nature is equivalent to disobeying the Will of God. — Agustino
Generally destroying things for no reason would be irrational and hence immoral yes. — Agustino
Now you're starting to understand that free will is required for morality. — Agustino
Well, you are a biological creature so long as you have a body, so if you ignore your body and biological life you are repressing a side of yourself. Just like if you ignore your spiritual longings you are repressing a side of yourself. That's just an objective fact, which you cannot deny. There is, as Plato would say, a metaxy that must be maintained between matter and spirit. — Agustino
No, there are many reasons why promiscuity is immoral, and those reasons exist on multiple levels.
First, there are psychological reasons. Engaging in promiscuity trains your mind to be in the habit of looking at others as objects that are there ready for you to use in whatever ways suits your purpose. It denies the personality of the other, and by virtue of that action it denies your own personality. You cannot use others as objects without you yourself becoming an object. And this is what happens in the promiscuous relationship - both partners use the other unaware that the other is using them. Mutual flagellation. By lying to yourself in such a way, you ultimately destroy the very foundation of your rational faculty, leading to the effects of what Plato termed "the lie in the soul". You are no longer capable to distinguish truth from desire and falsehood. — Agustino
There's also social reasons. Promiscuity has always been legislated against because it leads to rivalry, and rivalry leads to violence and death - the inability to enjoy the object of desire, and the fascination with the model and the rival. — Agustino
Why are you interested in PUA? Because you are fascinated with the model and the rival that is the obstacle that stands in the way of the object of desire. — Agustino
The removal of the law hasn't removed the obstacle - the law was never an obstacle, it never scandalised you. But the other becomes an obstacle, and they scanadalise you once the law has been removed. At least the law is impersonal and applies equally to all, and thus prevents rivalry and conflict. Hence the growing trend of rising divorce rates with dwindling sexual mores. — Agustino
Then there's also the spiritual reasons. Promiscuity frustrates the ability to develop intimacy and spiritual union with the beloved. It closes this aspect of existence to the practitioner, instead forcing him to remain in the chains of lust. — Agustino
You do realize we don't live in the jungles of Darkest Africa, right?And finally, we have evolutionary needs. Promiscuity is counter-productive to the aims of reproduction, especially for humans where the human infant spends a very long period of time being defenceless and requiring others for its survival. In fact, the human infant is special amongst all other animals in requiring such a long time until it can survive on its own. In addition, the female also requires protection during pregnancy in order to survive - — Agustino
:Dit cannot fend for herself. — Agustino
The family is thus rooted in our biology as much as it is rooted in our psychology, society, and soul. — Agustino
You are under a mirage if you think the law is more narrow than the state of nature. Freedom is the law, and the state of nature is precisely slavery. — Agustino
The point that different individuals have different desires that they think will be fulfilling does not invalidate what I've said with regards to a common human nature. It is already a well-known psychological fact that humans are more often than not deceived in what they think will make them happy - in their desires. Desire is indeed, on many psychoanalytical grounds, a blind alley for determining the good. This isn't to say that I think people should be forced to be good - precisely because by being forced they wouldn't be able to be good. Being morally good requires freedom of will as its presupposition. Rather people should question their own desires honestly. — Agustino
I've never stated that. Rather I've stated that lifelong marriage and premarital chastity are the only way to reconcile the otherwise contradictory impulses and tensions that are found in the soul. This means reconciling the biological, spiritual, psychological and social aspects of the human being into a harmonious whole. — Agustino
Maybe it may be their personal way of trying to be happy and fulfilled, but how do you know they really are? You'd have to analyze their life by some objective standards, you wouldn't be able simply to take their word for it - they may be repressing certain aspects of their personalities for example. — Agustino
this is so wrong that it's funny. On the contrary, homosexuality in many of its forms is known to arise out of a certain fascination with the rival and model and intensification of desire which decouples it from the biological object and shifts it to the model. — Agustino
You want others to know that you have sex with her. And so forth - it is the others which end up becoming fascinating, not the object. This is because desire always projects a fullness of being onto the other - if the other wants this object it must be because it is really valuable and they know - it must be because this object can grant you a similar fullness of being to the one that you imagine they must be enjoying. And the more you want it, the more they want it. At a certain point of intensity, desire decouples from the object, and attaches unto the model and the rival, since it is perceived that they are the source of the object's value. This is homosexuality - when desire hypostasizes the rival and decouples the normal teleology of the sexual impulse from the biological level onto the mimetic one. In some forms it can be latent - such as in Dostoyevsky's Eternal Husband who is always fascinated with his rival, who always has sex with the women he likes, including his wife. — Agustino
Thus homosexuality far from being an element that illustrates the stability of a society, is an element that illustrates its instability [CITATION NEEDED]. That is why in the Bible Sodoma and Gomorrah are shown the be unilaterally destroyed on the background of the inversed scapegoat victim Lot, who alone escapes. The community effectively erupts in violence of all against all as desire spirals out of control and the model becomes more and more rival, and hence violence escalates. Homosexuality is hence a sign of the proximity of violence and the dissolution of all social structure into unanimous violence which eradicates all differences reducing everything to identity, which is exactly why religions have almost universally prohibited homosexuality in an effort to prevent desire from spiralling out of control in their communities. — Agustino
Yes, but you've ignored the evolutionary explanation for the great similarities between humans. Namely that the fundamental biological structures that constrain our existence will not change and have not changed for millions of years. The so-called environmental changes you mention have been, so far, minor in comparison to everything that has stayed constant. The need to eat is still there. The need to have sex to reproduce is still there. The need to take care of infants for a very long time is still there. The fragility of life is still there. The need for others to survive is still there. The presence of disease and infirmity are still there. And on and on. These structural needs of our biology remain unchanged, and hence they have solidified in virtually one way of being in certain regards (including the sexual arrangements in this case). — Agustino
It is inherently disordered because it promotes tendencies that are likely to disintegrate the marriage — Agustino
There is a reason why we observe that statistically, the most stable marriages are those of people who have never had other partners before. — Agustino
Do not underestimate the violent effects upon the psyche of promiscuity and of looking at the other as object. If you look at the first woman as an object, what would prevent you from seeing your wife in the same way? It is now a habit of your mind. "Many people feel that" is just a rationalisation - these same "many people" also divorce at a 50%+ rate. — Agustino
The is-ought gap does not even exist on my metaphysical framework. It only exits on your Humean and impoverished metaphysics as a problem that you desperately cannot resolve because you have rejected teleology. But in my system of metaphysics, there is no is-ought gap, or better said, there is no gap between facts and values, and hence no gap between is and ought. Values are in-built already into facts — Agustino
For example. It is the essence of triangularity that makes us conclude that a squiggly triangle with jagged edges is a bad triangle. And this judgement is objective. It really is a bad triangle because it fails to instantiate what it seeks to instantiate through its telos, namely triangularity. The value - fact distinction only comes into play if we assume a priori that values are subjective and not rooted into the objective nature of things, which is precisely what I don't assume. It's what you assume - hence you raise up the dust and then complain that you can no longer see... For me the good is objective, we have objective standards by which we can determine it. We see that it is objective. — Agustino
I am all for evolving and adapting, but evolution and adaptation need to be intelligent, not blind at the human level. Purposefully trying to enact tendencies which we know are bad since they go against our permanent biological structure [CITATION NEEDED] which has remained unchanged are useless. Instead, we should focus on variation and adaptation where there is room for it - variation that depends on our immediate and changing environment. Not everything about us needs to change and to vary since there are some unchanging elements in our environment. — Agustino
You'll never solve this problem until you look at what the underlying facts are. This is what you refuse to see by saying that they are subjective, and there are actually no facts to see there. — Agustino
Yes, the world is diverse and changing, but it is also constant and unchanging in other respects. We still need to eat. That's constant. Babies still require protection for a long time until they can live on their own. That's still constant. Pregnancy still takes 9 months for a woman - that's still constant. And so on so forth. You cannot deny the constancy of these facts of our biological existence, and hence the idea that there is one way to be adapted to these constant facts that is the best way is actually entirely rooted in our evolutionary history. — Agustino
There are no individuals. See this is the problem, you come up with all sorts of unquestioned metaphysical presupposition - like the individual :s . What the hell is the individual?! Desires are learned, most of them aren't inborn. — Agustino
No, what would happen is that they would imitate each other's acquisitive desires, since human beings are mimetic, and soon the whole society would erupt in a violent conflict of all against all. Then this violence will transfer unto a victim who is chosen at random from them, who will be deemed responsible for all this conflict and they will all unite against the victim and kill him or her. Then the victim, because of the peace it has brought unto the community, will be sacralized as a god. Then both rituals - re-enactment of the murder - and prohibitions against desire - would be installed in place, and they would be identical to those that you consider to be religion. They would aim at the prevention of unanimous violence. — Agustino
There are no "individuals". Because, as Aristotle said, man is the most imitative of all animals, all humans are inter-individuals because they take desires from each other. So there would be no question of what they would consider, there would simply be the fact of the matter - they will imitate each other's desires, and when these desires land on the same object - as they are BOUND 100% to land, there will be conflict, which will only intensify desires on both sides unless something external - like the law or the scapegoat, intervenes to stop the process. — Agustino
What do you mean not actually solving it? How isn't the demonstration that the problem doesn't exist in the first place a solution to it? It resolves the entire conundrum that arises out of it.Teleology such as you wield it can be a kind of strategic assumption which you use to skip over the problem of induction, sure, but it's not actually solved by it. — VagabondSpectre
We should employ Aristotle's "four causes" model because this model enables us to do ontology and metaphysics - in other words it enables us to understand the structure of reality and the way things fit together with each other. The approach to knowledge of modern science is opportunistic - it aims to create models of the world which enable predictability and which can be translated into mathematical terms. This isn't a problem so long as all you do with it is calculate and predict - but it is a problem if you are trying to understand the nature of reality. The motivation of the activity you engage in will alter the decisions you take, which can lead you to become blind to certain other truths.I'm not opposed to using empirical observations to classify the behavior of energy and matter (which is inevitably inductive), but why employ Aristotle's antiquated "four causes" model to do so rather than the approach to knowledge of modern science? — VagabondSpectre
Well, I think you've picked on the wrong cause from Aristotle's model. That cause, the efficient cause, is actually precisely the one science says we do need to understand a thing. Efficient causes are important to understand because they show the link between causes and effects. The efficient cause of a statue is the sculptor. In this case, knowledge of the efficient cause shows us how the state comes about, and that it is the effect of another cause. But this efficient cause doesn't necessarily have to be external to the formal cause of an object (or to its essence) - such as in the case of radioactive decay.Aristotle's model is cumbersome, for instance: we don't need to know the "designer" of something, nor how something came into existence, for us to classify or understand the material/formal and final causes of a thing. — VagabondSpectre
Well, the causes are all related to each other. Without an efficient cause, you cannot understand how the material and formal causes are related together towards the production of the final cause. How would you make sense of them then?for us to classify or understand the material/formal and final causes of a thing. — VagabondSpectre
Well this appears quite contradictory because just above you said that material/formal and final causes are required to classify things and we should keep them, and now you say you're not really interested in classifying things as much as you are interested in understanding them :s . Aristotle went over this, but basically understanding one particular aspect of existence is always performed by placing it in connection with all other aspects of existence and seeing how it connects. Like a piece within a puzzle. You cannot understand the piece except by classifying it in its proper context.I'm not explicitly interested in classifying things so much as I am interested in understanding things; there are many possible ways to classify and delineate things and sets of things from one another, and the enduring problem with doing so is that when we become accustomed to our own discrete categories (which are oft haphazardly constructed and notably incomplete) we have a hard time recognizing things which don't fit neatly into one category or the other. — VagabondSpectre
Design is the wrong way to put it, much like purpose was the wrong way to think of teleology before. The reason for this is that design, much like purpose, only applies to a particular group of agents, and implies conscious volition to make a certain thing a certain way. Rather it's better to think in terms of efficient causality than design."What agent designed it" — VagabondSpectre
:s - this isn't at all true. I don't know why you conceive of Aristotle as some idiot savage that couldn't tell his right hand from his left hand and couldn't see that there exists variation between animals, that children don't inherit all the traits of their parents, and so on. He clearly did know this, in fact, Aristotle was the first to dissect a chicken egg and analyse the embryo and how it develops, including identifying that the embryo has a heartbeat. Doing so, he analysed exactly the evolution of the particular animal and noticed that this process was somewhat different and not exactly identical except in certain forms (patterns of organisation), between different particular eggs.for Aristotle because he lived in a world so utterly bereft of evidence based explanations for how all the variance in heaven and earth came into existence. — VagabondSpectre
Darwin's understanding is not at odds with Aristotle's model of causality. First of all, it couldn't be, because Aristotle's model is metaphysical anyway. It's important to understand this distinction between physical facts and metaphysics. But more importantly, the "complex worldly forces" are nothing but causal agents themselves, which fits perfectly into Aristotle's model.If Darwin could have explain it to him, Aristotle probably would have altered his model radically. Agency would have been replaced with complex worldly forces and factors (with a necessary case study into each instance — VagabondSpectre
Sure, different efficient causes would lead to different effects.A major nuance that the 4 cause model seems to lacks is the fact that in different environments particular "forms" can exhibit drastically varying behavior. — VagabondSpectre
I wouldn't say an organism's behaviour, in this case, is its final cause. No, not at all - it's final cause is that for the sake of which it behaves in the first place. And there's nothing in an organisms adaptability to its environment that stops us from comprehending it using the 4 cause model. Indeed, it is only within this model that we can understand how and why the organism uses its environment the way it does.The complexity of the human organism makes it too difficult to comprehend all the ways in which we are evolutionary designed to react and adapt (behavior is final cause). — VagabondSpectre
Efficient causes can result out of the simultaneous action of multiple agents, what's wrong with that? It's perfectly comprehensible.The limitation with identifying a specific range of effects is that we also must identify how that specific range changes over a range of changing environments. Once we start considering multiple environmental factors, the intuitive ease of the 4 cause model breaks down due to complexity and variance in outcomes. — VagabondSpectre
Yep, Aristotle inferred his four causes out of an analysis of motion and change.We can use physical evidence to infer physical law and regimes of physical behavior — VagabondSpectre
No, as I said above, the final cause is that for the sake of which the thing acts. This is not the same as what the thing does.the final cause of something is what that thing does (or as you might argue on a case by case business, what it's form implies it should do, or creator or designer intends it to do). — VagabondSpectre
To a certain extent yes, not necessarily a moral human. Why not? Because certain things that make a good human being - such as health for example - aren't entirely within one's control. So if a human being is sick, they're obviously not immoral, even though they are a bad human being in-so-far as they are sick, since they do not choose to be sick. That's why morality involves the application of free will with regards to teleology.If a functional watch is a good watch, then a functional human is a good human, but not necessarily a moral human, right? — VagabondSpectre
The obvious fact that non-adherence to it would logically imply choosing to harm one's self in more or less damaging ways.Even if you could define the truest teleological assessment of humans, what would make adhering to it's conclusions the moral course of action? — VagabondSpectre
Well no, it's not entirely beyond our current level of understanding. Extreme variation of behaviour (more extreme in humans than in other animals) is easily accounted for by the form of the human being - man is a rational animal and as such has freedom of choice. Out of freedom of choice we would indeed expect to see very varied behaviour. All people are teleologically oriented towards the same end - eudaimonia as Aristotle would say - but they each think there are different ways to get there. This does not mean that each particular human being is as wise as he can be in any way or that the ways he chooses are the right ones. The presence of choice and reason make chosing the wrong thing entirely possible in ignorance.With something so complex as biological life though, it's more like "The complexity of how life was designed is beyond our current level of understanding; the origin and full scope of life and reproduction are beyond our current level of understanding; the adaptability, variance, and data contained in the human genome is beyond our current level of understanding; extreme variance of human behavior is evident and defies classification of humans by final cause, but we do know that variance acts like an experimental force that drives evolution, and that evolution itself is an ongoing process" (further frustrating even mere taxonomical issues, let alone full descriptions of actual organisms.). — VagabondSpectre
No, just like the reductionism that Michael attempted before, this actually obfuscates the issues. Saying that we're identified merely by a set of genes may be, strictly speaking, correct, but it gives off the idea that we can be reduced to those genes in isolation, just how for Michael, sexual attraction can be reduced to the chemical happenings in one brain, in isolation from other brains. This is wrong.Humans are identifiable by having a human set of genes, basically. — VagabondSpectre
Speciation would obviously occur when the substance of the organism is altered, meaning more specifically that its form is altered. Form does not depend on its material constituency directly - in the sense that changing one gene would not necessarily change the form - because form is a pattern of organization that holds the set of genes together as it were in one organism. So some genes can be altered, without altering this pattern of organisation that determines the overall coherency of the organism. How much they can be altered doesn't have a clear answer in all situations.At what point does speciation occur? To what extent are ethnic distinctions meaningful or impactful on "final cause" and there "difference in purpose" of the distinct ethnic groups? — VagabondSpectre
A lot of things. They are negentropic biological systems far from equilibrium, which means they need to take in nutrients and pass out waste products (these are absolutely constant, it cannot ever be otherwise given our physical laws), humans are rational creatures with free will, we are subject to disease and aging (which are also inevtiable), women have to be pregnant for 9 months, it takes a long time for the human being to develop from birth to adulthood, etc. - there's a lot of invariant structures in what makes a human being human - much more than there are in triangles actually ;)What do ALL humans really have in common? We're alive? Most of us want to continue to be alive and to be free? Beyond that it's mostly too complex with too much variance; that's why humans are so hard to define. — VagabondSpectre
The presence of variation though does not in any way affect what the objective standard is. There's also sick people in the world, does that mean that sickness is an objective standard of goodness, or that we cannot understand that sickness is bad? :s Of course not. The presence of variation in terms of health does not prevent us from understanding what a healthy human being is, and that health is good. In fact, it is precisely an understanding of human form, however vague, and of human teleology, that enables us to universally accept that health is good and to be desired, and illness is bad and to be avoided. And if some human being freely chose to be ill, we would classify them as diseased, not as normal.You base your objective standards on a supposed universal human form, but the overwhelming evidence shows that deviation from any standard is actually an ingrained biological mechanism (which helps to ensure adaptability through variance), and there are overwhelming numbers of deviant humans. — VagabondSpectre
No, I cannot accept that, because it implies that feeling happy is all that happiness consists of. That's wrong. A murderer can feel happy, it doesn't follow from that that he really is happy. Indeed, the more happy he is, the more unhappy he is in reality.Accept that pursuing happiness even by frustrating one's own reproductive potency isn't inherently harmful if that's what makes the consciousness happy — VagabondSpectre
Yeah, freedom to choose is actually part of what it means to be human - you know, those invariant structures of being human that you don't really want to accept.their freedom to choose how to look and how to live is an acceptable variant — VagabondSpectre
I'm not sure what kind of women you know would be impressed by seeing you destroy an extremely precious artefact, which is a watch created all alone by Mother Nature...For enjoyment? What if it would impress a woman and get her to agree to enter into a lifelong monogamous sexual relationship with me? — VagabondSpectre
That's like saying that willingly putting your hand in the fire doesn't seem to be a clear case of harm and immorality. It's just playing with words. By definition that is a case of harm and immorality. Repressing a side of yourself by definition is harming yourself - that's what repressing it means - forcing it to stay quiet, disregarding it, not caring for it."Spirit" aside, "repressing a side of yourself" doesn't seem to be a clear case of harm or immorality. — VagabondSpectre
You shouldn't repress any sides, rather you should bring all of them into harmony.Which "sides of ourselves" (what is a side of ourselves exactly?) should we repress and which should we encourage? — VagabondSpectre
I cannot follow this. It confuses a lot of things, amongst which the relationship between freedom of choice, brokenness, etc.What makes embracing the allegedly objective human sides of ourselves and repressing the objectively broken parts of ourselves (per your assessments) morally good? — VagabondSpectre
Well no, things are more gradual and less black and white than that.Actually, I'm not a mentally dissociated (by proxy) Pavlovian trained homunculus who has become sociopathically unable to distinguish between myself, others, desires, and "truth", after allowing myself to have casual sex. Thanks for the warning though, I'll be on the look out for sudden urges to treat people and myself like objects and for the sudden unexplained destruction of the foundation of my rational faculties... — VagabondSpectre
No, I didn't describe a situation of just the penis going into the vagina. So trying to reduce it to that is stupid, as if the penis went into the vagina without any other context, it just randomly found itself there :sJust because the penis goes into the vagina, the woman, and the man by proxy, do not become "objects" — VagabondSpectre
Yeah, I can see that you are confused. Probably because you haven't much studied psychoanalysis before.The model o.0? Like... Purty womerns?
Fascinated with the rival?
I'm confused. — VagabondSpectre
It's not rivalry that drives progress but rather the suppression of it. We build our societies precisely by suppressing rivalry (or at least re-directing it towards the unwanted, the "sinful", etc.) - if we didn't, then we'd all kill each other.This seems kind of like a silly objection though. Rivalry drives progress in addition to creating inevitable losers. It's the economic basis of Capitalism! I don't know why promiscuity leads to inability to enjoy the object though. I like my packaged gifts and my anticipation for opening them in equal parts please! — VagabondSpectre
And what is this if not fascination with rivals in the sexual game? :sActually no, my interest in PUA stemmed mainly from my interest in persuasion and the surrounding pseudo sciences which, yes, peddle a lot of bull shit, but also do offer some interesting information. As a man I found it interesting and entertaining that people are out there using quasi-rigorous systems for "pulling" women, and I admit I've used a few of the confidence and presentation tricks that the PUA crowd will peddle, but no, I'm not a PUA. — VagabondSpectre
That's not freedom. Again, rivarly is the dissolution of freedom - it is the restraining of rivalry through laws, both social and moral, that permits there to be freedom in the first place. To be under the impression that rivalry is freedom is nothing else but to buy into a mythological and sacrificial society which demands the expulsion of certain "guilty" victims in order to secure peace and prosperity for the others. It is exactly what Christianity has fought against, and what paradoxically enables you to be critical of certain versions of Christianity today.The freedom that results in social obstacles (obstacles toward obtaining a faithful wife?) is the same kind of freedom that results in innovation, but more importantly, happiness.
A law which guarantees the same for all in such a freedom restricting manner seems counter-productive. The sexual market filled with rivalry of conflict produces some big winners and many losers, but many people do not wish to live a society where they cannot be free to make their own sexual decisions for the marital sake of others. — VagabondSpectre
Yes that is a logical possibility, you have yet to show that it holds in practice. Furthermore, intimacy isn't some kind of currency that you have a limited amount of, so until you formulate a clear understanding of intimacy it is pointless to discuss this.Maybe.... Maybe some promiscuity enhances one's ability to develop intimacy... Why is intimacy a zero sum game where we only have so much of it to dole out in one life-time? — VagabondSpectre
Right, even in our society we do need families in order to adequately take care of infants. Some people can do without this, precisely because the majority doesn't do without it.You do realize we don't live in the jungles of Darkest Africa, right? — VagabondSpectre
No, I don't think they can provide better for more women. They may be able to provide better from a strictly economic point of view, but that's not what's under discussion now, since there are other aspects which are just as important if not more important. You do realise that those women will be exceedingly rivalrous with each other don't you? I hope you're not under the imagination that those women would be happy to be shared.Why not polygamy given the fact that males have higher rates of death than females (so there are more women to go around) and the fact that the few very successful men can provide better for more women than many men can provide for one? — VagabondSpectre
No, because polygamy isn't a way to harmonise all aspects of our soul together. That's precisely the problem. You may solve an economic issue through polygamy, but you do that by neglecting other issues.Doesn't our biology also root polygamy in our souls? — VagabondSpectre
Maybe, but that wouldn't be a good situation to be in. It would be like having a sickness that one doesn't have much choice about. So not immoral, but not good either. It would be a temporary solution at most.What if... What if death due to child-birth caused a deficit of females.... Shouldn't we then be polyandrists (multiple husbands to one wife)? — VagabondSpectre
They're not going to be happy with lack of strictness either. People are woefully bad at determining what will make them happy.They're too strict for everyone to be happy with, so what can you offer to those people? — VagabondSpectre
It's a true psychological fact, virtually unanimously accepted in psychoanalysis for example. If you look at most people's lives you will see this as well. Most people aren't exactly happy - they always find reasons to complain, new desires, etc. Everyone is neurotic to a certain extent or another, not everyone is pathologically neurotic. Freud for example differentiated between an ordinary Oedipus Complex (which all people have more or less) and an abnormal one, which is pathological." Humans are more often than not deceived in what they think will make them happy". Bullocks! I'm sure humans are often wield naive desires, but to say that we're mostly deceived about what will make us happy is a very suspicious claim indeed. — VagabondSpectre
How exactly do you quantify pleasure?And just how do you quantify the "soul"? — VagabondSpectre
Happiness comes by degrees, they can achieve some degrees of happiness, I'm sure of that.So you're just doubtful that promiscuous or gay or trans or any sexually deviant person can actually be happy? — VagabondSpectre
Yes, mental health issues are frequently more commonly seen amongst the trans, gay, etc.Can you source this doubt in anything other than appealing to vague culturally informed perspectives like "casual sex is harmful" and "monogamy is necessary for fulfillment"? — VagabondSpectre
No, that's not what that says. It's a complete misrepresentation, in both cases."Homosexuality of all kinds results from an obsession with hot men and women and increased sexual desire which causes heterosexual attraction to shift to homosexual attraction".
I feel like I need to dumb this down even further to appraise it:
"Too much sex and you'll grow hair on your penis become homosexual"...
I don't know why but I'm skeptical of this... Were it true, why should we even care morally speaking? — VagabondSpectre
Well yes, the cuck is latently homosexual. He has reached the stage of desire where the sexual object can only be enjoyed in the presence of the rival.You had to throw a cuck in there didn't you? :D — VagabondSpectre
This doesn't follow, they would not prohibit homosexual sex in that case, just people being entirely homosexual.I think that the writers of Christian doctrine may not have wanted any sexual deviance to ensure "fruitfulness" (which helps explain the popularity of the religion), but we shouldn't take it for granted that homosexuality results in god turning innocent women to salt pillars and committing genocide... — VagabondSpectre
Well yes, most people are incapable of too much self-control. Another psychological fact."Promotes tendencies"? Am I a child or a dog incapable of reasoned thought and self control? — VagabondSpectre
Oh, so it was a successful culture. Good!You ever consider that the same sort of culture which had them marry their first sexual partner also has something to do with keeping them together? — VagabondSpectre
It's not peddled by third wave feminism, the argument is as old as Kant, and perhaps even older. But it is not intellectually bankrupt. Of course you don't actually treat her exactly like an inanimate object. The point is that there is a gradation from treating someone as a person to treating them as an object. You are lower down towards the object end in this case, but obviously not as low as raping her for example.This whole "objectifying" shtick is intellectually bankrupt. At no point when my penis consensually enters the vagina of a woman (even during casual sex) do I cease to perceive that the woman is a person rather than an in-animate object or cattle-like beast of burden. I in fact retain my cognitive faculties even during sex. You're operating on the ridiculous myth of rape culture peddled by third wave feminism. — VagabondSpectre
No. You confuse what they think will fulfil them and hence what they do, with what would actually fulfil them.Being a good human in the same sense that a triangle is a good triangle doesn't make us moral... Someone with the cranial pathology of a serial killer could be effective at doing murder, a "good serial killer"... You could even say that's what fulfills them. Does that make them moral? — VagabondSpectre
Sure, I don't expect them to. People are free, hence we expect them to make wrong choices amongst others.The fact is that not everyone is happy to abide your strict sexually puritanical standards despite your insistence that it is unhealthy for them to be disregarded. — VagabondSpectre
It's not the mythical formation of Christianity, it's the mythical formation of all societies. There's a lot of studies done about this in anthropology, for example, Levi-Strauss comes to mind, as well as René Girard and Eric Voegelin.No Agustino, when you look people in a room they do not essentially replicate the mythical formation of Christianity. — VagabondSpectre
No, we're not individuals either. Just look at when someone posted a picture of feet in the Shoutbox - everyone else started to do the same. Just because people around here have a higher IQ doesn't mean they're less prone to succumb to mimetic tendencies which are biologically inherent in us.I assure you Agustino, there ARE individuals. Sometimes people have the same desire and sometimes there is conflict as a result, but there are individuals. For example, us! — VagabondSpectre
Metaphysics isn't the same as absolute certainty. That's what Descartes thought, and he was wrong.As far as replacement metaphysics goes, nobody needs metaphysics. Absolute certainty is not the flavor of science or any self-critical philosophy... — VagabondSpectre
I noticed you have this misunderstanding of virtue ethics (at least of the Aristotelian kind) ever since we discussed MacIntyre in another thread. You seem to think that virtue ethics cannot say X is wrong, because that somehow has to do with Kant's categorical imperative.For instance, 'promiscuity is immoral for x reasons' seems to me the antithesis of virtue ethics, it's importing a rule from a Kantian system itself based on Christianity and then claiming virtue for it. — mcdoodle
Yes and no - you're carrying out a Foucauldian / structuralist analysis. What this analysis blinds you from seeing is precisely the origin of those economic and social systems - what is their origin? Why have they necessarily structured themselves around the expulsion of the victim, with prohibitions on one side and ritual on the other? What was there before the structuration?The actual argument has to do with how people were position by the economic and social systems of control to be adverse to homosexuality-- it breaks the "natural" account people are automatically attracted to the opposite sex and destined to have a family. The issue isn't really that a certain section of the population will spend their lives with people of the same sex, but rather that certain social organisations cannot effectively assert power within the context of gay people being accepted.
You lose, for example, the ability to spilt social roles in an exclusive dichotomy between men and women, the account that humans are destined to have a heterosexual relationship and children, etc. Gay people are the scapegoat for a concern for power and economics. So it's not that people in the past cannot see their left hand from their right, it is they are ignorant by their own greed for wealth, social power and domination. They would throw gay people under a bus to dominate others.
The only reason being gay appears "unstable" is because those in power think and tell everyone so, such that a stable social environment it understood to exclude them. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You build tombs for the prophets and decorate the monuments of the righteous. And you say, ‘If we had lived in the days of our fathers, we would not have been partners with them in shedding the blood of the prophets.’ So you testify against yourselves that you are the sons of those who murdered the prophets. — Matthew 23-29:31
My ethics bears a family resemblance with other strands of Aristotelian virtue ethics (and by extension to some strands of natural law theories), but it's not the same on certain points. One point of difference, for example, is in my conception of sex as having two purposes, intimacy and reproduction, and so long as one of them is met, the activity isn't immoral - with the former taking precedence over the latter if they ever come in conflict.Just asking this because I have a few issues with natural law theory that would seem to be applicable to Augustino's views if it is indeed the case that Augustino is a natural law theorist. — darthbarracuda
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.