No the argument is that you could perceive negative psychological consequences from, say, instance X of casual sex that you don't currently perceive.No, but is that relevant? Is your argument now "casual sex is wrong because there could be negative psychological consequences (either now or in the future)"? — Michael
No the argument is that you could perceive negative psychological consequences from, say, instance X of casual sex that you don't currently perceive. — Agustino
No that doesn't show it is wrong, but it shows that it is possible to condemn casual sex on psychological grounds - contrary to what you claimed the evidence proved. — Agustino
No the evidence isn't mistaken. The evidence is what it is. The explanation of the evidence is mistaken - the mechanism by which such evidence occurs is mistaken.You can't defend your claim "casual sex is wrong because it has negative psychological consequences" from the attack "the evidence shows that casual sex doesn't (always) have negative psychological consequences" by simply asserting that the evidence might be mistaken. — Michael
I mean to say that some people - Epicurus for one - found that the sage should abstain from sex, as it leads to potentially damaging emotions more frequently than to pleasure, and avoiding pain is more important than gaining pleasure. Now you can disagree with him, and I do disagree with the idea that one should never have sex, but that doesn't mean it's not rational within its own limited scope. I agree with Epicurus for example - but think there's some other kind of sex, which isn't described accurately in this way - committed, non-casual sex.What do you mean by this Augustino? — jamalrob
No the evidence isn't mistaken. The evidence is what it is. The explanation of the evidence is mistaken - the mechanism by which such evidence occurs is mistaken. — Agustino
No the evidence isn't mistaken. The evidence is what it is. — Agustino
No I obviously don't believe just that it might be mistaken, I have reasons to think it is mistaken. But with regards to where you are, it is first important to accept the idea that they (your explanations) might be mistaken, and to stop saying that the evidence proves X, when in fact it doesn't.No, it might be mistaken. But it might not be. These people might genuinely have not suffered (and will not suffer) negative psychological consequences. You seem to be shifting the burden of proof or arguing from ignorance or moving the goalposts. — Michael
Perceived psychological benefits exist in cultures which are liberal towards sex - just as psychological harm as a result of it exists in cultures which are conservative towards sex. All this tells is that human perception (NOOOOT psychological reality) is to a large degree governed by culture.Just saw his links now. He says that the evidence isn't conclusive and he cites studies that reach neutral conclusions as well as the conclusion that there are psychological _benefits_ to casual sex. — Terrapin Station
No I obviously don't believe just that it might be mistaken, I have reasons to think it is mistaken. But with regards to where you are, it is first important to accept the idea that they might be mistaken, and to stop saying that the evidence proves X, when in fact it doesn't. — Agustino
I agree sex isn't always a bad thing in terms of psychological effects. I don't take the hardcore Epicurean position that the Sage will never engage in sex.And in lieu of evidence to the contrary, the claim that sex isn't always a bad thing (in terms of psychological effects) is more justified than the claim that it's always a bad thing. — Michael
Just as much as it suggests all other explanations which are congruent with the facts :PI didn't say that it proves it. I'm only saying that it suggests it. — Michael
Then in what way is it more justified? — Agustino
Perceived psychological benefits exist in cultures which are liberal towards sex - just as psychological harm as a result of it exists in cultures which are conservative towards sex. All this tells is that human perception (NOOOOT psychological reality) is to a large degree governed by culture. — Agustino
Really? But this "evidence" may be there given both statements. If casual sex always has negative psychological consequences, it doesn't follow that our perception of the the psychological reality will always be accurate.So this evidence makes the claim "casual sex doesn't always have negative psychological consequences" more justified than the claim "casual sex always has negative psychological consequences". — Michael
That's what I meant by horizontal gene transfer - if you read the wiki it will even say that in fact — Agustino
Yes. Sex does not dominate most of human interaction — Agustino
Really? But this "evidence" may be there given both statements. If casual sex always has negative psychological consequences, it doesn't follow that our perception of the the psychological reality will always be accurate. — Agustino
Yes, I've looked at the wiki, stop giving it to be 10 times.Are you really sure? — TheMadFool
That's just examples of very small movements of people. Certainly sex does not influence a large share of human affairs, for most people. There are some wierdos now, for which everything is about sex. We have some of them amongst us in actual fact ;)Are you sure? — TheMadFool
No I'm appealing to empirical evidence that is actually there in the studies. The interpretation of that evidence, of course, isn't in the studies, and neither should it be put there in the first place.So you're appealing to empirical evidence of something that is not at all in any studies? — Terrapin Station
I mean to say that some people - Epicurus for one - found that the sage should abstain from sex, as it leads to potentially damaging emotions more frequently than to pleasure, and avoiding pain is more important than gaining pleasure. Now you can disagree with him, and I do disagree with the idea that one should never have sex, but that doesn't mean it's not rational within its own limited scope. I agree with Epicurus for example - but think there's some other kind of sex, which isn't described accurately in this way - committed, non-casual sex. — Agustino
No I'm appealing to empirical evidence that is actually there in the studies. — Agustino
No I don't dismiss evidence, I dismiss your interpretation of it. The World Trade center fell after a plane hit it. That's our evidence. You say it fell because the impact of the airplane had in damaging its structural integrity. Or you say bombs were planted inside of it. Or whatever. I, who am more knowledgeable than you in engineering, will say that it fell because fire spread across multiple floors in a steel frame structure, thereby weakening its stiffness, combined with the floors tying the columns together collapsing and thereby the effective lengths of the columns doubling and therefore the maximum buckling load they could carry becoming less than a quarter of the initial value (taking into account reduction in stiffness due to the fire as well). Now because I understand how buildings work, I can have a holistic view, and I know what the right explanation for the facts is, regardless of what folks peddle, and think the facts are saying or whatever nonsense. Now I don't even need to test this (but I have in fact tested it on a computer model, and it is correct), to know that it is the case. It's the one with the largest explanatory framework for what happened.With this line of reasoning one can dismiss any and all evidence. — Michael
Yes I do. First you have to understand the nature of being human, the desires that are generally found within the human being and what role they play in this economy. Then you have to analyse your own experience and ask yourself what you're really after when you want to have sex. Is it just the physical pleasure? If so, why don't you masturbate, for example? That would be much simpler. Is it something psychological then? If so, then you really want intimacy. If you really want intimacy at some level, then you should pursue that idea to its very conclusion rather than half-heartidly.Do you have a method for determining the effects of casual sex that is better than that of professional psychologists doing professional studies? — Michael
I entirely disagree. Why do you say this?Thus, I want to say that casual sex is an important or good part of life — jamalrob
Are you purposefully misreading the studies? >:O One of them claimed that there was no empirical evidence that casual sex caused negative psychological consequences, not all of them claimed this... really this is such a non-charitable discussion.So in all of the studies, there was empirical evidence of negative psychological consequences, despite what the research subjects said and despite the conclusions reached by the people conducting the studies. Could you explain how this is the case? — Terrapin Station
One of them claimed that there was no empirical evidence that casual sex caused negative psychological consequences — Agustino
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