I think the Roman Catholic priesthood is a an excellent demonstration of how toxic celibacy can be — Bitter Crank
This sounds quite neurotic. Life is much richer than mere sexual experience, and a man who has experienced sex and nothing else has missed a lot of life. Furthermore, sex should not be a means for validation and self-worth. At least it's not in a person who is well balanced. Why would any rational person seek validation in something that is, in the end, at the mercy of other people? One would have to be a fool - a perpetual slave to other people, in order to get what (s)he needs.There are few avenues of validation more satisfying than the sexual. — Bitter Crank
Sex is not a validation or an affirmation. Again, this is a neurotic point of view. We start from the assumption that someone needs validation to begin with, and second of all that such validation should be obtained from sex. This is questionable on multiple grounds. First, someone should not need external validation. Secondly, validation obtained from goods which cannot be obtained without the approval and assent of others is a form of slavery to the giver of goods. Not something desirable.regular validation and affirmation — Bitter Crank
That's not what most sex addicts describe. They describe feeling quite empty after the act.It's not just "getting off". — Bitter Crank
If one needs sex to affirm one's sense of self-worth then that person is to be pitied, for they shall suffer much. This sounds more like a nymphomaniac than a normal, well-balanced person. You should perhaps be aware that nymphomania is classed as a psychological illness, which is to be treated - not something to be desired. Nymphomaniacs are addicted to sex as they get their sense of self-worth from it.Good sex, whether in a long term relationship or with a stranger whose first name one knows not, and whom one will probably never see again, is affirming to one's sense of personal self-worth — Bitter Crank
Indeed I agree. But at the same time I think the accountant would be better off being celibate until he can find a stable partner, who fits him in intellectual capabilities, virtue and values than engage in casual sex with strangers. Better as this gives him the opportunity to develop self control, build a self-worth that is not dependent on other people (sex means other people), learn how to live alone, and explore, understand and develop himself much more. In fact, in most places around the world, people try to live like this, and those that can't, at least aspire to live so.But just going about an ordinaryl life, but deciding to practice celibacy, just doesn't make sense to me. What would an accountant working for General motors and living in suburban Detroit, who doesn't belong to any organizations except GM, get out of deciding to never have sex again? A promotion? I don't see why that would happen. New friends? I guess the celibacy support group might be a friend-finding opportunity. — Bitter Crank
There are few avenues of validation more satisfying than the sexual. — Bitter Crank
This sounds quite neurotic. — Agustino
Life is much richer than mere sexual experience, and a man who has experienced sex and nothing else has missed a lot of life. — Agustino
Furthermore, sex should not be a means for validation and self-worth. At least it's not in a person who is well balanced. — Agustino
Why would any rational person seek validation in something that is, in the end, at the mercy of other people? — Agustino
One would have to be a fool - a perpetual slave to other people, in order to get what (s)he needs. — Agustino
Really? It doesn't strike me as neurotic at all. (We seem not to look at the world in the same way.) — Bitter Crank
I didn't argue we are complete islands. On the contrary, we should relate to each other as much as possible given that we do this rightly - virtuously. But this relating should not be at the loss of our dignity. Depending on someone for sexual needs is a loss of dignity, unless one has a medical condition preventing this from being otherwise. This doesn't mean that one shouldn't have sex - it means that one should be able to live without it if they must. Likewise, if someone depends on others for their food, this is a loss of dignity, unless they have a medical problem (for example a handicap), they are children and cannot work, they are too old to work, or otherwise there is some other external force preventing them from working. It is shameful, contrary to the nature of each person which is to fulfill their potential for freedom.Humans are obligate interpersonal actors. We have no choice but to interact with others to survive, to be nurtured, to be taught, to learn, to explore, to give, receive, to love, to have sex that is more than masturbation. We are not complete isolates unto ourselves. We are porous, and into and out of us flows all the interactions that make up a life. — Bitter Crank
It's not just "getting off".
— Bitter Crank
That's not what most sex addicts describe. They describe feeling quite empty after the act. — Agustino
This sounds more like a nymphomaniac than a normal, well-balanced person. You should perhaps be aware that nymphomania is classed as a psychological illness, which is to be treated - not something to be desired. Nymphomaniacs are addicted to sex as they get their sense of self-worth from it. — Agustino
They are getting symptom relief — Bitter Crank
Yes I agree that there's not that many, that's why I stated that most people aren't like this. Of course then there's the danger of falling to the other side - some people, despite having someone nearby who is a good match for them, refuse to engage in any sexual behaviour. That is a different fear, a fear of commitment, intimacy, dependence; a fear of being open and truly relating to the other person, a fear of loss of autonomy. This is a symptom of too much self-concern, and too much self-love; narcissism; or again, a fear of inadequacy, and a fear of vulnerability. There's also the people who only want sex with strangers - presumably also this latter fear of vulnerability, combined with a fear of responsibility. But a strong man is neither of those two extremes, but a balanced middle. He will not be afraid to pounce, but only if the circumstances are right.I've come across people with some quite odd preferences, people whose impulse control was somewhat deficient, criminal predators, petty crooks, hustlers, prostitutes, guys that spent too much time thinking about sex, people who spent way too much time in bars drinking, and so on -- but maybe only three hypersexuals since 1968. There just aren't that many people out there who have THAT MUCH sex. They wish, but no. — Bitter Crank
A relationship cannot be improved by not having sex. If the relationship isn't good, then it's not good, full stop. And it's not good because of character defects (in one or both partners), not because of the presence or lack of sex. — Agustino
Celibacy is developing the inner strength to: 1. refuse to take that which isn't worth your time (refuse to engage in sexual relationships with people who will hurt themselves and hurt you), and 2. learn to live alone (because sometimes in life you may actually have to), and 3. learn to be patient and wait so that you may catch gold. Simple. And it's not my philosophy, it's the philosophy that has existed for reasonable men and women since Aristotle. A diamond cannot be found without patience, perseverance, learning to say no, and temperance and prudence. All of the former are virtues.
So my point is aim to get married. Keep looking for virtuous people. Stay in their company, and ultimately marry one. But do not marry just because you need to have sex. Do not marry just because other people are. Do not marry the wrong person because you cannot find better. Be of good courage and persevere in your search. And this is all greatly facilitated by celibacy until then. — Agustino
The only ones who are willing to do anything to get laid are desperate people who cannot control or manage their own urges (a character defect by the way - a defect which will certainly not be solved by "getting laid"). — Agustino
Only when one has reached their potential for freedom and independence can they truly enjoy sex - not as slaves running after something without which they cannot live - but as dignified human beings, sharing their freedom with one another out of a free choice to do so. — Agustino
Running to the closest woman because I cannot control my sexual impulse is shameful - a parade of my un-freedom, masking itself as a free decision, when it is no free decision, but a forced decision. — Agustino
Ok, I agree to this by and large. However, I disagree that screwing my best friend will necessarily change our relationship, anymore than taking her on a fantastic boat ride would - it depends on the expectations which each has. There's many shared experiences which can change a relationship, and sex is just one of them.Your other comment here is striking for how incorrect it is. Sex can dramatically change a relationship, either improving it by bringing the people closer together or by destroying a friendship. If you don't believe me, go screw your best friend and see if everything is the same the next morning. The point being that sex is an important component of a relationship, but obviously one of many. — Hanover
I think I said this in my very first post, sorry if this wasn't clear enough.Your references to celibacy conjure thoughts of lifelong abstinence for spiritual reasons, but then you go on to say that really you're only advocating abstinence before marriage — Hanover
Dating without sex doesn't seem to make much sense. I would just call that a form of friendship, albeit different than what is usually understood by friendship. And yes, by marriage I mean a strong committed relationship, not necessarily something approved of by a priest. I do think that friendship comes first, dating is merely a transition from just friendship, to something more. In a Venn diagram, dating is the intersection between the friendship circle, and the relationship/marriage circle.I'm not sure why celibates who are just waiting for marriage cannot have meaningful friendships or even romantic non-sexual relationships. Those who preach abstinence do not mean that you can't date anyone. They just don't want you to have sex until marriage. — Hanover
I'm afraid this doesn't follow. A drug addict may happily go his way and ignore my advice, but that is not an argument against my advice being useful. My advice is useful if he had only listened to it. Arguments against my advice being useful are intellectual, his not being helped by my advice is a problem of will; he makes a free choice to ignore it.I don't favor promiscuity, but your simple declaration that those who are out looking for meaningless sex are somehow flawed is nothing but a moral judgment by you as to what sex ought to represent to people. There are those who don't live by that standard and go happily on their way, which simply means that your advice may not be useful to a segment of the population. — Hanover
Well perhaps they should think about it themselves, and ponder it carefully, and see afterwards if in fact they do not come to this same conclusion.I can only imagine the surprise of those who thought they were truly enjoying sex, but are now learning they weren't. — Hanover
You understand what I meant though - of course there are "socially acceptable" (read, effective) ways of sprinting up to them and asking for sexual release, obviously not directly.It's not shameful as much as it might be embarrassing and futile. Although I am far from being one to offer advice on how to score with the ladies, sprinting up to them asking for sexual release might not be effective. — Hanover
Uh, yeah. Sure. Just like going on a cool boat ride.However, I disagree that screwing my best friend will necessarily change our relationship, anymore than taking her on a fantastic boat ride would - it depends on the expectations which each has. — Agustino
So it's not a date until you have sex? What was it before the moment of penetration? Just a friendly encounter?Dating without sex doesn't seem to make much sense. — Agustino
My point is that there is enough variation in acceptable behavior that someone doesn't have to model themselves after you in order to be normal. I'd also say that your views seem to be based upon intellectual notions of virtue and righteousness as opposed to any real life analysis. We are talking about human behaviors and relationships which are inherently emotionally based, which means that any analysis that simply declares a behavior inappropriate based upon some logical reason will be incomplete (and really naïve sounding). We all understand that if logic controlled such matters, Romeo wouldn't have dated Juliette. Of course, they really never "dated" because they didn't have sex before they were married.A drug addict may happily go his way and ignore my advice, but that is not an argument against my advice being useful. — Agustino
Sort of like telling me that I really didn't enjoy that glass of wine because I didn't comprehend the nuances of a glass of wine well drunk, despite my assurances that I did. We're now into refined fucking that only the sophisticated can truly appreciate I guess. Sounds complicated and somewhat tiring. Too each his own I guess.Well perhaps they should think about it themselves, and ponder it carefully, and see afterwards if in fact they do not come to this same conclusion. — Agustino
So it's not a date until you have sex? What was it before the moment of penetration? Just a friendly encounter? — Hanover
In a Venn diagram, dating is the intersection between the friendship circle, and the relationship/marriage circle. — Agustino
True, but some things can be determined to be wrong. In this case promiscuity can be determined to be deleterious, both to the participants themselves, as well as to the society at large. If you would like I can provide a detailed argument for why this is so (I have just recently in fact provided the argument but only for social damage in a response to BC on the other forum http://forums.philosophyforums.com/comments.php?id=74551&findpost=1368094#post1368094My point is that there is enough variation in acceptable behavior that someone doesn't have to model themselves after you in order to be normal. — Hanover
My ideas of virtue and righteousness are based on real life. In fact most people on Earth share those values by and large - if not in practice, then at least as an ideal.I'd also say that your views seem to be based upon intellectual notions of virtue and righteousness as opposed to any real life analysis. — Hanover
Yes but claiming that emotionally based behavior cannot be critiqued, and that right and wrong cannot be determined in emotionally based behavior is simply not true. Beating up your brother because he stole the keys to your car may be an emotionally based behavior, but that doesn't excuse it from being criticized, and being analyzed to determine whether it is right or wrong. Same for promiscuous sex.We are talking about human behaviors and relationships which are inherently emotionally based, which means that any analysis that simply declares a behavior inappropriate based upon some logical reason will be incomplete (and really naïve sounding). — Hanover
This was addressed before in this current post.Of course, they really never "dated" because they didn't have sex before they were married. — Hanover
No it's not like this at all. It's about an activity that is bringing you some harm, and yet you refuse to perceive the harm. Just like taking drugs does harm to a drug addict, and yet they often fail to perceive the harm, and overly emphasize the good feelings they get from it.Sort of like telling me that I really didn't enjoy that glass of wine because I didn't comprehend the nuances of a glass of wine well drunk, despite my assurances that I did. We're now into refined fucking that only the sophisticated can truly appreciate I guess. — Hanover
...but that doesn't excuse it from being criticized, and being analyzed to determine whether it is right or wrong. Same for promiscuous sex. — Agustino
I took the relationship between celibacy and weak anti-natalism in Thorongil's post to be one of indistinguishability in behavioural commitments, but not moral commitments. A person with a commitment to celibacy will in practice also be an "anti-natalist" in a weak sense by virtue of the reproductive upshot of celibacy. — Soylent
I don't think Thorongil wanted to commit to the position that celibacy entails a corresponding anti-natalist attitude. — Soylent
Truvada is an HIV nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitor and prevents HIV from reproducing within target cells. — Bitter Crank
No, it's not correct to state that a celibate is an anti-natalist, in any sense, simply by virtue of being celibate. The prefix "anti" means "opposed to" or "against", and natalism is the position that reproduction is acceptable — Sapientia
Analog is so old school. Is this hipster medicine? When is the digitally remastered version coming out? — Hanover
Which is why I think Thorongil settled on anatalism to describe the weak "anti-natalist" position. I think it would be analogous to calling a person who doesn't go to church as irreligious, but irreligious is indistinguishable from the weak anti-religious position, whatever that might be, in behavioural commitments. I'm not sure what purpose Thorongil's use of anatalism serves for describing celibacy, but it seems to be related to the shift away from the anti-natalist self-identification, which might be related to your criticism of "anti-religion" and "anti-abortion" being an inappropriate description (i.e., they're not opposed to it, they just don't do it). — Soylent
I'd also point out that if your celibacy is the result of inability, then you may want to work on those issues as opposed to philosophizing them away and convincing yourself that you're advancing some higher objective. I have the sneaky suspicion that all this "I'm not interested in such matters" would get turned upside down if the right person came along. Own it and fix it. — Hanover
I understand the difference, I was also trying to understand Thorongil's position in relation to anatalism. I understood the celibacy comment to describe that Thorongil identifies as an anatalist both because it is not justifiable to have children, and also because the lifestyle commitment is unlikely to produce a child by the reproductive upshot. I take that to mean that Thorongil is celibate and will not use artificial insemination or any other medical intervention to have a child. It's a personal identification as anatalist not referring to the moral status of having children. — Soylent
So now I identify as an anatalist, both because I find natalism unjustified and because I happen to be celibate. — Thorongil
[The weak anti-natalist] could also be someone whose lifestyle negates the possibility of having children, such as celibacy, meaning that they practically assent to anti-natalism, if not theoretically. — Thorongil
Are you saying that he is saying that he is celibate because he is anatalist, or vice versa? It seems to me that it's vice versa — Sapientia
Or to state otherwise, Thorongil's celibacy as a lifestyle choice is unlikely to produce children (anatalist) and the moral position that having children is not wrong but also not right is unlikely to produce children (anatalist). Because of the two distinct positions, Thorongil identifies as anatalist rather than anti-natalist. — Soylent
I do agree though that celibacy simpliciter does not preclude the option to have children, but it may be the case that a person that chooses celibacy has, at least in themselves, tacitly assented to the position that it is not the case that one ought to have children. — Soylent
It might also be significant that Thorongil hasn't committed to a strong position either by disclaiming the weak anti-nalalist position with the word "could". That is different than saying "the weak anti-natalist is also someone whose lifestyle..." — Soylent
I'd also point out that if your celibacy is the result of inability, then you may want to work on those issues as opposed to philosophizing them away and convincing yourself that you're advancing some higher objective. I have the sneaky suspicion that all this "I'm not interested in such matters" would get turned upside down if the right person came along. Own it and fix it. — Hanover
I did point out the logical problems with the association of celibacy and the anti-natalist position, indicating that there is simply no way to correlate the two. You can hate sex and want more children in the world, love sex and want no more children in the world, hate sex and hate children, and love sex and love children. We could even change the word "hate" to "be indifferent to" and "love" to "sort of like" and even create more logical possibilities. Every possible logical possibility can exist.
This being a philosophy forum, and my response being so obvious, I can only wonder (and admittedly out loud) why someone might try to draw a correlation when there isn't one. My thought was that the OP wasn't rational at all, but more of a rationalization; thus my response, which included a possible reason one might wish to rationalize.
I'd also point out that if a rule were passed requiring that I remain on topic, the world would have lost out on some of my most interesting insights. — Hanover
I don't think that your reply to Hanover actually addresses the very clear and specific point that he made, nor does it seem to address anti-natalism or anatalism - which is clearly what this discussion was created to discuss. — Sapientia
In your block of text, there is just a single sentence which is closer to the topic of discussion, which states that sexual appetite is "a powerful force that is necessary to propel the next generation". But it remains the case that you don't need to have sex in order to reproduce, so that comment is mistaken or beside the point. — Sapientia
Your whole reply seems to boil down to an attempted justification of a restrained will or desire, but fails to even address - let alone resolve - the erroneous association between anti-natalism and celibacy that Hanover and I have pointed out. — Sapientia
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