Did I say that sexual promiscuity, etc. should be illegal or what? Identifying an activity as immoral isn't coming with the pitchfork, as I'm not trying to get him to do anything by force. I'm just discussing with him, and explaining why his behaviour is immoral. — Agustino
I work out, I have a sexy body that I'm proud of, why would I want some tramp to enjoy it eh?... I want to have sex with a woman who deserves to have sex with me — Agustino
What the hell is wrong with people these days... — Agustino
Well that's certainly not my fantasy. Do you think I'm lying to you? And no if you were to say that to your exclusive partner it wouldn't be just a white lie, it would be quite problematic because you're being dishonest about your intentions and how you feel about her. And that's actually very serious, you will never be capable to have an intimate relationship with someone if you'll keep up this dishonest behaviour. — Agustino
No that's absolutely not coming at him with a pitchfork, you don't even know what you're talking about. A pitchfork implies violence (or certainly the threat of violence) used to get someone to behave a certain way, and no I haven't done that.Explaining why his behaviour is immoral is coming at him with a pitchfork. — TimeLine
Yeah give me a break. There's a difference between narcissism and a normal and adequate self-respect and self-esteem which takes into consideration your situation. If you consider yourself such that you're willing to sleep with just about anybody, there's something wrong with your self-esteem.Just to let you know: — TimeLine
The one who knows myself and my body better than you do, clearly.And who are you to speak when you say the following: — TimeLine
Yes it does, I'm trying to educate you not to do that to your loved one, because it would be very very bad for both of you if you did that. It's better to be honest if you have that fantasy, and discuss it openly, and work through it with your beloved rather than hide it from her through your "white lie", which isn't actually that white at all. If you repress it like that, it will just ruin your relationship or get you to do something that you regret.allocate blame in response to an honest admission. That speaks to your character. — geospiza
It's better to be honest if you have that fantasy, and discuss it openly, and work through it with your beloved rather than hide it from her through your "white lie" — Agustino
I did try it, it went very well. Not exactly with your fantasy (I never had that one), but rather with porn viewing. I told my girlfriend when I was 16ish (can't remember the exact ages), and she helped me get over it.I urge you to try it and report back on your experience. — geospiza
What do you mean avoid attribution? You yourself said it. And I absolutely do think you need to be educated if you think that hiding your fantasies about other people from your partner is a "white lie". It's absolutely not a white lie.so please avoid attribution of either the "white lie" or the "full disclosure" to me personally. — geospiza
The experience of a genuinely loving relationship where I am respected and admired and likewise that I respect and admire my partner elongates that pleasurable sensation beyond the bedroom, and it establishes meaning to our existence in a mutually shared capacity that in doing so motivates us to become better people. It is not only casual sex that I have a problem with; many couples - including those that are married - are in it for convenience, dependence or tradition rather than for love and so it is an empty bind that results in the same meaninglessness as casual sex and one will never find themselves feeling pleasure neither ever progressing. But unlike, say, masturbation (which I don't think is immoral but without pornography, but please let's not get into that), there are a number of practical concerns that render casual sex problematic, the epidemiological is clear for one. The problem can thus also become practical ethics as well as morality. — TimeLine
who wasn't willing to help you overcome your moral defects and become a better human being — Agustino
What do you mean avoid attribution? You yourself said it. And I absolutely do think you need to be educated if you think that hiding your fantasies about other people from your partner is a "white lie". It's absolutely not a white lie. — Agustino
Does my sentence which you quoted say the opposite somehow? I don't see it.People don't generally begin a romantic relationship with the primary purpose of helping to cure the other person's imperfections. — geospiza
And?! Did I say you did?I made no such admission to telling the "white lie" — geospiza
Yes - that and the examples you gave are the problem.I said only that there might be good reason to withhold disclosure of one's fantasies from others in some circumstances. — geospiza
No the analogy absolutely can't be drawn that way. The analogy compares the logic of the situation, NOT the gravity of the offences. Only someone like you can fail to see this. The analogy points that the underlying logic is the same. In the case of giving them cyanide, their consent doesn't make that action moral. Neither does their consent make the action of sex moral. Now, what the fuck does any of this have to do with which action is worse? :s Are you that incapable of comprehending what you read?! — Agustino
Read what I wrote above before peddling this stupid strawman for the 1000s time — Agustino
No, you haven't breached my consent, you've violated my property and a few other rights, not my consent. — Agustino
No, if by like you mean a comparison of the gravity of the two offences. However, if by like you mean that they share the same logical structure, sure. — Agustino
Because you cannot have a tattoo without injury the body, but you can work at McDonald's without injury. — Agustino
No, consent is only breached when you actively force someone to do themselves against their will. If I do something that doesn't match what someone else wants me to do, that's absolutely not breaking their consent. Breaking their consent is forcing THEM to do something they don't want to do, typically through the use of force. You have a bit more studying to do. — Agustino
We only need to enforce it culturally, not legally - that would be a good thing, it would save a lot of people from suffering and pain. Certainly better than allowing you to enforce your idiocy culturally. — Agustino
That doesn't mean they're not objectively harmful. Someone may not perceive cannibalism as harmful. So what? Does that tell me cannibalism is not harmful? This is a very stupid objection that people don't all agree. Who gives a fuck what they say? I don't. I just care about the truth. — Agustino
No, that's actually not true. If my behaviour was directed towards successfully impregnating a female I'd donate my sperm to a sperm bank and impregnate thousands of females. Clearly I'm not very keen to do that. Their idea that everything we do is directed toward impregnating a female is extremely naive and short-sighted, and disregards the human component (as opposed to the animal) of our being. — Agustino
That it also has an evolutionary role, there's no doubt about it, but to assume that the evolutionary role is everything about it, that's naive. There's a lot more reasons why I want to bond for life with a female, some of which have little to do with offspring. — Agustino
There is no doubt that love has chemical effects that are detectible in the body - but to go from that and say that that's all what love is, that's the height of idiocy, excuse my words. That's called jumping to conclusions to say the least. — Agustino
For the most part yes, but it depends. So long as it doesn't frustrate the other purpose of sex (intimacy) I'd have no issue with some forms of contraception. — Agustino
Are you an idiot or what's the matter with you? How can sex be an expression of your love for them when you rape them? Can you please explain this? — Agustino
No, there is no logical connection between something being acceptable and not being immoral, so you're drawing this link based on empty air. — Agustino
Yes, happiness does involve pleasure, however to affirm idiotically as you have that someone will be happy because they experience pleasure is stupid beyond measure. — Agustino
No, since you're not actively doing something to frustrate the ends of your sexuality. — Agustino
Yes that is immoral. You can do whatever you want with your penis, that doesn't mean it's good.
The rest of your post is blabber, red herrings and strawmen so I won't bother. When you have something more significant to say, you can let me know. — Agustino
Saying both are inherently harmful isn't comparing them.you're necessarily drawing some sort of comparison between the harm of cyanide and the harm of sex — VagabondSpectre
In terms of JUST sexuality yes. But this is not a problem. Since having sex with them doesn't involve just sexuality, it involves other virtues as well, such as justice and charity. So while in terms of sexuality there is no immorality provided that the non-consensual sex is with your wife, there would be immorality in terms of justice and charity. And since justice and charity are both more important than sexuality in terms of morals, then having non-consensual sex with your wife is immoral overall.Unfortunately you have failed to communicate a sensical position in regards to consent and sex. Very clearly you don't think consent has to do with the morality of sex, and so by that logic having non-consensual sex with someone must be the same as having consensual sex with them (plus some arbitrary violation of consent like being force fed cabbage). — VagabondSpectre
No there is a strawman based on the fact that it seems your intellect isn't strong enough to be able to make the necessary distinctions or appreciate charitably the ideas presented, or if you lack knowledge, read and inform yourself.This is no red herring or strawman Aug, this is the messy underside of your poorly formed moral ideas. If I were you I would recant... — VagabondSpectre
No you haven't. You'd have breached my consent when you force ME to do something, not when YOU do something. In that case you've breached my right to property amongst several others, but not my consent.If you have a no flyers sign and tell me not to dig a hole in your yard, but I send you flyers and dig a hole in your yard, I've breached your consent. — VagabondSpectre
You're equivocating between two different senses of consent.If you want flyers though, and give me consent to send them to you, then the same action (sending flyers) becomes beneficial to you as opposed to harmful (consent changes the moral nature of the underlying action as it applies to individuals). If you're trying to install an in-ground pool, and you consent for me to dig the hole for it, then I'm actually doing something morally praiseworthy. — VagabondSpectre
That may be true if sex were like having a haircut. But it's not. You said "it's more invasive" ;)Having consensual sex with someone is like giving them a consensual hair-cut. Both actions are not immoral because consent is involved and there is no necessary harm in the underlying actions... — VagabondSpectre
In scenario A you present one action, in scenario B you present two actions which are unrelated. That makes it impossible to compare directly.If so, can you explain why rape has the same moral gravitas as consensual sex + a minor infraction against someone's consent? (remember, because consent has nothing to do with the morality of an underlying action)... — VagabondSpectre
How am I restricting your freedom? Since when is morality a restriction of freedom? Do you think your freedom is restricted for example because you can't eat other people? Do you think your freedom is restricted because you and others have property rights? No - actually your freedom is increased in these manners.I'm trying to escape your attempts to restrict my freedom via your crappy moral suppositions. — VagabondSpectre
It would be hedonism if happiness = pleasure - it seems you keep comflating the two, you can't even keep your mind straight mate. What's wrong with you?To be happy? (nope, because that's hedonism or something) — VagabondSpectre
This is your assumption. You have yet to prove this, and let me tell you - science ain't gonna help you, because this is a METAPHYSICAL assumption.Love is in fact a chemical cocktail. It's not a metaphysical or transcendent "force", it's a physical state of mind, and it was created and refined by evolution, not by god or some objective meaning of life. — VagabondSpectre
It actually does, if you understood it.In other words, the existence of love doesn't demand that we orient the entirety of our moral frameworks around it. — VagabondSpectre
Yes, now you actually bring up something valid - took you a long time guessing and stabbing in the dark to put your hand on something that may be problematic. Not all Aristotelians would agree with me here, but basically here's my argument: Human beings are formed of a rational soul, which includes capacities of the animal (sensory) and the vegetative (nutritive) souls (ALERT: these are Aristotelian terms with clear definitions to which people who understand the definitions would agree, please don't cry about God) but adds to them the capacity for will and intellect (personhood). Granting that what differentiates human beings from animals is superior and greater (will & intellect), it follows that if it's necessary to sacrifice a telos that belongs to the animal and vegetative parts of the soul in order to achieve a telos that belongs to the human part of the soul then such is moral. Under this reasoning, if it's necessary to sacrifice reproduction, to achieve intimacy, then this would be moral, since (sexual) reproduction belongs to the animal part of the soul, while intimacy belongs to the uniquely human part of the soul. Another reason why promiscuity isn't immoral in animals, for them the telos is just reproduction, so they're not doing anything immoral, for promiscuity is something that hurts the uniquely human telos of intimacy. That's also why you're immoral if you have promiscuous sex aimed at reproduction - but it would be a lot less immoral than if you were to just have promiscuous sex while frustrating both intimacy and reproduction.Why are you allowed to frustrate one of the two necessary ends of sex?
Is there some kind of "satisfy at least one teleological end of an action and you're not immoral" rule?
I'd say that makes no sense according to your logic. If you're frustrating EITHER end you're doing yourself harm (by your logic). — VagabondSpectre
You clearly don't understand. No it doesn't have to do with the intrinsic morality of the underlying action, but it DOES have to do with the morality of the human interaction that is presupposed by the underlying action. So even if the underlying action were moral, you can still commit some wrongs through the interaction (by for example imposing your will by force on another)."consent has nothing to do with the morality of the underlying action", and because "I value them as a person, want to be intimate, reproduce, and express my love for them through the act of sex" (let's assume that I even marry her at a shotgun wedding, which also isn't immoral because "consent has nothing to do with the underlying morality of an action"), then how could this instance of rape possibly be immoral? — VagabondSpectre
No, it's never MORAL to murder or eat other people. It may be acceptable simply because it is the lesser evil - for example someone tries to murder you, and you kill them first. That's not moral, but it's acceptable, simply because it's the lesser evil for you.I mean, you're the one who stated that cannibalism is always immoral but acceptable in some cases. I'm the one who is suggesting that it is moral (or not immoral to be specific) in some cases, such as in the case of survival necessity. — VagabondSpectre
Right everyone does this. Distinctions exist at the intellectual level, not in reality. If you read some Aristotle, you'd actually know this. Again - the reason why your comprehension is so terrible is because you don't even have the basics clear. I'm not gonna educate you in logic and metaphysics now.I don't actually subscribe to the idea that some actions are in and of themselves immoral. I think that depends on intentions, circumstances, and in some ways outcomes. — VagabondSpectre
It's questionable whether there even is such a drive as seeking pleasure for its own sake. Furthermore, "pleasure from eating is fundamental to human psychology" is very questionable."Pleasure from eating is fundamental to human psychology. The drive to seek pleasure is just as fundamental as the drive to avoid pain and to stay alive. — VagabondSpectre
Because I don't undertake an action that frustrates those ends. I'm staying in my natural state - not marrying, and not reproducing - in other words not doing anything. I'm not taking any action which frustrates those ends. Not doing anything doesn't count as doing something that frustrates it. I don't die if I don't have sex, so there's nothing frustrated about my being or about my sexuality (as I've shown before).How does not getting married and not reproducing NOT frustrate "the necessary teleological ends of sex" (per your definition)? — VagabondSpectre
I never claimed consensual sex is morally equivalent to suicide and cannibalism. You're strawmanning again and this is becoming very painful to discuss because of your ignorance of what I'm actually saying.Stop saying that consensual sex is in any way morally equivalent to suicide and cannibalism, and stop suggesting that consent has nothing to do with the "underlying morality of actions" (especially with reference to sex). — VagabondSpectre
It is not mutually consensual casual sex between two single adults that I find immoral, but this very assumption, this notion that it is reasonable to approach a woman to 'find out' which is enough to expose your intent and the very point I am attempting to convey. The intent that compels you to 'find out' whether a woman is sexually available is a flaw in your perception of women and this intention verifies who you are as a person. So, what happens to the woman who you approach and who is not sexually available? Who gives a shit, right? Abandon, and then next? Next what exactly? Your intention in approaching the woman to find out if she is available for casual sex is immoral; that is sexual objectification. Morality is about what is going on in your mind and the decisions that you make and the perceptions that you believe, and not about them agreeing to it or not. — TimeLine
Why do you continuously put me into the same category as Aug? I do not think you are morally depraved neither do I have a problem with sex outside of marriage, but having meaningless sex without love is, to me, degrading to my personhood. I actually believe in genuine love and I have yet to encounter someone who can see 'me' rather than my body and I refuse to share my body for a fleeting moment of sexual gratification. — TimeLine
Do you honestly think that I'm devaluing the person-hood of someone by describing them as a "sexually satisfied customer"? — VagabondSpectre
I see, but then you say:
" She's really got one of those "actualize the potential for communion" bodies." — VagabondSpectre
No objectification of women there, right? — TimeLine
I mean that I've had sex with them, they liked it, and came back for more (and I them). — VagabondSpectre
Urg, yeah ok. — TimeLine
The experience of a genuinely loving relationship where I am respected and admired and likewise that I respect and admire my partner elongates that pleasurable sensation beyond the bedroom, and it establishes meaning to our existence in a mutually shared capacity that in doing so motivates us to become better people. — TimeLine
It is not only casual sex that I have a problem with; many couples - including those that are married - are in it for convenience, dependence or tradition rather than for love and so it is an empty bind that results in the same meaninglessness as casual sex and one will never find themselves feeling pleasure neither ever progressing. But unlike, say, masturbation (which I don't think is immoral but without pornography, but please let's not get into that), there are a number of practical concerns that render casual sex problematic, the epidemiological is clear for one. — TimeLine
The problem can thus also become practical ethics as well as morality. This is what you are refusing to discuss because you are trying to defend yourself from Aug who is coming at you with his pitchfork and torch; set that aside, we are talking rational ethics. — TimeLine
No. I never suggested that, you assume that because you are failing to see the philosophical problem at hand. We need to ascertain whether there is any intrinsic meaning in our sexual relations with one another - which we have come to agree as meaning formed by mutual affection and love that becomes instrumental to the pleasures that bring value to sexual activity and to our own identity or personhood - and as such, what lacks intrinsic meaning is the disvalue due to the lack of this mutual affection and love. — TimeLine
The source of pleasure in our sexual activity becomes the key to permissibility and so, if as stated above it has intrinsic meaning over or above the source of pleasure, likewise should the source of pleasure outweigh the intrinsic meaning, the person or the other' value is reduced below the desire to attain an orgasm. It is not to say that it will certainly lead to acts of rape or harm of another neither does it require absolute prohibition, but sociopaths can also be non-violent and we are talking morality here. The very source of our abhorrence of non-consensual acts of sexual activity. — TimeLine
It may appear logical to believe that casual sex is justifiable and rape is completely abhorrent, but there is certainly an inconsistency when trying to argue philosophically why acts such as rape wherein no principles - value, meaning - binds the act itself together is any different to casual sex which also lacks this binding principles. — TimeLine
Saying both are inherently harmful isn't comparing them. — Agustino
In terms of JUST sexuality yes. But this is not a problem. Since having sex with them doesn't involve just sexuality, it involves other virtues as well, such as justice and charity. So while in terms of sexuality there is no immorality provided that the non-consensual sex is with your wife, there would be immorality in terms of justice and charity. And since justice and charity are both more important than sexuality in terms of morals, then having non-consensual sex with your wife is immoral overall.
Really you're clearly not very well read, because Aristotelians through history have dealt multiple times with this objection that you bring up and you somehow think I never thought of :s — Agustino
You're equivocating between two different senses of consent. — Agustino
That may be true if sex were like having a haircut. But it's not. You said "it's more invasive" ;) — Agustino
In scenario A you present one action, in scenario B you present two actions which are unrelated. That makes it impossible to compare directly. — Agustino
How am I restricting your freedom? Since when is morality a restriction of freedom? Do you think your freedom is restricted for example because you can't eat other people? Do you think your freedom is restricted because you and others have property rights? No - actually your freedom is increased in these manners. — Agustino
This is your assumption. You have yet to prove this, and let me tell you - science ain't gonna help you, because this is a METAPHYSICAL assumption. — Agustino
Yes, now you actually bring up something valid - took you a long time guessing and stabbing in the dark to put your hand on something that may be problematic. Not all Aristotelians would agree with me here, but basically here's my argument: Human beings are formed of a rational soul, which includes capacities of the animal (sensory) and the vegetative (nutritive) souls (ALERT: these are Aristotelian terms with clear definitions to which people who understand the definitions would agree, please don't cry about God) but adds to them the capacity for will and intellect (personhood). Granting that what differentiates human beings from animals is superior and greater (will & intellect), it follows that if it's necessary to sacrifice a telos that belongs to the animal and vegetative parts of the soul in order to achieve a telos that belongs to the human part of the soul then such is moral. Under this reasoning, if it's necessary to sacrifice reproduction, to achieve intimacy, then this would be moral, since (sexual) reproduction belongs to the animal part of the soul, while intimacy belongs to the uniquely human part of the soul. Another reason why promiscuity isn't immoral in animals, for them the telos is just reproduction, so they're not doing anything immoral, for promiscuity is something that hurts the uniquely human telos of intimacy. That's also why you're immoral if you have promiscuous sex aimed at reproduction - but it would be a lot less immoral than if you were to just have promiscuous sex while frustrating both intimacy and reproduction. — Agustino
You clearly don't understand. No it doesn't have to do with the intrinsic morality of the underlying action, but it DOES have to do with the morality of the human interaction that is presupposed by the underlying action. So even if the underlying action were moral, you can still commit some wrongs through the interaction (by for example imposing your will by force on another).
These are Aristotelian distinctions, which you don't seem to be capable to make even though you've read Aristotle (or so you claim). For example, there is talk of X being wrong in-so-far as it is considered in itself - this wouldn't include consent in the case of sex for example. But there is also talk of whether or not X is wrong (tout court), which would include other considerations apart from just the underlying action in and of itself. — Agustino
It's questionable whether there even is such a drive as seeking pleasure for its own sake. Furthermore, "pleasure from eating is fundamental to human psychology" is very questionable. — Agustino
Because I don't undertake an action that frustrates those ends. I'm staying in my natural state - not marrying, and not reproducing - in other words not doing anything. I'm not taking any action which frustrates those ends. Not doing anything doesn't count as doing something that frustrates it. I don't die if I don't have sex, so there's nothing frustrated about my being or about my sexuality (as I've shown before). — Agustino
I never claimed consensual sex is morally equivalent to suicide and cannibalism. You're strawmanning again and this is becoming very painful to discuss because of your ignorance of what I'm actually saying. — Agustino
To illustrate that they are (or can be) both harmful in-themselves, without even bringing the question of consent into play.Why bother making the juxtaposition if not to suggest some kind of equivalence between these two things? — VagabondSpectre
Charity involves compassion and taking care of others, if you force them to do something that's not very compassionate. The virtue of justice and charity do have to do with consent, among other things, in this specific context. However, the virtue of chastity (which is what we refer to when we call sex in and of itself immoral - has zero to do with consent).So it's not the harm done to your wife that makes raping her immoral, it's that it's not "just" and "charitable"?
What in your virtue ethics makes it unjust (hint: does it have to do with consent?), and what does charity have to do with it? — VagabondSpectre
Yes, but the immorality of casual sex does not restrict this freedom. We're not talking about making casual sex illegal. You said that I try to restrict your freedom - and that's false.My freedom would be restricted if i didn't have the right to have sex with consenting adults, not increased... — VagabondSpectre
I asked a question first. Since you say that love is JUST the chemical reaction visible in the body, the onus is on you to prove this, since a priori, it is at least logically possible, especially given our experience, that love involves a lot more than this.You mean your metaphysical assumption that love is more than it's physical description? I know, science ain't gonna help you there. — VagabondSpectre
Okay here's where I wanted to bring you. You've now said that this contains no actual evidence. Furthermore you've said that the "rational soul" is not proven or scientific. Please remember these two statements. I want you to take the questions below and provide me clear and direct answers - no evasiveness, no mocking, no nothing of that sort. Failure to do this will indicate that you're not interested to continue this conversation on a rational basis.You realize that all this can be brushed aside with no effort because it contains no actual evidence?
The assumption that humans have a "rational soul" is not proven or scientific. Dividing this unproven soul into the "animal" and "vegetative" is an unsubstantiated extension of just assuming "rational souls" exist in the first place (regardless of how vague I might object the terms to be). Then comes the arbitrary moral value assumption that says the "vegetative" is more morally valuable than the "animal". And finally comes the assumption that the telelogical hierarchy of necessary ends of these realities constitutes a sound basis for objective moral reasoning. This is just bullshit predicated on bullshit... — VagabondSpectre
By this logic it's never moral to ever approach a woman with the intention of pursuing a romantic relationship because that sexually objectifies her and what not.
How do people ever get into a relationship in this world? Is only the woman allowed to make the first move? Does she need to wear a sign that says "interested in a relationship" around her neck? — VagabondSpectre
I don't care about elongating the pleasure of admiration and respect beyond the bedroom. Nor do I need admiration and respect to "establish meaning to my existence", nor do I find "motivating myself to become a better person" to be morally obligatory. — VagabondSpectre
My advice is to not go to such bars and clubs. (or places where sexual fraternization is the main attraction). — VagabondSpectre
Strictly speaking, your notion that approaching a woman to find out if she's interested in sex is immoral because if she's not interested then she and society yata yata yata are harmed is like saying that it's immoral to make eye contact with any other human being because they might have some sensitivity that renders eye contract a traumatic experience for them. — VagabondSpectre
"Sexual objectification" isn't the same as whatever "devaluation of person-hood" is. I don't suddenly forget that sexy women are people too because I talk about their body as if I'm attracted to it... — VagabondSpectre
I hope I am not crossing the line by suggesting that you have a woman's perspective. — geospiza
Notwithstanding that you might find your soulmate there, what kind of expectations would you have about finding Mr. Right in that setting? — geospiza
Isn't there something to be said about lightening up a little? — geospiza
Sophisticated people know that the overture is half-serious as is the rejection. — geospiza
Men are afraid that women will laugh at them. Women are afraid that men will kill them. — Margaret Atwood
I confessed to a fantasy. I see now that it was a mistake to let my guard down. — geospiza
Yes, because saying that is just a subtle form of coercion. — TimeLine
Reminds me of the following quote:
Men are afraid that women will laugh at them. Women are afraid that men will kill them.
— Margaret Atwood — TimeLine
For what it is worth, I wish you would not view your 'confession' as a mistake because I can appreciate your fantasy as well. There is nothing wrong with your fantasy. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I did not personally attack you - go back and read it again. It seems to me that you have no clue what you're talking about and you get very easily offended - that's not my fault now.It was a mistake to admit it to what's-his-face because he just turned around and used it to personally attack me. — geospiza
Can you please stop discussing and spewing falsity about me? There's nothing selfish about anything that I've said for that matter. Nor did I encourage treatment of women as objects, but rather quite the opposite. You should really be ashamed of yourself for letting your personal feelings towards me cloud your judgement to the extent that in almost each and every message of yours you have to say misrepresent what I say in order to be able to say something negative about me.You and Aug are both doing the exact same thing in different ways, that is you are seeking for entirely selfish purposes based on what you want, but through friendship one develops empathy, which enables one to give love and so you no longer desire that type of gain and turn that narcissism away to feel care and admiration for your partner. They are no longer an object but a person and when this is reciprocated a genuine bond is formed and thus one begins the process of a romantic relationship. — TimeLine
I've been told that a common women's fantasy is the opposite: to have the singular devotion and attention of one man they admire. If that's true, how can we account for these conflicting fantasies in a relationship? — geospiza
Can you please stop discussing and spewing falsity about me? — Agustino
I have a sexy body that I'm proud of, why would I want some tramp to enjoy it eh? — Agustino
Keep quiet with your bullshit. — Agustino
you got rid of a son/daughter of a bitch who didn't love you to begin with — Agustino
I did not personally attack you - go back and read it again. It seems to me that you have no clue what you're talking about and you get very easily offended - that's not my fault now. — Agustino
How warped and cynical. — geospiza
To illustrate that they are (or can be) both harmful in-themselves, without even bringing the question of consent into play. — Agustino
I asked a question first. Since you say that love is JUST the chemical reaction visible in the body, the onus is on you to prove this, since a priori, it is at least logically possible, especially given our experience, that love involves a lot more than this — Agustino
Okay here's where I wanted to bring you. You've now said that this contains no actual evidence. Furthermore you've said that the "rational soul" is not proven or scientific. Please remember these two statements. I want you to take the questions below and provide me clear and direct answers - no evasiveness, no mocking, no nothing of that sort. Failure to do this will indicate that you're not interested to continue this conversation on a rational basis.
• What is this "rational soul" that you claim is not proven or scientific? — Agustino
• What do you mean by scientific or proven in relation to the "rational soul"? Keep in mind that these words have different standards - a different standard of proof is required to show there is a tree outside your garden, compared to showing that atoms exist. — Agustino
• Do you hold that only what is scientifically proven is worthy of belief? — Agustino
• Do we mean by a "good" doctor a doctor who performs his function well, either in healing the ailments of the body/mind or in keeping the body/mind healthy or what do we mean? (telling me this question is irrelevant or somehow avoiding to answer it will count towards failure and evasiveness). — Agustino
• Do you think you can dismiss a long philosophical tradition without even understanding its positions by just waving your hand and calling it bullshit? Something you don't understand isn't necessarily bullshit, and you have to, as of yet, show evidence that you do at minimum understand it. This is precisely the mistake Dawkins commits with Aquinas in his God Delusion. — Agustino
I didn't speak about God at all. So why are you bringing God in? I've asked you to prove merely that love is JUST a chemical cocktail and nothing more. It's not a black and white thing. If love isn't just a chemical cocktail, that doesn't mean God exists, so don't be scared. This is not a trap. I'm just asking you an honest question.Do you really think I'm about to accept the burden of proving that god did not design love? — VagabondSpectre
And don't you need to prove your point if you want to convince us that love is just a chemical cocktail? Or do you expect us to fall down before your great wisdom in blind acceptance? That sounds quite like what you project on religious people to tell you the truth. It's quite hypocritical to hold others to standards you don't hold yourself to.I figure you ought to prove the inverse if you want to base your own objective morality upon it... — VagabondSpectre
What does that mean? I didn't ask you to recite what I said, I asked you what it means. You say you're familiar with Aristotelian tradition, so please go ahead and explain to me what exactly a rational soul is. What is this thing that human beings are formed of?According to you, it's what human beings are formed of, which includes capacities of the animal (sensory) and the vegetative (nutritive). — VagabondSpectre
Okay, I agree. What would you say "obscure" and "unsubstantiated" mean? How do you make a belief "clear" and "substantiated"?No but I hold that obscure and unsubstantiated beliefs are worthy of scrutiny before belief. — VagabondSpectre
And would you agree that we mean someone good at healing, instead of good at baking pies, because we appeal to the function of the doctor, and so we consider a doctor to be a good doctor when he performs his function well?What do we mean by a good doctor? Sure, someone good at healing.... — VagabondSpectre
Right, and I agree with that. But to claim that this tradition is presented without evidence is quite silly - even on an a priori basis, some of the brightest minds who have ever lived have believed it. To really make that claim you must first show that you understand that tradition, and show that it lacks such evidence, something that you haven't done. To be able to do that, you'd have to engage with the tradition, do you agree?I think the following: that which is presented without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. — VagabondSpectre
I will answer your question, but you won't understand the answer yet, so hopefully if we work through the questions I've asked you above, you will start to understand what I mean by this answer. So I would advise even if you disagree with the answer to refrain from critiquing it for now, so that you can begin to understand what it means. After you understand it, then you can begin critiquing it.Now that I've answered your questions, please answer just a single one of my own: — VagabondSpectre
The fact that it necessarily frustrates the telos of intimacy of sex.What makes casual sex inherently immoral/harmful? — VagabondSpectre
How am I objectifying others through that statement? To objectify them would imply that I treat them as objects rather than persons, correct? That I treat them as tools, presumably for my benefit, right?I said to Vagabond that he and yourself are doing the exact same thing, that is wanting rather than learning how to give and ultimately objectifying onto others your desires in different ways, and this followed what you yourself said: — TimeLine
How is telling someone they don't know what they're talking about when they make false statements, and telling them they're easily offended a case of "personal attack"?Even in this same sentence below, you do exactly what you say you are not doing, where you say you don't 'personally attack' followed by a personal attack, — TimeLine
Yeah, good, I agree. We're on the same side of this if you haven't realised.Now my argument with Vagabond is that attraction and love to another person is about giving love and learning to understand the other person through empathy, which is formed through friendship. — TimeLine
So if I call someone who is a tramp, a tramp (not to her face in this case) is that bad? Why?You would not call people 'tramps' for a start, such Othering is unnecessarily aggressive. — TimeLine
Sure, but why do you think I wouldn't respect women I encounter? :s I referred to tramps who jump on you - that's what I actually said - so I think if they did that, according to your own logic (with which I don't quite agree by the way), they would have objectified me.If you do not respect a woman that you encounter, brush your shoulders off and move on, but who knows, these so-called 'tramps' could quite simply be good women who don't fit into the category you expect of them. — TimeLine
Of course I will judge them by their actions. When you say I'm extremely aggressive, aren't you judging me? I could do the same - who the hell are you to judge? :s Maybe I'm a really nice guy - who are you to say I'm not? Just because I don't fit your preconceived standard of behaviour? Pff - stop objectifying me!Who are you to judge? — TimeLine
the object is disposed of and replaced. — TimeLine
Love at first sight is also load of garbage, because the fact is that your intention to pursue a romantic relationship should always follow friendship. — TimeLine
You and Aug are both doing the exact same thing in different ways, that is you are seeking for entirely selfish purposes based on what you want, but through friendship one develops empathy, which enables one to give love and so you no longer desire that type of gain and turn that narcissism away to feel care and admiration for your partner. They are no longer an object but a person and when this is reciprocated a genuine bond is formed and thus one begins the process of a romantic relationship. — TimeLine
So yes, it is immoral to approach a woman with the intention of pursuing a sexual relationship, unless this follows you approaching a woman with the intention of getting to know them as a friend. — TimeLine
To be morally conscious - which is established by friendship - is the language that enables empathy and thus ultimately love, the cognition and capacity to connect to the external world and identify other people. You thus consciously experience the world, otherwise you are doomed to remain trapped in your own limited cognitive framework, unfeeling and mindlessly controlled by your instinctual drives and an environment that dictates how you should behave. If your environment endorsed rape, would you do it? Or having sex with a prostitute who may have been kidnapped and forced into sexual slavery? Or be in an unloving relationship because you attain social praises?
Without morality, you are a mindless drone, a non-person. — TimeLine
You thus consciously experience the world, otherwise you are doomed to remain trapped in your own limited cognitive framework, unfeeling and mindlessly controlled by your instinctual drives and an environment that dictates how you should behave. If your environment endorsed rape, would you do it? Or having sex with a prostitute who may have been kidnapped and forced into sexual slavery? Or be in an unloving relationship because you attain social praises?
Without morality, you are a mindless drone, a non-person. — TimeLine
I think you may be having some trouble being philosophical. It was rather tedious reading most of what you wrote because clearly you fail to understand what it is that I am attempting to convey, as proven below: — TimeLine
VagabondSpectre wrote: "Strictly speaking, your notion that approaching a woman to find out if she's interested in sex is immoral because if she's not interested then she and society yata yata yata are harmed is like saying that it's immoral to make eye contact with any other human being because they might have some sensitivity that renders eye contract a traumatic experience for them. —
Timeline wrote: :-|
VagabondSpectre wrote: "Sexual objectification" isn't the same as whatever "devaluation of person-hood" is. I don't suddenly forget that sexy women are people too because I talk about their body as if I'm attracted to it... — VagabondSpectre
Care to explain your logic here? — TimeLine
So if I call someone who is a tramp, a tramp (not to her face in this case) is that bad? Why? — Agustino
That's not kind, that's not nice, and that's not virtuous. End of story. — Agustino
Of course I will judge them by their actions. When you say I'm extremely aggressive, aren't you judging me? I could do the same - who the hell are you to judge? :s Maybe I'm a really nice guy - who are you to say I'm not? Just because I don't fit your preconceived standard of behaviour? Pff - stop objectifying me! — Agustino
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