My point is, gender, sexuality, orientation and proclivity, are Fictional as are our political, religious, or cultural preferences. — ENOAH
But, for Humans, sexuality: dating, and romance, birth control, fertility intervention, marriage and matrimonial laws, both ecclesiastical and civil; rituals, restrictions, mutilations, fetishes, and positions, references, proclivities, size, fashion, and technique, are all human constructions, — ENOAH
Both occur naturally in many other species that do not construct social roles.some so deeply foundational to human Mind and History that they seem natural. And that’s hetero-sexuality.
Gay sexuality is similarly constructed. — ENOAH
I’m saying reproductive mating and same sex mutual releases of whatever sort may or may not be natural; but all human sexuality, across the board, is Fictional. — ENOAH
The mating rituals to which we are accustomed may be invented by human cultures, but the fact of mating rituals goes back 500,000,000 years. — Vera Mont
Humans are story-tellers. We weave stories around everything, and more stories around the things that have the most profound effect on us — Vera Mont
And those natural drives are the source, in Reality or Nature for the Fiction which we construct. — ENOAH
They just had to be healthy and willing. Later on, the males decided they didn't need to wait until a female was willing. In fact, taking females against their will was also a way of humiliating their male rivals. Eventually, societies came up with safeguards against internal strife, including rules the prescribe acceptable forms of mating. Patriarchal societies included rules that strictly enforced the rights of males (and inferiority of females) in order to assure fathers of the genetic purity of their offspring - usually for the purpose of land inheritance.I would speculate that the human's version might have been fore the male to present some physical potential, and for the female to present a certain pelvic feature. — ENOAH
I don't think so: people are still making lots of lots of little people. They seem quite capable of navigating the rituals of their various cultures.I say the stories displaced procreation with Fiction, and that Therein lies the craving etc. — ENOAH
But why does that need saying?That's all I'm saying. — ENOAH
Patriarchal societies included rules that strictly enforced the rights of males (and inferiority of females) in order to assure fathers of the genetic purity of their offspring - usually for the purpose of land inheritance. — Vera Mont
Also, "Fictional" might be too strong a word, but it is effective at contrasting these processes described differently by you and I, with what I am proposing to be the NonFiction, Nature. — ENOAH
I'm not even given to saying sexuality is mutable. One can be unaware of their sexuality, or an aspect of it, but it seems to me saying that its either fictional or constructed is wrong and both violates my intuitions, and my understanding of fight for rights. — AmadeusD
All human society as we know it is artificial. And yet it's natural that an intelligent, imaginative species should elaborate on its social organization, and it's natural for such a species to evolve complex regulatory systems as its numbers grow.I don't get it. It seems like you're providing more "evidence" that what we've constructed is not natural. — ENOAH
Among lions, probably. Among humans, wealth and power are also artificial. Do you really feel any society today is dominated by those most fit to lead?I.e., those male humans who engaged in the systemic oppression of women were naturally selected as the fittest. — ENOAH
I'm not. Are you?So, why does this need saying?
Because we are attacking one another by weaponizing Truth, and no position is true. — ENOAH
"just one of our stories"??? Their myths and legends and self-generated self-images are what groups of people go to war over, burn down one another's towns, kill and torture for.The only functional judgment one can make--and as far as I'm concerned, in human existence, functional is as close as one can get to truth--is to say sexuality which harms or oppresses is unacceptable, all else is just one of our stories. — ENOAH
So you think all the current rules and social norms regarding sex and reproduction should be replaced by one principle, written as law? Your principle - with no metric for the definition of 'harm' - while admirable, is just as artificial as any other human-created law. — Vera Mont
In fact, it's more the opposite. I'm thinking that the "laws", any and all of them--which, to my mind, have evolved to displace the "natural" practices--are artificial, might therefore be recognized as artificial, and that none of them, therefore, should be imposed; and, especially not imposed under the guise that they are so imposed because they are true or natural. — ENOAH
How could you have meant the opposite? In what way do you make something unacceptable, except by writing it in law?to say sexuality which harms or oppresses is unacceptable — ENOAH
Especially in energy technologies, profligate reproduction and overconsumption.But for human mind, and experience, we've gone too far, and are literally at a point of no return (to our real natures). — ENOAH
All human society as we know it is artificial. And yet it's natural that an intelligent, imaginative species should elaborate on its social organization, and it's natural for such a species to evolve complex regulatory systems as its numbers grow. — Vera Mont
So I assume that you are saying that "artificial" is just a special type of "natural". — Metaphysician Undercover
I am not saying there should be laws imposed or not imposed. Rather the opposite. — ENOAH
Since sexuality is, in my submission, artificial, no one practice is "true." — ENOAH
I wish you could!I don't see the contradiction you do. — ENOAH
Archeologists and anthropologists spend a good deal of time and thought on the reconstruction of how human cultures evolved, so you can to a large extent trace our laws and mores backward through changes to their influences and discover the probable reasons they came about. — Vera Mont
So I assume that you are saying that "artificial" is just a special type of "natural". Then I suggest to ENOAH that the "fictional" is a subdivision of the artificial, which is a subdivision of the natural. And, it makes no sense to try and divide the artificial into natural and unnatural because it's all natural.
5h — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree that people should not tell other people what their sexual preference or practice ought to be, except insofar as they're protecting potential victims. But it's not tied to truth and falsehood; it's tied to social values. And they're not all rational or practical. — Vera Mont
if nature permits or makes something possible then I doubt it can be called unnatural. So I would guess that any and all types of sex would be natural. — Sir2u
No: I'm stating that artifice is an attribute of creatures whose intelligence and imagination enable them to build complex structures from simple materials. The creatures are natural; what they do is in their nature to do; the things they produce are artifacts. Artificial means "made by human beings" as distinct from things that occur naturally. (Nobody, finding a pocket-watch on the forest floor, would mistake it for a pine-cone, and nobody except a theist already pledged to a particular mythology, would think either was created by a supernatural being: one grew; one was made. ) — Vera Mont
You can still divide the natural from the artificial - in fact, you'd better, when it comes to fruit, or another person's sincerity, or your own behaviour. — Vera Mont
But the whole purpose of using either artificial or Fictional is to contrast it with Natural, and therefore, according to my submission at least, Real. — ENOAH
Someone please explain, can artificial be natural? And I don't accept that because it arises out of the activities of a natural species, therefore it is. If artificial can be natural, then to hell with that, I'm reverting to Fictional. — ENOAH
They don't. They're not. So what?Or how does the fact that they can trace the root of our laws etc. suggest they are not artificial, or that being artificial, they are simultaneously natural? — ENOAH
Natural and truth simply don't enter into it. It's true that humans are social animals, that all social animals have social rules and norms; it's natural that they should, else their social structure would break down. The values human societies elaborate are in response to their experiences, beliefs and requirements over time. That's where the anthropologists come in. But I guess you think how things evolved is irrelevant. I disagree; I think what's irrelevant is classifying human ideas as Fact/Fiction; Natural/Artificial; True/False.Then so I understand, these social values, they're natural? — ENOAH
Neither. Why we shouldn't tell others what preferences they have - whether social or sexual - because, as long as they're not hurting anybody or disturbing the peace, their preferences are none of our damned business, and oppression, especially in the realm of personal conduct, is detrimental to social coherence.We shouldn't tell others what social preferences they should have...because all sexuality is natural (as opposed to my, we shouldn't tell others what social preferences they should have...because all sexuality is artificial--for post prehistoric humans) — ENOAH
I don't believe that we were built by aliens and dropped on this planet. I cited the meaning of the word artificial: "made by human beings". I use it according to its dictionary definition. Made on purpose, out of raw materials that are found, dug up or growing wild.I don't see how you can maintain this distinction between natural and artificial, if you insist that human beings are natural. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, I mentioned the construction of ideas: conceptual artifacts. The creative process comes naturally to species with volition and reason; the product of artifice practiced by artisans is an artificial artifact.But if that type of "making" is supposed to be natural, then what about making knowledge through teaching, and making ethics, norms, and social conventions? — Metaphysician Undercover
It's easy. Living organisms are generally natural - that is, growing out of other organisms, rather than constructed by design (although some lines are becoming blurred with genetic technologies), while machines and implements and structures are man-made. Once we have a truly bionic man, another line will be blurred.I don't see how you can maintain this distinction between natural and artificial, if you insist that human beings are natural. — Metaphysician Undercover
Modern ones still do. Nothing fictional about that.Some birds dance as mating ritual; some mammals fight. Maybe prehistoric humans danced and fought. Natural. — ENOAH
The wax, plaster, wooden, ceramic or plastic one would have no nutrient value and probably taste bad, even if it didn't break your teeth. Which artificial fruits are synthesized in such a way that they taste and nourish like the real ones?What's your point here? Why would it be necessary to distinguish between a natural fruit and a synthetic one? — Metaphysician Undercover
Why? Found in the wild/ made by design. Simple; gods need not enter in.I think that to maintain the distinction between natural and artificial, we need a third category, supernatural, to provide for the separation between them. — Metaphysician Undercover
Maybe it's the supernatural which ought to be described as fictional. — Metaphysician Undercover
The Body responds to certain natural drives which are tied to procreation. The soul, a thing, we think of as -unique to humans*-has displaced Body's procreation with its multifarious made-up forms. Some individual souls believe their made-up forms to be Natural to the Body, and accordingly "right." But they are the workings of the soul, supernatural, made-up. Their form has no better claim to natural than those of other souls. — ENOAH
Neither. Why we shouldn't tell others what preferences they have - whether social or sexual - because, as long as they're hot hurting anybody, their preferences are of our damned business, and oppression, especially in the realm of personal conduct, is bad for the welfare of a society. — Vera Mont
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