Obviously rape and child molestation are wrong. — Michael
My statement was with reference to those who argue that chastity and/or monogamy are more virtuous that casual sex. — Michael
Virtue has nothing to do with how good you are refraining from legal, consensual, adult sex. — Michael
And it also has nothing to do with how good you are at keeping your penis away from this or that crevasse (or vice versa). — Michael
You're saying that many people want to avoid intimacy, therefore sex is a requirement in modern relationships? — jamalrob
Do you mean sexual or romantic relationships? — jamalrob
I'm pretty sure that sex has been essential to a very large portion of human relationships for a very long time. — jamalrob
And you assume, without any justification, that sex is not a part of being intimate with someone, but is rather a way of avoiding intimacy. — jamalrob
I'm open to the idea that there might be a new and increasingly widespread way of relating to people sexually that excludes intimacy--a kind of relationship that we might call pornographical, both because it is primarily objectifying and also because pornography increasingly shapes our sexualities--but this is a long way from saying that sex per se is an avoidance of intimacy. — jamalrob
This is simply not credible. Do you think that when divorce was taboo and women were subjected to the authority of the husband, "true intimacy" flourished? Do you think that when marriage was more openly and uncontroversially about property and status, couples really got to know each other? Do you not realize that it's only recently that romantic love has become the primary reason for getting married? — jamalrob
This demonstrates prudishness and little else. You do realize that attentiveness, understanding, and compassion, along with gruff physicality, are often essential to good sex? — jamalrob
If it wasn't apparent, I was trying to show how intentions have little importance. — darthbarracuda
One can always characterize any situation to suit one's needs by invoking intentions here and there.
That's the lesson of consequentialism - the only thing that matters at the end is what's left over.
You didn't intend that they starve, but you did intend to ignore their plight.
Again, I ask why intentions have any importance here. — darthbarracuda
Rather than people being OBSESSED with sex, I think people LONG FOR warmth and sharing (intimacy). — Bitter Crank
Unfulfilled wants and desires cause suffering. — unenlightened
People sitting with a laptop certainly look like they don't want to be disturbed - as in they want to be amongst people, and yet be far from them too. — Agustino
So, you're OK with bestiality then? — John
Do you intend to communicate by typing on a keyboard? If you do, then why do you intend to communicate? Because you think this is good. — Agustino
You don't OBSERVE right and wrong, you judge things to be right and wrong. You observe facts - for example the color of leaves of the tree out your window. — Agustino
My judgement tells me. — Agustino
Actually no, because the faculty of judgement =/ reason in the way I've been using it. Reason is the way we function - we do things for certain reasons. That's what rationality is - a creature is rational if it holds reasons for doing X and Y. — Agustino
Yep, we judge it to be wrong. But this isn't to say our judgements can be objective. — Agustino
If I judge it to be wrong, I clearly am not using reason to do it. — Agustino
Differences in judgement are not differences of reason. — Agustino
Desire is innate and is not a choice, nor can it be eradicated — Emptyheady
at best suppressed with some nasty unforeseen side effects. — Emptyheady
This is why I think Buddhism is fundamentally mistaken and numbing yourself leads to alienation. — Emptyheady
I believe in two personal virtues, ambition and discipline.
Hume was on the right track when he said: "Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions, and can never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them." — Emptyheady
Pinker — Emptyheady
You type on a keyboard because you want to communicate, and you want to communicate because you see it as good no? — Agustino
That's not a judgement but the observation of the way reason functions. — Agustino
Nope. They will think they're striving for the good, even while they're not - just like Casanova. — Agustino
Our faculties of judgement. — Agustino
Nope - that's not what I said. If you know that fucking bitches is wrong, and you go and fuck bitches, then you're just acting irrationally. — Agustino
A judgement isn't the same as an observation. We observe facts. We judge meanings. — Agustino
Which things don't you do because you think them good? — Agustino
Again, this doesn't disprove my point. Even if I'd rather please my penis (he said it!) than live a still life among monks, all that means is that I judge it to be good to please my penis, hence why I do it. — Agustino
I may be wrong now in my judgement - that pleasing my penis is good - but it doesn't follow from that that I'm not directed towards goodness.
In this case me. Everyone judges for themselves. — Agustino
You are defined by reason - it is part of your essence to be a rational animal. If you don't seek goodness, then you are irrational, and if you are irrational you - the rational animal - doesn't exist. — Agustino
By watching the structure of our reasoning faculty, and noticing that it is always aimed towards goodness, even when I do evil. — Agustino
My logic doesn't determine which judgement is right. It only makes the point that we're both pursuing our paths because we judge them to be good. That's a commonality we share, despite all our differences. — Agustino
Goodness is more primary than Being - that's the idea. — Agustino
I'm not going to let you continue to get away with that. — Baden
Because I am drawn to Goodness. — Agustino
Goodness is the end in-itself, that for which we do all things. — Agustino
Reason is directed towards goodness - we do things because we think them to be good. — Agustino
Even the criminal does things because he thinks them to be good. He's not a criminal in-so-far as he does things which he thinks good (he's actually a saint in-so-far as he does that), he's a criminal only in-so-far as he's mistaken about what actually is good - it's a mistake of judgement, not one of reason in other words. — Agustino
Because reason functions in this manner all by itself, we only have being in-so-far as we seek goodness; and we lack being in-so-far as we're mistaken in our judgements. — Agustino
But it's important to note that we can't ever be fully mistaken so long as we're still rational. — Agustino
So long as we're rational, we'll pursue the good - whatever we identify the good to be. — Agustino
If someone thinks the good is killing people, then he's making a mistake in judgement, and he will reap the rewards of what he has seeded - suffering and pain. — Agustino
Because God is Good — Agustino
God has Being.
God cannot be evil by definition. — Agustino
If this isn't God, would God be worth worshipping? — Agustino
Because God is deserving of worshipping. God is deserving that you angle your whole life towards Him. If He were evil, instead of good, would he be as deserving? What makes God deserving of worship? Is it his might and power? Or is it his love and goodness? — Agustino