If one makes a promise to another who is important to one then the disapprobation of the other and in extremis, the loss of relationship with her or him is sufficient punishment, I would say. — John
His point is that given these 'outs' people should be held accountable before the law if they breach what he claims is the legally binding contract of marriage. — John
You should specify the harm they can cause to their partner, and the nature of the harm - namely long-term harm, which is not reparable or in any other way amenable.His point is that given these 'outs' people should be held accountable before the law if they breach what he claims is the legally binding contract of marriage. — John
This is not true. In most Western countries divorce became legally possible before adultery was made legally permissible.in (at least Western) societies where adultery was/ is punishable, divorce (except perhaps notably for men in Islamic societies), was/is usually not an option — John
Many people? Justify this please.Also, due to the fact that many marriages were arranged in traditional societies; it would not be surprising if many people found themselves in marriages which were not satisfying. — John
Good! Those people shouldn't get married in the first place. The point is to protect those who are interested to get married, with everything that marriage entails, and sexual loyalty and exclusivity is one of the entailments of marriage in MOST people's minds - because you so love to throw around this word. If they're not interested in marriage, they can just go ahead and live together, form a civic partnership, etc. Marriage should not be degraded so that we get more people marrying - these people would form terrible marriages anyway - and set terrible examples for everyone else too!I contend that this is a self-contradictory set of aims because legal enforcement of marriage vows would result in even less people marrying. — John
First of all - there's nothing "ultra" about it. You throw around these pejorative labels, but there's nothing ultra in there. It's simply traditional. Do you have a problem with tradition? Do you have a problem with respecting traditions? Most people who have ever lived have had similar traditions. You of course ignore that all major religions, without exception, condemn adultery in harsh and explicit manners - and this includes non-Abrahamic religions, such as Buddhism, Hinduism, and Taoism. There's nothing "ultra" about this proposal - there is something very "ultra-radical" about your proposal perhaps. But that's another story, one that I'm not very interested to explore, because it has nothing to do with the essence of this conversation. I have no need to derail this conversation to score meaningless victories over you - it's about the ideas, and what should be done - not what was done. If we play by what was done, then you've already lost. Second of all, it's about protecting people who want to marry and who want their marriage vows to be respected. They have a right to be protected. This is more important than "less people would want to be married" - I am not concerned whether they want to be married or not - that is irrelevant.because the most plausible result would be that even less people would want to be married in this new kind of 'ultra-traditional' way — John
Do you happen to have a short memory? :)The other point of contention between Agustino and myself in regard to this issue is that I fail to see how instituting something as law that arguably very few people would want to live subject to, could possibly reinforce the stability of society. This is a point which, so far, Agustino has utterly failed to address. — John
This is again liberal propaganda. Most people don't know how bad the cheating statistics are. Most people are not aware that this is a problem. Most people don't know that it's quite likely that this will happen to them. That's why by the time they age, most people will agree with me. So you're wrong - it's not an extreme minority. And if you look through history, you will be surprised to see that most people who have ever lived in fact agree with me. All religions - without exception, be they Hinduism, Buddhism, or Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Taoism - all of them have rules against adultery. Do you think all those people were idiots, and you're the only smart person? — Agustino
There is nothing virtuous in gleefully enjoying other people being hurt and seeing their lives ruined. Maybe for you that is virtue - certainly not for me.I hope others will share the burden and rally to the virtuous cause of setting him right on this matter, even if only for his own sake. — John
Sure, I'm not advocating that it is ideal that people should cheat on one another, but you are not addressing the issue; which is whether the person who cheats should be punishable by law. — John
This time around, let's spend less time figuring out how to punish people who commit adultery and spend more time figuring out how to help families be successful. — Bitter Crank
You seem to have completely missed the fact that marriage is a civil contract and that breach of said contract is therefore a tort and not a crime — Barry Etheridge
Successful families need:
to live within modest material budgets so that their resources can be directed toward good parenting.
to receive enough income that between them, parents can provide 1 FTE parent. Maybe families need to be subsidized to make that possible. Both mother and father should have time to interact with children.
education in good, traditional child-rearing practices. Many adults have not benefitted from being raised in a healthy large family and they simply do not know what healthy family life looks like. They need training to achieve it. And on-going support.
Families need good pre-natal health care, good delivery service, and post-natal followup health monitoring.
Families need functioning communities in which to live.
Single parenthood (as a starting plan) should be strongly discouraged. — Bitter Crank
To which John replied:No those "doctrinal" differences have practical significance. Becoming God can very easily be associated with anything being permitted for you. Like Osho Rajneesh having promiscuous sex with his disciples. Or poisoning a community. Or Krishnamurti having sex with one of his friend's wife behind his back, and having her have an abortion. — Agustino
Then Wayfarer and myself actually gave John the evidence - to which of course he never replied:I'm going to be blunt here: I think you are transforming yourself into a self-righteous fool.
This is all just malicious unsubstantiated gossip, unless you can show clear evidence for those claims about Osho and Krishnamurti . And again, even if those claims were true; so what? No man is perfect. — John
But he did continue with the pejorative counterfactual insults:
self-righteous purism — John
self-righteous fool — John
fossilization of the arch-conservatives — John
someone produces self-righteous prozelytizing — John
I tried to remedy these biases and explain to John:The other point was about church dogma, and ultra-conservative fundamentalist interpretations thereof; which I think you are guilty of — John
LOL! It's laughable if you think my interpretation are ULTRA-conservative FUNDAMENTALIST. Really - I can't be bothered to answer such nonsense. First of all fundamentalism... have I claimed the Earth was created a few thousand years ago? Have I claimed Christianity is the only way? Have I claimed evolution is wrong? No. So please get your concepts straight. Just because you don't like conservatives doesn't mean you get to throw with pejorative statements. There is a long, and respectable tradition in all religions. That isn't ultra conservative. That's just the wisdom that was passed through the ages. — Agustino
It is also significant to state that John mentioned adultery first:Again, as I see things, you are just adopting liberal and progressive prejudicies without thinking about it. You are never even questioning them. You think saying adultery is wrong is ultra conservative. Hell - even saying sex before marriage is wrong isn't ultra conservative. Those are things that people have believed for most parts of history, and in most societies. Ultra-conservative are reactionary movements - such as Puritanism. There's a difference between the two. Apparently you don't think there is. — Agustino
But in the realm of ethics, because each one of us is a unique individual there will always be nuances in unique situations, such that it cannot be right to make blanket moral pronouncements such as "divorce is wrong", "adultery is wrong", "homosexuality is wrong" and other like ultra-conservative dictatorial claims such as the ones you make on these forums. — John
To which I replied:but it will not do to prosecute and punish people for transgressing what are merely moral injunctions — John
Of course. That's why social means and social pressure is used to combat those. Although maybe some immoral things ought to also be illegal - say adultery. But that is a different debate. — Agustino
To this - which notice has to do with the morality of adultery, and NOT its legality, John replies:For you, Orthodoxy is ultra-conservative. That's false. It is historically false to say the least. Adultery is wrong means it is harmful. Always. That's not ultra conservative. Please go research what ultra conservative is. Or read the article I have read just yesterday http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/conservatism/ — Agustino
Of course one is surprised at such a reaction - especially as it had been John the one who has consistently ignored the evidence provided, consistently attempted to say that Orthodox tradition had no mystics, consistently trying to say or insinuate that Orthodoxy is totalitarian, and consistently refusing to accept his incorrect readings of the Bible - which he has started to even call "creative misreading". So I have to inquire why - this is about the morality of adultery here - he apparently is so disgusted if a husband beats his wife - but he is not disgusted at all if the same husband were to cheat on his wife! In fact - if someone dares to label this latter act as immoral, he is suddenly catalogued as "ultra-conservative" - forget the legality issue - this is bigger than that. Here is a man who is opposed to morally condemning adultery! So to this John continues with the same dogmatic propaganda and insults:I'm sorry to say it Agustino, but I find most of what you say highly disagreeable, even repugnant.
I cannot see anything in it that persuades me you would be open in the slightest to any alternative reason on these matters, so I feel no inclination to engage with you further; it would it seems just be a complete waste of time. Good luck with your life, man... — John
Notice his flippancy - as if any of these (apart from the open relationship claim) is a justification for adultery - somehow if these things are the case, according to the Gospel of Liberal Progressive John, it becomes at least less immoral to commit adultery! Furthermore, I have explained to him by pointing to statistics that men cheat more often than women, and women are more likely to be negatively affected by adultery. And yet of course John ignores it. He doesn't even retract his false accusation that morally condemning adultery is a case of patriarchal control over a woman's sexuality - while the truth, as shown by the facts, is quite literarily the opposite. If anyone is controlled by having adultery be immoral, then it is much moreso men than women. Through the rest of the thread, which did descend into a discussion of the legality of adultery, I kept being appalled by the pure and irrational unquestioning dogma of John, which he has repeatedly tried to enforce on others.Beating someone up is an act of aggression pure and simple, it is in no way analogous to adultery, as you are suggesting it is. The committing of adultery could be as a result of a whole range of diversely variant circumstances. Perhaps the relationship is not good, they are not really attracted to one another physically, perhaps the one who commits adultery (does that consist in 'being an adult', by the way? ;) ) has difficulty controlling sexual desires, perhaps s/he has fallen in love with the person s/he commits it with, perhaps husband and wife share an agreement to live in an 'open' relationship. Will you punish people in all these very different circumstances? The way you frame the whole question is very male-centric, by the way. It wouldn't surprise me if you believe that men are naturally superior to women and that they should, in line with your beloved traditional values, rule the household. — John
I don't mind questioning for example whether tradition is important or not. Certainly you never brought the question up. I don't mind discussing the importance of authority in religion or in society - but again you never brought that up. You take your liberal principles as a priori truth, and aren't even willing to discuss them, much less question them. You consider them holy truth, and disgusting to even dare to question them! In fact principles which are different are emotionally repugnant to you. But hey - each to their own! — Agustino
This is in contra-distinction to other progressives who intervened and discussed their views politely - without insulting - such as AndrewK.OK, having said that I don't want to indulge in slanging matches; I'll try to address what you write here, without doing that. It's true that I have characterized some of what you have written as "prozelytization" and "self-righteousness", and that's because that's just what I perceive when someone speaks about "making adultery illegal" and such like. If someone produces self-righteous prozelytizing statements then they are, by virtue of that and to that degree at least, self-righteous prozelytizers. Beyond that I have not indulged, as far as I can remember, in ad hominen characterizations of your personality, as the part I underlined above certainly shows you to be doing in regard to what you purport to be my personality. — John
3. John is dogmatic, and insulting about his assertions. He demands that it be as he says it is, while ignoring all the evidence to the contrary. All the arguments and statements he has made have been refuted - they are factually wrong. He - and not anyone else - is in fact totalitarian.As to such things as the breakdown of the family: I am not sure the nuclear family is necessarily the best model — John
Of course it's a crime! Speeding is an offence under statute (the Road Traffic Act here in UK). You can't be fined for a civil offence, you'd have to be sued! — Barry Etheridge
Truly you bear your name :P Read Kierkegaard's Works of Love - maybe you'll learn something about it (namely that duty is a sanctification of love), and remove that "un" from your name ;) . Owning each other is exactly what love is. Just like the Communists wanted ownership of property in common, two lovers want ownership of each other in common - and they want their love to be eternal. They don't want to be two people - they want to be one with each other. For eternity - this is just what they want.Marriage should be banned.
It is a form of enslavement, which the emphasis here given to adultery illustrates. It institutionalises the ownership of another, and has its roots in the male desire to support only the fruit of his own loins. Thus it encourages selfishness. is radically sexist, and treats women and children as chattels.
No one has the right to be loved cherished and obeyed for a lifetime, and such a clause in any other contract would be stuck down as unfair and unreasonable.
But love cannot anyway be subject to contract any more than a gift can be part of a trade. It is a nonsense that belittles the free relationship of people caring for each other. — unenlightened
There's nothing strange about it. In my country it is the same as for MU. You fail to differentiate between something which is penal, and something which is punishable by civil law. Speeding is punishable by civil law, but is not penal - at least in most cases. Killing someone is penal - it's in the penal code of your country - which is different than the civil code of your country.Well, as you are apparently unwilling to reveal the identity of this strange 'plase' I suppose I'll have to take your word for it while retaining my right to extreme skepticism! — Barry Etheridge
No - this isn't the case. In your country - the UK - you are correct. But for example in the US, speeding is not a crime. Neither is it a crime in many other places across Europe. Not all things which are prohibited by law are criminal.Speeding, no matter what words are used to describe it or what the title of the particular law or order under which it is prohibited is therefore criminal. — Barry Etheridge
I largely agree. I'm not interested to discuss the legality of adultery with John, so much so that I am morally horrified at his moral lack of concern for the victims of adultery - be they the spouse or the children. The fact that he finds it "ultra conservative" or other such pejorative label to even state publicly that adultery is morally wrong - that's what I have a problem with. I think the avenue you propose is more helpful.This time around, let's spend less time figuring out how to punish people who commit adultery and spend more time figuring out how to help families be successful. — Bitter Crank
Yes - but a marriage will lead to children, unless one of the partners is unable to have children perhaps. But even then adoptions are possible. And as for people getting married and not having children - that is very strange. Perhaps they shouldn't get married if they never plan to have children. They could still live together, etc. but why marry? Furthermore, what about the harm that adultery would do to the partner, not only to the children? It seems to me that adultery would be contradictory and destructive in any monogamous relationship where loyalty and sexual exclusivity exist, and where the intimacy between partners is important ie in a marriage. People can live together outside of marriage, and obviously there is no adultery there as such - except that obviously people will be harmed by cheating, less severely than in a marriage, but still harmed, in a way that is morally reprehensible - obviously though there would be no legal grounds to sanction this though. Nor can much be done to discourage it except what you said afterwards, which is to have strong families, which can educate people, and guide them away from the dangers of such lifestyles, leaving it ultimately to their choice after this.Adultery in the context of the usual marriage vows is unhelpful, contradictory, and often destructive. What I consider important is that IF a heterosexual marriage leads to children, then the parents should endeavor to keep their relationship healthy and centered on raising healthy, productive and reasonably happy children. That means avoiding adultery, addictions, irresponsible debt, desertion, and the like. — Bitter Crank
I agree.to live within modest material budgets so that their resources can be directed toward good parenting.
to receive enough income that between them, parents can provide 1 FTE parent. Maybe families need to be subsidized to make that possible. Both mother and father should have time to interact with children.
education in good, traditional child-rearing practices. Many adults have not benefitted from being raised in a healthy large family and they simply do not know what healthy family life looks like. They need training to achieve it. And on-going support.
Families need good pre-natal health care, good delivery service, and post-natal followup health monitoring.
Families need functioning communities in which to live. — Bitter Crank
I don't engage with it, because I don't care about such matters - honestly. I don't want to discuss whether adultery should be civil offence, or a penal offence, etc. These are details. If I was a politician I would hand this stuff to the lawyers for them to best decide how to legally handle it. They aren't even relevant to the conversation I was having with John. The question at most was whether adultery should be punishable - how it will be punishable is a matter for debate, a debate which I'm not interested in now. But to determine whether something should be punishable in some way X, it is enough to look at the effects of certain actions, and the place they have in the relationship between people.So you're just not going to bother with the very clear distinction that I made and you're just going to go on playing semantics? Whoopee! Well I suppose it keeps you from having to engage with the actual issues under discussion! Would it be better for you if I replaced 'criminal' with 'illegal' then? Or shall I just make something up. Speeding is "kersplutzabubble' whereas adultery is "fluddlepuddle", perhaps? — Barry Etheridge
Truly you bear your name — Agustino
First of all, sanctions for adultery have benefited women much more than men. This is a fact. Just look at the statistics. If marriage didn't exist, 1000 years ago, women would have been chattel. — Agustino
Ideologues like you, fail to see that you shall love your neighbour as yourself! You want to love your neighbor more than yourself - that's why you say it's selfishness to listen to your own desires. But this is false. Being one with someone means, that just like your liver does not forget its own needs while in collaboration with the rest of your body, so too, you do not forget your self in collaboration with others, whether in a love relationship, or in a community. It's about giving equal priority to yourself and to the other person. If the other hurts, you hurt. But if you hurt, then the other also hurts - which you seem to forget. — Agustino
http://magazine.foxnews.com/love/cheating-statistics-do-men-cheat-more-women for example this. 70% for men, 50% for women in the US. The difference is much larger in parts of Europe. And by the way, you have no right to stomp your feet and demand statistics that you can look up for yourself.It is not a fact. Show me the statistics. — unenlightened
There is no sexism in that sir. It's the same deal for both man and woman. What's sexist about it if I may ask? It's the same rule applied to both. Nothing can possibly be sexist in that. It's not different rules for each. It's the same.But your counterfactual declaration is simply a pronouncement that sexism, and slavery are the natural state of man — unenlightened
Well I'm happy for you - but this isn't to say that this is a stable arrangement. It may have worked in your particular case - but that's all.My partner and I have been faithfully unmarried for 27 years during which we have brought up 4 children — unenlightened
It's not about threat of punishment, etc. It's about protecting people from being intentionally harmed by others.Punishment, and the threat of punishment is a form of coercion that has no place in a mutual relationship, and can only have a negative impact, sustaining a loveless and divided relation through fear. — unenlightened
I didn't make things up Sir. It's the implications of your statements.I tell you what, why don't you make shit up about me and what people like me think, and argue with that instead of addressing my post? Oh, you already did. — unenlightened
So unless you're advocating that all contracts freely entered into by both parties and sealed with the requisite consideration should be banned, which would make life infinitely more complicated and chaotic, I'm really not sure that your argument has any merit at all! — Barry Etheridge
It's not about threat of punishment, etc. It's about protecting people from being intentionally harmed by others. — Agustino
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.