Ah so you do have knowledge about it. Why do you think it is false? Not having reasons to believe it isn't sufficient to have reasons to hold it is false. So what are your reasons for holding it is false? — Agustino
But you do have evidence in your knowledge that you don't have cats in your house + neither do you have a reason to believe that one could have gotten in. So you do have evidence - namely your knowledge about what is (or should be) in your house. The framework against which you judge - that is the evidence (which of course you built from experience etc.)It can be. I don't need evidence that there isn't a cat in my kitchen to believe (and claim) that there isn't a cat in my kitchen. — Michael
Ah good, now we're getting somewhere. Explain this more please.But if you must know, when it comes to meta-ethics I'm an anti-realist, combining emotivism, prescriptivism, nihilism, and relativism. I interpret your claims as being of the realist bent, and moral realism doesn't make any sense at all. — Michael
... neither do you have a reason to believe that one could have gotten in. — Agustino
Ah good, now we're getting somewhere. Explain this more please.
Yes but you need to have a background framework which makes this conclusion reasonable - such as you have knowledge about your house, with regards to not believing there is a cat in your kitchen.Exactly. And I don't have a reason to believe that celibacy is morally superior to casual sex. — Michael
:-} And suppose your premise is wrong? Suppose it is nonsense to say that giving in to your lusts is morally superior to being celibate?Suppose you're terribly wrong here and that the need for sex and the satisfaction of that need is a more mature response than a person who has successfully repressed that need. Suppose your premise is utter nonsense, that elimination of or simply lacking sexual urge is unrelated entirely to virtue, morality, maturity or any superior power? That does seem to be your underlying unsupportable premise.
It strikes me that those who go without are either (1) misled religiously, (2) asexually constructed, or (3) socially incapable. Advocating chastity therefore arises because you either (1) wish to convert others to your religion, (2) are incapable of understanding sexuality due to your own asexuality, or (3) are trying to justify your own social limitations. — Hanover
Why?A priest who has abandoned his sexuality under the false doctrine of the church and who has given up a family and the meaningful relationships that flow from embracing that sexuality is a lesser person than a person actually engaging in the world and occasionally (gasp) having casual sex. — Hanover
Yes but you need to have a background framework which makes this conclusion reasonable - such as you have knowledge about your house, with regards to not believing there is a cat in your kitchen. — Agustino
But if you must know, when it comes to meta-ethics I'm an anti-realist, combining emotivism, prescriptivism, nihilism, and relativism. — Michael
Morality doesn't involve just being kind to others and not being cruel to them.I have a background framework. I understand that it is good to be kind to people and bad to be needlessly cruel to them. I'm a capable moral agent who understands moral norms. And yet despite this understanding I cannot see how celibacy is morally superior to casual sex. — Michael
Great excuse not to deal with matters when they get real, not merely some "casual sex" in a beaker isolated from the rest of life. Sure it's difficult in real life. It's not that easy to walk the talk. There are costs to social integration - sometimes it's not worth paying the price. And you laugh maybe, but look at that divorce rate. I wish you luck beating the odds of your social integration mate, you'll need it.Wow. That got stupid faster than expected. — Hanover
Let's see, which would I rather choose? The humiliated but socially integrated Russell or the tranquil but family-less priest? — Agustino
>:O But certainly God must be happy in my happiness no? He made man and woman one for the other didn't he? Why would God have made sex possible if it wasn't meant to have some role to play? I've spent time with monks but the thing is, the vocation of being fully angled toward God isn't for everyone. God made a few like that, and the rest of us not so. It's important to distinguish which one you are. If you are capable of devoting yourself entirely to God, that's great! But not everyone has to live in such a way - it's not an imperative for everyone.A charlatan who'd rather appease his desires of sex and procreative ownership than angle himself fully toward God. — Heister Eggcart
Advertising sex as good for health is, for example, a way to get people interested in sex. — Agustino
People having sex is a market - for condoms, for sex toys, for medication for STDs, for abortions, for contraceptives, for pornography, for dating agencies/websites, for alcohol, etc. So what you're saying isn't the complete truth, again. People having more sex = more business of all sorts - including psychotherapy, and whatever else people need because they fuck themselves up through improper actions. — Agustino
as you are hyping it up for example — Agustino
Please refer to the article from Forbes that Baden has linked :PCould you give us a sample of advertising "sex as good for health" or "a way to get people interested in sex"? — Bitter Crank
Yes we are, because if we weren't, sexual advertising wouldn't work. We first need to be made to think sex of any kind is a great great thing, only then can we mindlessly start pursuing it. It's not just that we think sex CAN be a great thing - that arises naturally in us. We naturally think sex can be a great thing in love and marriage when it is directed towards intimacy and children. But that sex outside of those circumstances can be a great thing - that doesn't arise naturally. That's a perversion of our sexual instinct.We are not conditioned to be interested in sex (at least between the ages of 15 and 45). — Bitter Crank
Yes they do - they also advertise for themselves.Tinder or Grindr facilitates sexual partner finding, but it doesn't give people the idea to have sex. It doesn't need to. — Bitter Crank
No, based on my earlier testimony we have determined that I'm not a sex-crazed freak, and therefore have all the right to encourage others to become more rational about their behaviour, and stop harming themselves in stupid ways.Based on earlier testimony, we have already determined that you have no competence to pontificate about people's sexual behavior. — Bitter Crank
Suppose you're terribly wrong here and that the need for sex and the satisfaction of that need is a more mature response than a person who has successfully repressed that need. Suppose your premise is utter nonsense, that elimination of or simply lacking sexual urge is unrelated entirely to virtue, morality, maturity or any superior power? That does seem to be your underlying unsupportable premise.
It strikes me that those who go without are either (1) misled religiously, (2) asexually constructed, or (3) socially incapable. Advocating chastity therefore arises because you either (1) wish to convert others to your religion, (2) are incapable of understanding sexuality due to your own asexuality, or (3) are trying to justify your own social limitations. — Hanover
I think this raises an interesting problem. Even the materialist and atheist Epicurus considered sex to be a natural desire, but not a need. He distinguished between three types of desire - natural and necessary desires (such as food, water, air, sleep - these we call needs today), natural and non-necessary desires (like sex, this we call a want), and artificial desires (like the desire for fame - which he claimed are empty and vacuous).Since when is sex a "need" instead of a "want"? — Question
Each one has a role to play in this world. That's what the monks have taught me. You must seek out your role and play it virtuously. — Agustino
No Sir, but that can't be the role God has created for you, can it?I'd like to murder people, because that's what I think is virtuous. — Heister Eggcart
Suppose I said "desire" and not "need," how'd you've had responded? — Hanover
Oh common, as if the whole game doesn't change if they are desires and not needs? Really Hanover. Have some dignity man. This is philosophy, not your local pub, where you can take your anachronistic and medieval views against celibacy for granted.How does this distinction make a difference in the context of my post? Suppose I said "desire" and not "need," how'd you've had responded? I get there's a critical difference between want and need, but in this context, your objection seems pedantic. — Hanover
Hmmm... I think this needs to be qualified in some way, and I find it to be more Stoic than Buddhist personally... Buddhism is more about the extinguishing of and limiting of desire (similar to Epicureanism) than the right-ordering of desire (I take Stoicism and Aristotelianism to be more about right-ordering). Certainly being imperturbable is a very good thing. However, there's two ways, largely, to achieve this. One could be imperturbable by limiting their desires, and focusing all their joys in the very basics - as Buddhism or Epicurus would advocate, or one could be imperturbable by understanding their real and true desires, and then seeking to fulfil only those desires which are possible to fulfil at the time being (Aristotle, Stoicism, Aquinas, etc. would advocate this). For example - I can seek to fulfil the natural desire of love and intimacy in a relationship all I want, but if the circumstances don't make this possible right now, all my seeking will be pure suffering and being perturbed at worst, and at best, they'll end up in failure. But if I understand this, then I will not seek it unless it is ready-to-hand, in front of me, guaranteed. I prefer this equanimity which is always at rest, but always ready to move, than the equanimity that results from the limiting of desire.I'm going to take a Buddhist/Stoic turn here and argue that a person who has mastery over every one of their desires is, by all means, a Sage or has attained perfection in self-mastery. Nothing could bother such a person. — Question
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