CFA part Deux (Page 11)
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Expert ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() I have no problem with Chicken and I don't understand why folks want to discriminate against them. Edited by hrliles 2012-08-02 9:49 PM |
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![]() | ![]() jgaither - Just curious (and not that it matters for anything), but does his theory base any ideas off of the work of Aquinas or Augustine? That's a really good question. I don't know. I understand that his argument lies in the biological fact that man and woman can form one single reproductive form. It would be nice if I had read any of his work, but I have not, so I have to shoot from what you give me. I recommend The Clash of Orthodoxies. If I understand correctly you(R. George) say that because the "single reproductive organism" is specific to a man and woman it defines a marriage. I guess this why I asked about Aquinas and Augustine because they are inclined to say that that "single reproductive organism" is the reason why procreation shouldn't happen outside of marriage. And I guess this where I get hung up, is in the connection between marriage and procreation. There is no connection between the two. They are independent of each other and examples of that are born every day. By the very nature of procreation that it happens quite frequently out of wedlock, that it contradicts any correlation to marriage. They ought to be considered together. Additionally for year the intent of marriage had absolutely nothing to do with procreation and every thing to with position in society and inheritances. Even as far back as the romans they had eugenic breeding of temporary marriages at festivals specifically to procreate and the children were taken away and cared for by the state. That would fall under R George's definition of marriage would it not, but I think we can both agree that is by no means a marriage. The model of marriage within Western Civilization has always had the bearing and raising of children at its heart. My point is there is more to it, and to me specifically procreation isn't part of it, something else is. What is the something else? BTW, I saw what you did with that link. I read every page that day and didn't see what you wrote a page ago, and I went back to it today before posting and still missed it. I trust you that you posted it before, but apparently my scanning skills are lacking. Page 20, I think. Edited by dontracy 2012-08-02 10:00 PM |
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Master![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2012-08-02 9:59 PM
I understand that his argument lies in the biological fact that man and woman can form one single reproductive form. It would be nice if I had read any of his work, but I have not, so I have to shoot from what you give me. I recommend The Clash of Orthodoxies. Now, now Don. Remember the request was for non religious reason. I'll assume it only sounds theological until proven otherwise. If I understand correctly you(R. George) say that because the "single reproductive organism" is specific to a man and woman it defines a marriage. I guess this why I asked about Aquinas and Augustine because they are inclined to say that that "single reproductive organism" is the reason why procreation shouldn't happen outside of marriage. And I guess this where I get hung up, is in the connection between marriage and procreation. There is no connection between the two. They are independent of each other and examples of that are born every day. By the very nature of procreation that it happens quite frequently out of wedlock, that it contradicts any correlation to marriage. They ought to be considered together. Why should it though? There is nothing biologically that shows me that it should be considered so. Marriage is a man-made construct, not biological. I see relationships between the two as far as likely hood to procreate and things along those lines, but nothing that says you can't have kids without being married. And again you are stating what SHOULD be the case, not what is. Additionally for year the intent of marriage had absolutely nothing to do with procreation and every thing to with position in society and inheritances. Even as far back as the romans they had eugenic breeding of temporary marriages at festivals specifically to procreate and the children were taken away and cared for by the state. That would fall under R George's definition of marriage would it not, but I think we can both agree that is by no means a marriage. The model of marriage within Western Civilization has always had the bearing and raising of children at its heart. Further to my point, for natural law to be true or pertinent it has to be widely practiced and accurate. I'm not saying outliers don't exist, but it can't JUST be western culture to be natural law. My point is there is more to it, and to me specifically procreation isn't part of it, something else is. What is the something else? My contention is that the only thing I see that is consistent across cultures and generations is that it is a mutually beneficial contract between two people. Very similar to Kant's views and Hegel's views (which have slight differences, but it's a good example). It's pretty simple and pretty unromantic. Not that George's is particularly romantic either. |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() eabeam - 2012-08-02 3:46 PM Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?What is Chik-Fil-A's stance on Caster Semenya? Does she marry based on chromosomes or genitalia? Does she prefer waffle fries or a premium side? Is Lady Gaga more acceptable because Caster really was born that way? |
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Pro ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2012-08-02 10:12 PM ... To just shift back to a commons sense view for a moment, the bodies of a man and a women put together are designed to make babies. Together. That's pretty clear. It's not the bonding of just the egg and sperm that causes the unity, it is the whole package. BTW, I think that the use of technical forms of conception such as IVF are part of the problem as well. Well, either you are basing your argument on the production of offspring, or on the activity of sex. If it's the former, then again, childless couples of any gender no longer have valid marriage. (I will let the lid stay on the pot as far as contraception, as this part of the discussion is already only tangentially connected to CFA). And if it's the latter, humans can all different kinds of sexual activity that have no hope of reproduction, even within the context of a male/female pair bonding. It seems that the case you build for marriage being only within the context of male and female (and hey, what if one of them is transsexual or has ambiguous gender, for my pot stirring?) is based on a tighter connection between reproduction and marriage than is required in all contexts. Within a religious context, that is certainly legitimate. But in a more neutral/civil context, marriage is about a contractual relationship, not a reproductive one. In other words, the "sacrament of marriage" is not necessarily the same as the legal or social values of one. |
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![]() | ![]() In answer to both jgaither and gearboy I'll ask, if marriage is merely a contract, then why is it even necessary? |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2012-08-03 4:33 AM In answer to both jgaither and gearboy I'll ask, if marriage is merely a contract, then why is it even necessary? It's not necessary it's a contract between two people who want to make a legal commitment to each other. This is why religion plays no part in a state given certificate and why every religious point of view on this subject is moot. With every generation there are less hard liners on this subject and like it has already been proven the church will change its standing on certain civil rights issues over time. People here may not like it but someday in the US gay marriage will be legal. It may not be in the next 10 years but someday it will be. |
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Pro ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Big Appa - 2012-08-03 8:07 AM dontracy - 2012-08-03 4:33 AM In answer to both jgaither and gearboy I'll ask, if marriage is merely a contract, then why is it even necessary? It's not necessary it's a contract between two people who want to make a legal commitment to each other. This is why religion plays no part in a state given certificate and why every religious point of view on this subject is moot. With every generation there are less hard liners on this subject and like it has already been proven the church will change its standing on certain civil rights issues over time. People here may not like it but someday in the US gay marriage will be legal. It may not be in the next 10 years but someday it will be. This. I think we may be talking about "marriage" in 2 different ways - the religious institution and the civil. A contract is necessary because you are talking about talking two individuals and co-mingling present and future assets. Both in terms of being able to quickly and easily speak for one another (in the legal sense of assigning assets and benefits ) and in the case of the dissolution of the partnership, the distribution of those assets. The flip side of your question is to ask if a marriage is clearly going to be childless (e.g. infertility due to loss of testes or ovaries from earlier disease or trauma, or in the case of an older woman, menopause), why can two people be allowed to be married if it is a function of the ability to make babies? |
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![]() | ![]() gearboy - 2012-08-03 8:13 AM Big Appa - 2012-08-03 8:07 AM dontracy - 2012-08-03 4:33 AM In answer to both jgaither and gearboy I'll ask, if marriage is merely a contract, then why is it even necessary? It's not necessary it's a contract between two people who want to make a legal commitment to each other. This is why religion plays no part in a state given certificate and why every religious point of view on this subject is moot. With every generation there are less hard liners on this subject and like it has already been proven the church will change its standing on certain civil rights issues over time. People here may not like it but someday in the US gay marriage will be legal. It may not be in the next 10 years but someday it will be. This. I think we may be talking about "marriage" in 2 different ways - the religious institution and the civil. A contract is necessary because you are talking about talking two individuals and co-mingling present and future assets. Both in terms of being able to quickly and easily speak for one another (in the legal sense of assigning assets and benefits ) and in the case of the dissolution of the partnership, the distribution of those assets. The flip side of your question is to ask if a marriage is clearly going to be childless (e.g. infertility due to loss of testes or ovaries from earlier disease or trauma, or in the case of an older woman, menopause), why can two people be allowed to be married if it is a function of the ability to make babies? The answer to the last question of yours gearboy is covered by the first paragraph of George's argument. The marriage is consummated by acts that are reproductive in type if not in effect. To both of you, would you now accept the claim that the sexual revolution set out to dismantle the institution of marriage and has been greatly successful at doing so? All of the issues that you mention regarding what a contract of marriage covers can be covered with a contract that is non marital. |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2012-08-03 5:23 AM All of the issues that you mention regarding what a contract of marriage covers can be covered with a contract that is non marital.
See after all the religious interjection this is the main point of the gay marriage debate. Now if we say it's ok to grant the legal rights the state will still do it the same way it does now with a judge and vows. In the end the state will call the union the same as it always has because the state should not care about what religious groups interject into a word they already have for a meaning of a union. The people that are against say the word has a religious meaning. People that are for say the state gives the rights and the definition from the church has no bearing on this subject. Am I correct on this? Edited by Big Appa 2012-08-03 8:04 AM |
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![]() | ![]() Big Appa - Am I correct on this? People with faith based opinions have a right to form civil law accordingly. |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Big Appa - 2012-08-03 8:03 AM dontracy - 2012-08-03 5:23 AM All of the issues that you mention regarding what a contract of marriage covers can be covered with a contract that is non marital. Â See after all the religious interjection this is the main point of the gay marriage debate. Now if we say it's ok to grant the legal rights the state will still do it the same way it does now with a judge and vows. In the end the state will call the union the same as it always has because the state should not care about what religious groups interject into a word they already have for a meaning of a union. The people that are against say the word has a religious meaning. People that are for say the state gives the rights and the definition from the church has no bearing on this subject. Am I correct on this? Which brings us back to what I proposed eight pages ago and in other threads: call it a "union" and not a "marriage". There is too much history and tradition (some religious) to redefine the word now. |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() scoobysdad - 2012-08-03 6:15 AM Big Appa - 2012-08-03 8:03 AM Which brings us back to what I proposed eight pages ago and in other threads: call it a "union" and not a "marriage". There is too much history and tradition (some religious) to redefine the word now. dontracy - 2012-08-03 5:23 AM All of the issues that you mention regarding what a contract of marriage covers can be covered with a contract that is non marital.
See after all the religious interjection this is the main point of the gay marriage debate. Now if we say it's ok to grant the legal rights the state will still do it the same way it does now with a judge and vows. In the end the state will call the union the same as it always has because the state should not care about what religious groups interject into a word they already have for a meaning of a union. The people that are against say the word has a religious meaning. People that are for say the state gives the rights and the definition from the church has no bearing on this subject. Am I correct on this? I personally disagree and think the word will be redefined in the future. |
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Master![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2012-08-03 6:33 AM In answer to both jgaither and gearboy I'll ask, if marriage is merely a contract, then why is it even necessary? Insurance and death rights mostly. All around spousal rights. Outside of that, it's not necessary. |
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Master![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2012-08-03 8:07 AM Big Appa - Am I correct on this? People with faith based opinions have a right to form civil law accordingly. Except for a little thing called the first amendment: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." The Supreme Court did not consider the question of how this applied to the states until 1947; when they did, in Everson v. Board of Education, the court determined that the first amendment applied to the states and that a law enabling reimbursement for busing to all schools (including parochial schools) was constitutional. Additional letters from Jefferson show intent with "Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man & his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, & not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should 'make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,' thus building a wall of separation between Church and State." (I did the bolding, not Jefferson) That is why the supreme court is so important. The common person does not distinguish between their faith and civil law. |
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![]() | ![]() jgaither - Except for a little thing called the first amendment: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." The Supreme Court did not consider the question of how this applied to the states until 1947; when they did, in Everson v. Board of Education, the court determined that the first amendment applied to the states and that a law enabling reimbursement for busing to all schools (including parochial schools) was constitutional. Additional letters from Jefferson show intent with "Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man & his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, & not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should 'make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,' thus building a wall of separation between Church and State." (I did the bolding, not Jefferson) That is why the supreme court is so important. The common person does not distinguish between their faith and civil law. We're not talking here about establishing a religion. Neither did those who fought for emancipation and civil rights, |
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![]() | ![]() jgaither - dontracy - 2012-08-03 6:33 AM In answer to both jgaither and gearboy I'll ask, if marriage is merely a contract, then why is it even necessary? Insurance and death rights mostly. All around spousal rights. Outside of that, it's not necessary. So then the claim is correct, yes? |
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Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2012-08-03 9:07 AM People with faith based opinions have a right to form civil law accordingly. ______________________ They of course do. However, you mentioned a few posts back about a decline in society. Do you also feel they has been a decline church attendance, and that this is possibly related to the societal decline? I don't know numbers, but it certainly seems like there has been a decline. For many people I know, their problem has been with the church's inability to separate their belief of how the church members should live, and how everyone else should live. I think this is the root of many's frustration with organized religion. This my way (or God's way) or the highway type attitude applied across a broad spectrum of society runs contrary to both freedom and liberty.
Edited by Goosedog 2012-08-03 8:58 AM |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2012-08-03 9:55 AM jgaither - dontracy - 2012-08-03 6:33 AM In answer to both jgaither and gearboy I'll ask, if marriage is merely a contract, then why is it even necessary? Insurance and death rights mostly. All around spousal rights. Outside of that, it's not necessary. So then the claim is correct, yes? i disagree, i think the agenda is about giving these legal protections to all couples. the problem is that right now there is no avenue for that, except for the legal contract of marriage. sure, a power of attorney can cover some of the medical decision stuff, but what about survivor benefits? health insurance? many of these policies ONLY allow a spouse. with legal documentation to prove that person is your spouse. add me to the list of people that would gladly surrender my marriage certificate, issued by local gov't, for a civil union certificate that provided the same protections, and worked for any couple. and i would still be married in the eyes of God, or my religion of choice. |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() mehaner - 2012-08-03 6:59 AM dontracy - 2012-08-03 9:55 AM jgaither - dontracy - 2012-08-03 6:33 AM In answer to both jgaither and gearboy I'll ask, if marriage is merely a contract, then why is it even necessary? Insurance and death rights mostly. All around spousal rights. Outside of that, it's not necessary. So then the claim is correct, yes? i disagree, i think the agenda is about giving these legal protections to all couples. the problem is that right now there is no avenue for that, except for the legal contract of marriage. sure, a power of attorney can cover some of the medical decision stuff, but what about survivor benefits? health insurance? many of these policies ONLY allow a spouse. with legal documentation to prove that person is your spouse. add me to the list of people that would gladly surrender my marriage certificate, issued by local gov't, for a civil union certificate that provided the same protections, and worked for any couple. and i would still be married in the eyes of God, or my religion of choice. _____________________________________ Woo! That was a great post. And really does anyone think God will cast judgment on you if others use the word marriage? Again it comes down to does that affect you, your marriage, or your relationship with god? If anyone replies to my question it will start with a "No, but..." |
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![]() | ![]() Goosedog - dontracy - 2012-08-03 9:07 AM People with faith based opinions have a right to form civil law accordingly. ______________________ They of course do. However, you mentioned a few posts back about a decline in society. Do you also feel they has been a decline church attendance, and that this is possibly related to the societal decline? I don't know numbers, but it certainly seems like there has been a decline. For many people I know, their problem has been with the church's inability to separate their belief of how the church members should live, and how everyone else should live. I think this is the root of many's frustration with organized religion. This my way (or God's way) or the highway type attitude applied across a broad spectrum of society runs contrary to both freedom and liberty. I think the decline has much to do with the inroads made by human secularism, That's the conflict. |
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Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2012-08-03 10:07 AM It's a war, really. Unfortunately, for you, the United States Constitution is not on your side.
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Master![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2012-08-03 8:55 AM jgaither - dontracy - 2012-08-03 6:33 AM In answer to both jgaither and gearboy I'll ask, if marriage is merely a contract, then why is it even necessary? Insurance and death rights mostly. All around spousal rights. Outside of that, it's not necessary. So then the claim is correct, yes? Since you have not properly defended your stance on procreation being the definition of marriage and have not disagreed with me that it's a mutually beneficial contract between two people, then no, the claim is not correct. There is no attempt to dismantle the mutually beneficial contract between two people. The need lies in general spousal rights. Edited by jgaither 2012-08-03 9:12 AM |
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![]() | ![]() jgaither - Since you have not properly defended your stance on procreation being the definition of marriage What else should I say about that? I've pointed out the part of George's argument that addresses this a few times now. |
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![]() | ![]() Goosedog - dontracy - It's a war, really. Unfortunately, for you, the United States Constitution is not on your side.
What do you mean? |
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