vjohn82 wrote:Seth wrote:vjohn82 wrote:
It's simply irrational to object to one's sexuality but people have the right to.
You may think it's irrational, but you're hardly a paragon of rationality, as I've demonstrated elsewhere
Ad hominem. Move on.
Er, you first.
Seth wrote:According to whom?
The moral Zeitgeist. Humanity is beginning to reach in the deeper recesses of objective morality and historically we see a trend which is moving away from conservatism. Why? Because greater understanding of science reveals certain truths. For example, it is clearly true that genetic differences in skin colour should not lead to irrational prejudice. That seems an objective truth which humanity can agree upon. By logical comparison, if a person's sexuality is predetermined by their genes it would be irrational to discriminate based on their sexuality. Again, this is an objective truth should the question meet whether such behaviour can harm another person.
The problem, of course, being that there is a distinction between "status" discrimination and "behavior" discrimination. It is irrational to discriminate based on skin color, or indeed sexual orientation. It is not necessarily or axiomatically irrational to discriminate based on skin-color-based, or sexual-orientation-based BEHAVIOR.
Which is to say that if people of a particular skin color engage in socially unacceptable behavior as a function of the color of their, or another person's skin, it's completely rational for society to regulate and proscribe such behavior. The same is true of behavior related to sexual orientation. Society has every right to regulate sexual BEHAVIOR while still acknowledging that sexual ORIENTATION may be a "status" condition that the individual has no choice over.
They become objective truths when we take other moral questions into consideration; does being a certain skin colour harm another person? If yes, we need to ponder deeper into the question. If not, irrational prejudice seems likely to be objectively false.
Does a person's sexuality cause others harm? I have seen no credible argument that it does. Ergo, it seems more probable that an objective truth exists in not discrimination based on sexuality.
Inapt comparison. In the first case you are discussing a status condition (skin color) that in and of itself produces no inherent behaviors that might differ from any other acceptable or unacceptable social behavior that society might choose to regulate. In the second case you are discussing "sexuality" which implies actual sexual behavior, not merely "sexual orientation" which is the status condition equivalent to skin color.
Therefore your argument fails on faulty premises.
The question then becomes "does a person's sexuality cause others harm?"
The obvious answer is "it can, then again perhaps not."
The corollary question becomes "what right does a society have to regulate expressions of sexuality?"
The answer to that has been, traditionally, "society has broad rights to regulate expressions of sexuality."
So, the next question becomes "is there a rational distinction to be drawn between regulating heterosexual sexuality and regulating homosexual sexuality that would grant moral suasion in regulating the latter in different ways or to a more severe extent?"
All these questions are related to the overall needs of society as a whole to maintain order and protect individual rights, so it becomes a complex analysis of sexual behavior on every side and a judgment on the part of society, as expressed through its political system, as to what acceptable sexual behavior consists of in the interests of preserving that particular society's structure and operation.
Therefore if people base their prejudices towards a persons sexuality based on the historic writings of nomadic goat herders from the middle east, they are missing a chunk of their inate humanity and ability to engage rationally with other human beings.
Not necessarily. It may be that the reason that proscriptions on certain sexual acts have endured because those proscriptions are important to the preservation of the society as a whole, and that removing those constraints on behavior has been long found to be detrimental to societal stability and endurance.
In other words, traditions may exist for more than arbitrary reasons, and they may be the product of evolution and empirical learning over long time periods. Which means it may therefore be unwise, biologically and evolutionarily, to ignore or reject traditions that help provide stability and order for society.
Jewish dietary laws are a clear example of a religious tradition that endured for many thousands of years that has a clear and unequivocal benefit to preserving society by avoiding food-borne illness. That we understand the actual vectors and mechanisms involved does not necessarily invalidate the tradition. That we now have methods of testing food and systems to ensure the safety of food that make such traditions largely unnecessary may, however, invalidate the societal need for that tradition. But, given the recent Colorado-based Listeria outbreak that killed more than two dozen people (so far), it may be that Jewish dietary (kosher) laws are not quite as useless as one might think. Had ANY of the people involved in handling contaminated cantaloupe followed the cleanliness dictates of Judaism, from the grower to the consumer, and simply PROPERLY WASHED AND DISINFECTED THE OUTER RIND before cutting open the fruit, those who consumed it would not have gotten ill and died.
Washing your fruits and vegetables and disinfecting the rinds/peels is something that the FDA and other food-health agencies have been touting for decades. The risks are well known. But people IGNORED this safety procedure because the memes the FDA attempted to establish were not strong.
The memes of Judaism, however, are VERY strong, and have been so for more than 5000 years. This proves the utility of such memes, and such societal proscriptions on risky behavior...like male homosexual sex in the 1980s, which devastated the gay community and which socially-proscribed behavior (at the time) still haunts all of us today. The same can be said for heterosexual sexual promiscuity, particularly in places like Africa, where AIDS is becoming an endemic disease.
In Uganda, however, the "ABC" (Abstinence, monogamy, condoms) program promoted by the government, with the abstinence and monogamy parts being promoted and supported by the Catholic church in Uganda, which is to say societal proscriptions on unsafe sexual behaviors, has substantially reduced Uganda's high HIV/AIDS rates to about 6 percent by 2007.
This is an example of societal proscription of sexual behavior instituted as a method of protecting the stability and order of society.
So, given the fact that promiscuous homosexual sexual behavior in the 1980s lead to an epidemic of HIV/AIDS in the gay community, it is not in the least bit irrational that proscriptions on homosexual sexual activity were part of the societal controls on sexual behavior.
It may be that nowadays, with our greater understanding of HIV/AIDS and the sterling example of safe sex provided by the homosexual community, which adopted safe sex early and effectively, the societal concern over homosexual activity and public health may be overblown and it's time for change in societal mores.
And that's exactly what's happening, but such things take time and are slow to filter down through society.
So, is it really "irrational" for people to object to homosexual activities? Perhaps it is, but then again there may be other, more subtle threats to society and its stability posed by homosexual acts than just HIV/AIDS. That is evidently what religionists believe, which might explain their antipathy towards the homosexual social agenda of forcible acceptance of homosexual activity in society.
Please note that I specify "homosexual activity" and not "sexual orientation," which I agree is a status condition that makes discrimination based on that status alone irrational and unacceptable.
As for social acceptance of homosexual activity, I want to make it perfectly clear that I am not stating ANY personal opinion on the subject, I am merely exploring the subject without rendering any judgment for the purposes of argument, and in fact have no personal antipathy or concern about private, personal sexual behavior of any sort, so long as it's consensual and doesn't pose a public health hazard or public nuisance.
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