A
antunesaa
Guest
I doubt that “most people in the liberal West accept gay sex as ok” (unless “liberal” means “people who accept gay sex as ok”). A compelling example showing that acceptance by a majority does not imply that people think it’s ok is adultery. I think a tiny majority of people thinks adultery is ok; yet, most people I know accept it. Many, many people in the West practice adultery on a regular basis. I have adulterous friends (as I have homosexual friends) but that doesn’t mean I think their behavior was ok at some point. I don’t think adultery should be a crime. Yet, I think it’s wrong.Sorry but you did state in post 177 , that “most people in the liberal West accept gay sex as ok” and I never mentioned anything about the West being accepting of homosexuals, I simply asked in response to that comment of yours in post 177 what irrefragible proof you had that people in the West consider homosexual deviant acts to be perfectly fine.
Portrait
A first approach to uncover one’s “natural law” might be the following:
“Would you wish your son or daughter to [put the subject of your test here]?”
An overwhelming majority of people I know would answer no to adultery or homosexuality, for whatever reasons. Unfortunately some (albeit less) would also answer no to marrying a person of different race. I guess this calls for a careful distinction of a universal natural law and a “natural law” dictated by one’s circumstances and preferences.
Racism is curious because it is so widespread. But on closer look, what’s really in an universal natural law that makes two people of different races unable to form a family? Do they have any serious physical incompatibility that prevents them from having children? No. Do they have any sort of emotional incompatibility that makes love between them less enjoyable? No. Only when you enlarge your environment to relatives and the society at large problems might get more serious. And, in many cases, one’s preferences in terms of the opposite sex might be correlated with one’s acquaintances. If I know a lot of black people because I happen to be black, chances are that I’ll get in love with a black person for mere frequent exposure to that person. So I guess racism in many instances is in fact not racism - it’s just frequent exposure! The problem with this is that it might generate racism: someone might say: “look, they only marry between themselves; do they think they’re superior?” Because the topic is difficult, I guess, we also have the authoritative words from Jesus and the Apostles stating clearly that all humans are born with the same dignity. It is their chosen actions, not their innate characteristics, which are eventually subject to moral scrutiny. For me that settles the matter.
:clapping: That says it all.