A
antunesaa
Guest
You state you are agnostic, so you’re outside the circle of believers. Now, from an agnostic perspective, pretty much everything is defensible under certain circumstances. For instance, incest is defensible. Polyandry, polygamy and other combinations of males and females are also defensible. The death penalty is defensible. Voluntary slavery is defensible. Abortion is defensible. Sadism and masochism are defensible. Bestiality is defensible. Euthanasia is defensible. (I’m against all these practices.)Homosexuality is entirely defensible. The only argument against it is that certain believers claim that a supernatural being has inspired writings against it. And this argument, outside the circle of believers, is a very weak one.
infertility is a weak and irrational argument against it
health is a weak and irrational argument against it
“Natural Law” is a weak and irrational argument against it
Do I have to spell out arguments for all these things based on merely agnostic principles? Principles like: (1) “life is valuable up to the point that it is deemed admissible by the human community”; (2) “the free will of any person must be respected in all circumstances as long as it does not interfere with other people’s lives”; (3) “people can and should use any available means of achieving their personal goals as long as they do not harm others directly or indirectly”.
To attack voluntary slavery, abortion, incest, polygamy, polyandry, sadism, etc. you need something else. You need something beyond the consensus of the human community, because that consensus is by definition contingent. The problem with the above principles is that they are made by men for men. They lack the universality and continuity required for condemning practices that, by and large, have been condemned throughout history. These principles are not sufficient to rule out things that today are condemned by everyone but which, eventually, will be defended by someone within some years.
Take incest. Two adult people who happen to be brother and sister decide they love each other and want to live openly their relationship. Are those principles enough to combat their decision? I don’t think so. Their relationship concerns them only. They don’t hurt other people; by (2) we can’t deny them the fulfillment of their best wishes. Should we prevent them from having children? No: by (3) they could check whether their offspring were healthy and by (1) they would be allowed (as now people are) to abort potentially defective fetuses. So why forbid incest between consenting adults?
There is one principle that allows you to combat all these practices. The principle is that any being that is human is loved and wished by the God that was revealed by Jesus. (And perhaps the God of the other religions of the Book.) Of course, for you, who are a non-believer, any talk of God is anathema. But then you have to admit that, sooner or later, all those practices indicated above will be allowed if the current Western mindset persists.