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Nohome
Guest
Frankly, yes. That is what nature has been telling living oranisms since day one. Well, that and “if it doesn’t feel good, don’t do it”.“If it feels good, do it,” eh?
Nohome
Frankly, yes. That is what nature has been telling living oranisms since day one. Well, that and “if it doesn’t feel good, don’t do it”.“If it feels good, do it,” eh?
And the Catholic Church should adopt that as the ultimate moral rule?Frankly, yes. That is what nature has been telling living oranisms since day one. Well, that and “if it doesn’t feel good, don’t do it”.
Nohome
That, of course, is just your opinion. Plenty out there says the contrary:And by touting them as a method of “safer sex” we encourage people to have more illicit sex – more dangerous, life-threatening illicit sex.
No, never, the Church can teach whatever it wants about morality.And the Catholic Church should adopt that as the ultimate moral rule?
I don’t thinkd that was “nature” (not a real person) as much as it is Satan (a real person). I find your suggestion that the Church should bow out telling. The evil in Man has always wanted God to butt out and let him do as he pleased.Frankly, yes. That is what nature has been telling living oranisms since day one. Well, that and “if it doesn’t feel good, don’t do it”.
What is “the RCC?”No, never, the Church can teach whatever it wants about morality.
This is a public health issue, it has nothing to do with the Church. The sooner the RCC bows out of the debate the better.
Nohome
Roman Catholic ChurchWhat is “the RCC?”
The Church may teach as it wishes, that is the Church’s business. Keep in mind that only 17% of the world’s population is catholic. Well, 17% of the world’s population was baptized Catholic, but the number that is truly Catholic is significantly smaller (my opinion, I have no data, nor does the Church).And should the Church “bow out” of the debate on abortion, gay marriage, human cloning, and so on?
Didn’t say that.Do you consider that the Church has no mission to teach moral values?
I’m quite sure it isn’t public health.If so, just what is the Church’s mission?
Santan gives humans a sex drive? Does Satan give it to animals too? I suppose the sexually transmitted diseases found in plants are Satans work too?I don’t thinkd that was “nature” (not a real person) as much as it is Satan (a real person).
Hmmm,No, never, the Church can teach whatever it wants about morality.
This is a public health issue, it has nothing to do with the Church. The sooner the RCC bows out of the debate the better.
Nohome
No, and you either know better and are twisting my words, or can not understand English very well. What I was referring to was, “if it feels good, do it,” as a maxim for living, not sex drive. Man is more than his animal instincts. If you do not understand this, then perhaps you should get out of the public health debate and study first the wisdom of Catholic moral philosophy. Then perhaps you can understand rising above immediate animalistic gratification to the fullest of human potential.Santan gives humans a sex drive? Case in point that the RCC should get out of public health!
Nohome
After thumbing through PubMed abstracts for an hour, I am tired of trying to find studies which encourage condoms but don’t encourage reducing the number of partners. The ABC model (Abstinence, Be faithful to your partner, Condoms if you can’t do A or B) for reducing HIV is fairly universal.aidsmap.com/en/news/34FE2167-2DE0-4B2A-B2D0-319230755C1E.asp
HIV prevention interventions that include information on condoms do not inadvertently encourage an earlier sexual debut, more frequent sexual activity or more sexual partners, according to a meta-analysis of 174 studies published in the March edition of the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes.
Do you think the Church wouldn’t object to murdering persons with HIV? Or is there some other evil that you had in mind that you think the Church would not object to?If the proposed solution is evil, the Church should object. As it does now with condoms.
The fact that someone has a moral obligation to do something, does not grant someone else the right to force them to do it.The ethical issue is that sexually active persons in the at-risk group had a moral obligation to be tested. They had no right to wear a blindfold and continue spreading the disease
When you say those “with an obligation to protect the public” who are you referring to? Don’t you think it’s Orwellian to intervene in what is done to their person? No one in law has the right to force someone (who is a competent adult) to have treatment for a physical condition, in the UK anyway. In some circumstances eg open TB their freedom can be restricted, but they still cannot be forced to accept treatment IIRC (having treated someone in those circumstances several years ago).Beyond that, those with an obligation to protect the public had an obligation to institute routine testing.
Well then, perhaps you should read the context of the thread before you decide to snipe a debate.No, and you either know better and are twisting my words, or can not understand English very well. What I was referring to was, “if it feels good, do it,” as a maxim for living, not sex drive.
Yes, but the instincts remain a dynamic part of his being.Man is more than his animal instincts.
yawnIf you do not understand this, then perhaps you should get out of the public health debate and study first the wisdom of Catholic moral philosophy. Then perhaps you can understand rising above immediate animalistic gratification to the fullest of human potential.
I did read the context. If you feel my post was inappropriate, then you should report it. If not, then do not post if you find it difficult to be corrected.Well then, perhaps you should read the context of the thread before you decide to snipe a debate.
Read Humanae Vitae then. The teaching in this area comes from the proper interpretation of natural law. That is not begging the question. It does require reasoning skills which include accepting the authentic interpreter of the issue is the Pope.Fix, your post in reply only serves to confuse and indeed begs the question. It nowhere in those quotes mentions contraception that I can see - nor could it IMO.
It is certainly not the case that anything not authorised by the Church is illicit!Read Humanae Vitae then. The teaching in this area comes from the proper interpretation of natural law. That is not begging the question. It does require reasoning skills which include accepting the authentic interpreter of the issue is the Pope.
Where can I read that the magisterium has ever said contraceptive intercourse is licit?
The Church does not authorize intercourse, but She does relate the truth to us that is binding on our conscience. When has She said contracepted intercourse is licit?It is certainly not the case that anything not authorised by the Church is illicit!
It is a central issue. Not everything that can be done ought to be done. No preventive measure that contradicts the moral law is licit. That includes direct sterilization, direct abortion, contraception and many other things.In the arena of HIV prevention the issue is not the legitimacy of contraception as such.
I understand this point of view, but because condoms (which can prevent HIV transmission) prevent conception the Church sees the two issues overlapping each other.Preventing HIV is not an issue of contraception.