B
batteddy
Guest
But the ends don’t justify the means.
- We are not against having children, 2) However, we believe it healthy to space children at this time, 3) In order to space children, we need to find a way to lower the chances of pregnancy with each marital act, 4) An 80% effective condom lessens the chances of pregnancy with each act; NFP reduces the chances of pregnancy, say, 80%, relative to the peak time of the cycle for each marital act, 5) If she gets pregnant even in spite of these measures, we will accept this pregnancy and be open to life.
The ends may be the same (avoiding conception), but the means of contraception are immoral, merely using informatio is not.
Contraception is an active act, delibrately trying to decrease fertility and the chances of conception.
NFP is just the passive use of information, using decreased chances that are already naturally there.
Ethically, the end doesnt really matter. It’s whether the means are moral or not. Two acts can have the same end, but two totally different means, making one moral and the other immoral. We are not mere pragmatists in our ethics, we believe in ideals, and principles, and good or evil inherent in human acts, not just in the results of those acts.
If you don’t allow NFP…the creates strange epistemological questions related to ethics. I mean…does mere knowledge of days of fertility and infertility impose an obligation on you. If you somehow find out…are you then obligated to avoid the less fertile days, or obligated TO have sex on the fertile days??? No. Because you dont have to have sex any days if you dont want to. You can abstain. You dont have to have sex everyday if your married, and sometimes you will end up having sex on an infertile day…merely knowing that it’s an infertile day adds no obligation on your part, and you can even use the information to you advantage if you want.
Here’s an example:
I am at a store looking to buy a toaster. And I overhear two employees saying that there is a secret sale tommorow. Am I allowed to wait till tommorow to get the toaster at a lower price? Sure! I can buy the toaster any damn day I want. If I hadn’t overheard, I could have decided to go home, discuss it with the wife, and come back the next day and been surprised by the sale. But now that I overheard, am I obligated to buy today so as not to “cheat” the company out of that extra money? Of course not! The mere knowledge that there is going to be a sale anyway doesn’t impose any obligation on me. My merely holding the information and using it to my advantage is fine. I’m not “cheating” anyone out of anything, because the sale was going to occur anyway.
Likewise, mere knowledge that tommorow is an infertile day doesnt suddenly make my waiting till tommorow sinful. Because I’m not obligated to have sex tonight, nor am I obligated to abstain tommorow. I’m not cheating God out of anything, because the infertility was going to happen anyway, and I’m not required to have sex on any particular days. Mere information doesnt change that.
Now, if you did something immoral to GET that information…then it’s wrong. But measuring temperatures and mucus…isn’t immoral.
People inside a company who get information that a stock is going to drop…have to disclose their sales to the public before they sell or risk being accused of illegal insider trading for having an unfair advantage. But it is the deceptive tactic of hiding the sale from the public and thus misappropriating the information that is bad and illegal, not the use of the information. An insider can trade if they announce the information publically.
But if an outsider merely overhears the information…they are certainly allowed, under US law, to sell their stocks just as they always are. An outsider can sell them anytime they want…mere secret information that comes to them unintentionally…doesnt suddenly obligate them to hold on to their shares, and definitely not when it would be to their disadvantage to do so.
If the wife knew she was infertile on certain days, but the husband didnt, and she kept only having sex on those days to avoid having the baby he wanted to have…she might be guilty of a certain type of “insider trading” using her information deceptively, hiding it from someone who has a right to know in order to promote her advantage. But if both partners know fully…there is nothing wrong with using the information.