P
Pete_1
Guest
The more I look into the philosophical justification for Catholic sexual morality the more I realise Catholic morality is based upon perhaps indefensible foundations.
Firstly I have never read a single convincing defence of the most basic premises of Catholic sexual ethics and believe me I have looked.
Firstly the idea that sexual activity ought to always be ‘open to life’ is frankly ridiculous. What possible reason could anyone have for suggesting that contraception is immoral, whom does it harm? What good does it destroy? It seems that this basic principle is indefensible unless one appeals to some fallacious medieval relic of a teleology. Contraception seems to be harmless and in good sense if one does not want to cause overpopulation.
Common defences of Catholic morality fail miserably. ‘The natural end of the genitals is procreation’ so what? Why shouldn’t I act against a natural end, where is the harm? Where is the loss of good?
More sophisticated defences remain unconvincing ‘procreation is a basic human good, and one should not act to prevent something good from occurring’. This defence fails too. Why should I respect every basic good in every act?
The second doctrine concerning sex, that it is unitive perhaps is more convincing. But for me it is hard to accept that objectively a physical act is somehow and act of love as if the two are somehow bound – tied together in the very laws of the universe.
All purely physical acts (it seems) only subjectively create emotions. How can a purely physical act objectively cause an emotion? Cannot actors kiss one another without feeling love? Then why cannot actors engage in intercourse without feeling love? Perhaps subjectively most of the time this is not possible, but it does not follow that it is never possible.
I like Catholic sexual morality, but it genuinley seems unjustifiable. Has no one noticed that virtually no respectable secular contemporary philosophers maintain a Catholic view of sexual morality? Surely this cannot purely because they have ‘hardened their hearts’
Firstly I have never read a single convincing defence of the most basic premises of Catholic sexual ethics and believe me I have looked.
Firstly the idea that sexual activity ought to always be ‘open to life’ is frankly ridiculous. What possible reason could anyone have for suggesting that contraception is immoral, whom does it harm? What good does it destroy? It seems that this basic principle is indefensible unless one appeals to some fallacious medieval relic of a teleology. Contraception seems to be harmless and in good sense if one does not want to cause overpopulation.
Common defences of Catholic morality fail miserably. ‘The natural end of the genitals is procreation’ so what? Why shouldn’t I act against a natural end, where is the harm? Where is the loss of good?
More sophisticated defences remain unconvincing ‘procreation is a basic human good, and one should not act to prevent something good from occurring’. This defence fails too. Why should I respect every basic good in every act?
The second doctrine concerning sex, that it is unitive perhaps is more convincing. But for me it is hard to accept that objectively a physical act is somehow and act of love as if the two are somehow bound – tied together in the very laws of the universe.
All purely physical acts (it seems) only subjectively create emotions. How can a purely physical act objectively cause an emotion? Cannot actors kiss one another without feeling love? Then why cannot actors engage in intercourse without feeling love? Perhaps subjectively most of the time this is not possible, but it does not follow that it is never possible.
I like Catholic sexual morality, but it genuinley seems unjustifiable. Has no one noticed that virtually no respectable secular contemporary philosophers maintain a Catholic view of sexual morality? Surely this cannot purely because they have ‘hardened their hearts’