Well, I’m not actually sure if I line up neatly with either of those two positions, at least as presented.
For one, I know that I can’t say that it is never immoral to tell somthing to your spouse… breaking a just law from a legitimate authority is immoral, as is lying to someone or breaking your promise to them, so, at the very least it would be immoral to clearly tell someone you won’t tell anyone, not even your husband, and then to go on and so anyway Yes, I agree, it would be immoral for me to tell someone that I won’t tell anyone, not even him and do so anyway. But I think that it would be immoral for me to make that promise in the first place. , or to spread information protected legally by confidentiality laws. I think those laws are stupid and wrong, but I wouldn’t break them. I kind of thought you agreed about these situations though, so perhaps you just weren’t thinking of them when you made the above division? Yeah, when I made the above statement I wasn’t including legally protected stuff because I didn’t think of it at the time and I don’t really count that in what we’re talking about. That’s professional stuff, not the actual, personal things that I think should be sharable.
It seems to me like the real question here is about natural secrets, as Bookcat has called them. Is there such a thing as information which, simply because of what it is, should not be told to
anybody without a good reason. I take it, BEL, that you believe this doesn’t exist, as you believe that there would always be the exception of ones spouse? I do believe that natural secrets exist, although I’ve never heard that phrase used before. But I don’t think that telling your spouse a natural secret “counts” as telling someone. I think that once married your spouse becomes and extension of you. I actually agree with Bookcat that such “natural secrets” do exist, but that the importance of the unity between husband and wife can sometimes be sufficient reason for at least some of the information to be shared, not because the spouse has a right to the information, but because the spouse has a right to understand what his/her spouse is thinking/feeling etc and a refusal to share oneself and ones thoughts/emotions can bring harmful disunity to a couples married relationship in which they are supposed to be united as one, not just physically, but emotionally and spiritually as well. However, especially the more I think about it and the more clearly I understand my position on it, I really don’t think that that justifies the telling of every and anything, and that gossip
can exist between married couples. I still disagree on that one. And that doesn’t change my opinion about spouses not keeping secrets from each other, not gossiping is not
at all the same as keeping a secret from ones spouse, basically, its just not telling your spouse something that noone, even yourself, had any right to know in the first place.
Anyway, just adding in some more thoughts on the matter.