S
SgtSchultz
Guest
No it is not. Engaging in a harmful act in order to derive “pleasure” from it is deviant and disordered.Having said that, you may bring up examples such as S & M when at least one consenting adult is going to get physically hurt. Is that OK?
Absolutely. Morality, at least for those who believe in absolute morality, isn’t simply a matter of “consent”. Besides, I’d argue whether someone was capable of giving consent if they were willing to engage in harmful activity. I’d say their faculties and objectivity are compromised.Is it immoral even if the party has agreed to it, knowing full well the consequences? Is it immoral to cause harm to yourself, or have harm caused to you, if there is no negative effect on anyone else?
Also, it is not necessarily clear whether one who deliberately engages in self-harmful activity is not affecting negatively someone else.
Then what of people whose attractions change? What of a teen/early 20-something who likes voluptuous blondes developing into a man who likes slender brunettes?In passing, I think it might be genetic.
Oh, I never said you shouldn’t. In fact, I wouldn’t recommend marrying someone to whom you aren’t sexually attracted. What I said was that one has no right to marry based on sexual attraction as such. Marriage should not be the state affirming the fact that person A fancies person B. We don’t need the government getting involved in affirming such things.Apart from the obvious limitations, and personally I wouldn’t recommend it, but why can’t you marry someone because you are sexually attracted to them?
Like I’ve said before, I think the state’s involvement in the marriage business has been detrimental to the concept of the family unit. It lead to no-fault divorce and to common law living arrangements. Once subsidies and benefits enter the picture, others will want in on them too. Regardless of how solid arguments are for one group receiving benefits over another one, people will only see and hear one thing: “I want in on that too!” After all, I pay taxes!" Such subsidies and tax breaks also provide the wrong kind of incentive for marriage – financial.
But how are you defining harm? Harm might not be immediate nor easily identified. It may be subtle and it may take years to fully manifest.But…if I’ve classed some type of sex as immoral – that which causes harm to a third party (and possibly one of the partners?), then ‘moral sex’ (which really sounds odd to me), would be sex where no harm was done.