D
Deo_Volente
Guest
Grace & Peace!
“Broken” is not really applicable to a thing’s essence, but is more applicable to a thing’s telos. I.e., a thing is broken when it is unable to fulfill it’s purpose. A hairdryer is broken when it can no longer dry your hair. A chair is broken when no one can sit on it or in it. But when a hairdryer is broken, it does not suddenly cease being recognizable as a hairdryer–it doesn’t suddenly become unthinkable or unrecognizable as a hairdryer, nor does it suddenly become something else simply because it ceases to operate as it “should.” Telos and essence may be mutually conditioning in some ways (depending on your perspective–which comes first, essence or telos?), but they are not interchangeable.
We can speak of the purposes of marriage, as I have. We can speak of purposes that are essential, and we can also speak of purposes that are not essential–i.e., purposes that are conditional or optional. The various ends of marriage are not all identical with marriage, but to the extent to which any of those ends is present in every marriage that is recognizable as a marriage, then we’re speaking of essential purposes. If those ends are not universal, then they are not essential.
Moreover, you assert that a child has a “right” to be raised by its biological parents. In many cases, children are given up for adoption because the biological parents are not able to provide for the child adequately. Insisting on a child’s right to be raised by its biological parents would make giving up a child for adoption impossible, and may in fact be contrary to the child’s best interests in those cases in which a child cannot be adequately cared for by his or her biological parents. If the mother dies in childbirth, meeting the child’s “right” to be raised by both biological parents becomes difficult or impossible without supernatural or preternatural assistance. It is less the case that children have the right to be raised by their biological parents, and more the case that parents have the right to raise their biological children…unless they give up that right in one way or another.
Under the Mercy,
Mark
All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!
That doesn’t quite make sense, Stephen. Think about it. There is nothing that is what it is that is also lacking in what it needs in order to be what it is, and whether or not a thing is broken does not mean that it is lacking some essential part of what it is. There are no humans that actually lack their essential humanity, regardless of the degree to which they behave inhumanly. There are no chairs that lack the essential features of chairness. There are no butterflies that lack the essential qualities and features of a butterfly. A ham sandwich will always have ham in it, regardless of the quality of the ham or the other ingredients of the sandwich.I would consider that what is essential and not present in a thing would render the thing broken.
“Broken” is not really applicable to a thing’s essence, but is more applicable to a thing’s telos. I.e., a thing is broken when it is unable to fulfill it’s purpose. A hairdryer is broken when it can no longer dry your hair. A chair is broken when no one can sit on it or in it. But when a hairdryer is broken, it does not suddenly cease being recognizable as a hairdryer–it doesn’t suddenly become unthinkable or unrecognizable as a hairdryer, nor does it suddenly become something else simply because it ceases to operate as it “should.” Telos and essence may be mutually conditioning in some ways (depending on your perspective–which comes first, essence or telos?), but they are not interchangeable.
We can speak of the purposes of marriage, as I have. We can speak of purposes that are essential, and we can also speak of purposes that are not essential–i.e., purposes that are conditional or optional. The various ends of marriage are not all identical with marriage, but to the extent to which any of those ends is present in every marriage that is recognizable as a marriage, then we’re speaking of essential purposes. If those ends are not universal, then they are not essential.
You have identified the procreative act as essential to marriage. This is to say that any marriage in which the procreative act does not occur is not a marriage. I urge you to reconsider what you have stated here, Stephen, because you are not only judging modern Josephite marriages as inadequate or invalid, but you are also rendering a judgment on the marriage of Our Lady and St. Joseph. I would argue that it is better to see the procreative act as a conditional purpose of marriage and not an essential purpose.The procreative act is essential to marriage; it creates children which have a right to be raised by their biological parents.
Moreover, you assert that a child has a “right” to be raised by its biological parents. In many cases, children are given up for adoption because the biological parents are not able to provide for the child adequately. Insisting on a child’s right to be raised by its biological parents would make giving up a child for adoption impossible, and may in fact be contrary to the child’s best interests in those cases in which a child cannot be adequately cared for by his or her biological parents. If the mother dies in childbirth, meeting the child’s “right” to be raised by both biological parents becomes difficult or impossible without supernatural or preternatural assistance. It is less the case that children have the right to be raised by their biological parents, and more the case that parents have the right to raise their biological children…unless they give up that right in one way or another.
Under the Mercy,
Mark
All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!