According to classic philosophy and Christian tradition the feelings of love are ultimately secondary to the to the acts of love and are directed to that end, not vice-versa.
I don’t care whether you think acts have priority over feelings. It is still useful to be able to distinguish between the two. The fact is that if you refuse to make such distinctions, even basic communication can become difficult, and language is about communication.
To derive morality of human acts from the acts of the animal world(which is also necessarily fallen due to original sin), is absurd.
Firstly, I was just using the animals to illustrate something which should have been obvious to any straight male: some women get the juices flowing more than others. To act as if the sex drive doesn’t discriminate is just to deny reality.
Secondly, it’s not a derivation of morality. It is again just a simple description. It is a fact that some females (and conversely, males) are more attractive than others and that the sex drive will continue to discriminate in that manner. Now you can derive any ethics you wish from that fact, but it’s still a fact.
Feelings are not chosen, but we can choose to control our feelings instead of permitting them to control us.
So if we agree on the definition of “homosexuality” as “attraction to the same sex”, you would concur that homosexuals can’t prevent their own homosexuality? It is an attraction inflicted quite beyond our control by nature/God/whatever, yes?
One necessarily follows from the other. Someone who insists he’s “asexual” isn’t going to be, in the words of Sheldon Cooper, “fornicatin’ like a demonic weasel.”
No, no it doesn’t. Many asexual people still want a partner even though they don’t want sex, and they have sex to please the other person. Some also try to deny their asexuality just as some gays try to be straight.
This is the problem with the view that the separation of actions from feelings is a “distinction without a difference”. You end up with a ludicrously oversimplified worldview. The world is messy, and people have conflicting desires. To act as if a subset of a person’s desires makes their actions “necessarily follow” is to pretend that humans are perfectly consistent. This oversimplification also makes you more inclined to believe that everything boils down to choice, which is itself an oversimplification.
Seriously? ANY statement regarding morality is an ethic because ethics is the science of morality. Therefore any attempt to “describe” morality is necessarily an ethical statement.
I suppose you could be stubborn and insist that my statement was “meta-ethical”, since it was a statement about ethics, but it certainly wasn’t just “ethical”.
For example, consider the statement “All laws of physics are related to the four fundamental forces”. Is this a law of physics? Or, a more extreme example: “A string quartet is a group of four musicians that perform with string instruments.” Would uttering that statement qualify as a musical composition?
No, you can describe a discipline without participating in the discipline itself. In this case, I can describe how ethics are used without moralizing just as I can describe music without composing.
Secondly, there are no real moral or ethical consequences to having a favorite color. There are real moral and ethical consequences to homosexual acts, both physically and spiritually.
If you look back, you’ll notice that I called my argument an “analogy”, as in “These two things are not exactly the same but they have similarities which are relevant to my point”.