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Student09
Guest
OK. I’ll give your questions numbers to make it easier to address them.you skipped post #9
I was waiting for more definitions. So far I just have questions:
- Why can’t a 14 year old be an adult either de facto or de jure?
- Do we get to question the source of a de jure definition?
- Why would society demand de jure recognition of a love relationship?
- How would these definitions defer from a parent-child relationship?
- What would limit the contract to two adults either de facto or de jure?
- One can, and in the past the Church has allowed 14 year olds to marry. It’s merely cultural and has no bearing on the issue of heterosexual/homosexual relationships.
- Sure.
- Society doesn’t. Many heterosexual people live together out of wedlock and society doesn’t seem terribly concerned about that. It’s the people who are getting married or seeking marriage who demand societal recognition for emotional reasons and sometimes for financial or other legal reasons.
- Marriage is a contract entered into with full consent by both parties (children have no choice in being born or in who their parents are) and includes a sexual component.
- Are you defining “adult” as “eighteen years of age” or “has gone through puberty” (which would include some nine year olds, etc).