Is Dan Cathy a bigoted homophobe?

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It’s the same way that sex between a husband and wife is ordered towards procreation when they engage in the marital act on, say, day 23 of her cycle when she ovulated on day 12. **It’s absolutely IMPOSSIBLE for her to conceive, **but the act that she and her husband have done is still ordered towards procreation.
But if procreation is “absolutely impossible” for her, how can the act be “ordered towards procreation?”
 
This doesn’t explain why it’s accurate to characterize penis-vagina sex between **permanently **sterile couples as “objectively procreative,” as opposed to “objectively nonprocreative.”
I think we’re not doing a very good job of explaining “objectively procreative.” Let’s go back to the blind man analogy.

All eyes are ordered toward vision - they are “objectively perceptive.” A child born with a lack of visual perception is blind, thus unable to have perceptive vision. This does not mean, however, that eyeballs lose their primary function. It does mean that his eyes, though they are objectively perceptive, cannot fulfill their essential purpose. Again, the presence of blindness doesn’t change the fact that the essential purpose of eyeballs are to see the world in which we live.

In the same way, the essential purpose of the male organ is to procreate. A sterile male organ (a blind one-eyed Willy, perhaps) fails its essential purpose - and yet, we still recognize that the essential purpose of this male organ (and all male organs) is to procreate.
 
I think we’re not doing a very good job of explaining “objectively procreative.” Let’s go back to the blind man analogy. All eyes are ordered toward vision - let’s say this is referred to eyeballs being “objectively perceptive.” A child born with a lack of visual perception is blind, thus unable to have perceptive vision. However, this does not mean that his eyes are not “objectively perceptive” because the essential purpose of eyeballs are to perceive the world in which the person lives. So, his eyes, though they are objectively perceptive, cannot fulfill their essential purpose. Still, it doesn’t change the fact that the essential purpose of eyeballs are to see the world in which we live.
Question: what’s the difference, in your view, between function and purpose? Is there a difference?
 
But if procreation is “absolutely impossible” for her, how can the act be “ordered towards procreation?”
[BUMPED]

I think we’re not doing a very good job of explaining “objectively procreative.” Let’s go back to the blind man analogy.

All eyes are ordered toward vision - they are “objectively perceptive.” A child born with a lack of visual perception is blind, thus unable to have perceptive vision. This does not mean, however, that eyeballs lose their primary function. It does mean that his eyes, though they are objectively perceptive, cannot fulfill their essential purpose. Again, the presence of blindness doesn’t change the fact that the essential purpose of eyeballs are to see the world in which we live.

In the same way, the essential purpose of the male organ is to procreate. A sterile male organ (a blind one-eyed Willy, perhaps) fails its essential purpose - and yet, we still recognize that the essential purpose of this male organ (and all male organs) is to procreate
 
Huh? I’m talking about permanently sterile couples – couples for whom procreation is biologically impossible. When procreation is biologically impossible, how can the act be “objectively procreative?”
Penis is made for vagina.
 
Question: what’s the difference, in your view, between function and purpose? Is there a difference?
[Sorry - my other response was bumped.]

Yes, there is a difference. The purpose is the desired effect, while function is fulfillment of that desired effect. The purpose of eyeballs is to see - but not all eyeballs function in a way that meets that purpose.
 
All eyes are ordered toward vision - they are “objectively perceptive.” A child born with a lack of visual perception is blind, thus unable to have perceptive vision. This does not mean, however, that eyeballs lose their primary function. It does mean that his eyes, though they are objectively perceptive, cannot fulfill their essential purpose. Again, the presence of blindness doesn’t change the fact that the essential purpose of eyeballs are to see the world in which we live.

In the same way, the essential purpose of the male organ is to procreate. A sterile male organ (a blind one-eyed Willy, perhaps) fails its essential purpose - and yet, we still recognize that the essential purpose of this male organ (and all male organs) is to procreate
Suppose I grant that the “essential purpose of eyeballs are to see the world in which we live.” From this, it doesn’t follow that the essential purpose of a *blind man’s eyeballs *are “to see the world in which we live.” Why should I believe that? Similarly, suppose I grant that the “essential purpose of the male organ is to procreate.” From this, why does it follow that the essential purpose of a sterile man’s organ is to procreate?
 
Suppose I grant that the “essential purpose of eyeballs are to see the world in which we live.” From this, it doesn’t follow that the essential purpose of a *blind man’s eyeballs *are “to see the world in which we live.” Similarly, suppose I grant that the “essential purpose of the male organ is to procreate.” From this, why does it follow that the essential purpose of a sterile man’s organ is to procreate?
Here’s an analogy. A plug is made to fit in a wall outlet even when the power is turned off. Penis is made for vagina.
 
Suppose I grant that the “essential purpose of eyeballs are to see the world in which we live.” From this, it doesn’t follow that the essential purpose of a *blind man’s eyeballs *are “to see the world in which we live.” Why should I believe that? Similarly, suppose I grant that the “essential purpose of the male organ is to procreate.” From this, why does it follow that the essential purpose of a sterile man’s organ is to procreate?
Because it is designed to procreate and it has lost its ability to do so.
 
How can sex between permanently sterile couples - where procreation is impossible - be “ordered towards procreation?”
Because it’s the same as what a married couple does when they are temporarily “sterile”.

Perhaps it’s easier for you to see how a married couple’s sex is still objectively procreative when they engage in the act on an infertile day? Can you at least see that?
 
Suppose I grant that the “essential purpose of eyeballs are to see the world in which we live.” From this, it doesn’t follow that the essential purpose of a *blind man’s eyeballs *are “to see the world in which we live.” Why should I believe that? Similarly, suppose I grant that the “essential purpose of the male organ is to procreate.” From this, why does it follow that the essential purpose of a sterile man’s organ is to procreate?
I’m not sure what you’re asking. Are you asking, “why must one eyeball be disordered, and the other one ordered?” Are you now proposing that biological disorders are a fiction? There are no disorders, only organs with different purposes?
 
Perhaps it’s easier for you to see how a married couple’s sex is still objectively procreative when they engage in the act on an infertile day? Can you at least see that?
Not really. It seems to me that you’re simply defining penis-vagina sex as being “objectively procreative,” even when there isn’t a connection between the act and procreation.
 
Consider a man born sterile. He hasn’t “lost” his ability to procreate because he never had it.
You are assuming that each human being’s organs have different biological purposes. Not all lungs, for example, have the primary purpose of drawing in air. Not all hearts have the primary purpose of circulating blood. Is this what you are saying?
 
I’m not sure what you’re asking. Are you asking, “why must one eyeball be disordered, and the other one ordered?” Are you now proposing that biological disorders are a fiction? There are no disorders, only organs with different purposes?
Let’s stick with your blind man analogy. According to you, the essential purpose of eyeballs is to see, and this is true of both functional eyeballs and non-functional eyeballs. But why should I think this? Suppose I grant that the essential purpose of functional eyeballs is to see, what’s the argument that the essential purpose of non-functional eyeballs is to see (perhaps they have a different purpose, or no purpose at all)?
 
Not really. It seems to me that you’re simply defining penis-vagina sex as being “objectively procreative,” even when there isn’t a connection between the act and procreation.
No, I’m not defining it that way. Nature has. And actually, YOU have done this, too, implicitly, by your inability to answer my question: is there some other way that you know of to sexually reproduce than p-v sex.
 
Let’s stick with your blind man analogy. According to you, the essential purpose of eyeballs is to see, and this is true of both functional eyeballs and non-functional eyeballs. But why should I think this? Suppose I grant that the essential purpose of functional eyeballs is to see, what’s the argument that the essential purpose of non-functional eyeballs is to see (perhaps they have a different purpose, or no purpose at all)?
In other words, we’ve approached medicine the wrong way. We should view poor eyesight as something that is not disordered, but something that is a result of eyeballs that have a different (but noble) purpose. There is no need for superficial aids such as eye-glasses. Why would a person born with no legs need a wheelchair? That would diminish the primary purpose of the non-functioning limbs with which they were born. They obviously were not meant to be mobile.
 
In other words, we’ve approached medicine the wrong way. We should view poor eyesight as something that is not disordered, but something that is a result of eyeballs that have a different (but noble) purpose. There is no need for superficial aids such as eye-glasses. Why would a person born with no legs need a wheelchair? That would diminish the primary purpose of the non-functioning limbs with which they were born. They obviously were not meant to be mobile.
The claim at issue is whether the essential purpose of non-functioning eyeballs is to see. You say ‘yes,’ but what’s your argument that that’s the case? (And as might be expected, I would ask what’s your argument that the essential purpose of a sterile organ is to procreate.)

I’m not sure how your above addresses my question. It appears you are conflating an important distinction, that between (i) the desirability of having functioning eyeballs and (ii) the essential purpose of functioning eyeballs. Consistent with the claim that non-functioning eyeballs do not have the essential purpose of seeing, we should nevertheless strive to help blind people see simply because seeing is desirable.
 
The claim at issue is whether the essential purpose of non-functioning eyeballs is to see. You say ‘yes,’ but what’s your argument that that’s the case? (And as might be expected, I would ask what’s your argument that the essential purpose of a sterile organ is to procreate.)

I’m not sure how your above addresses my question. It appears you are conflating an important distinction, that between (i) the desirability of having functioning eyeballs and (ii) the essential purpose of functioning eyeballs. Consistent with the claim that non-functioning eyeballs do not have the essential purpose of seeing, we should nevertheless strive to help blind people see simply because seeing is desirable.
Yes, and as I’ve said (when you asked me the difference between purpose and function), purpose refers to a desired result in nature. Thus, we want to help blind people see because we want eyeballs to function for their desired purpose. Similarly, “permanently” infertile couples often spend tens of thousands of dollars so that their reproductive organs can function to their desired purpose (obviously this is not always possible).

And, I might add, infertile married couples often seek to adopt children to achieve the primary purpose of marriage; just as non-reproductive gay/lesbian couples seek to adopt children to achieve the primary purpose of marriage… which… is… procreation.

Recap:

Eyeballs
Primary Purpose: Vision
Functioning: Eyesight
Non-functioning: Blindness/Poor eyesight

Male Organ
Primary Purpose: Procreation
Functioning: “Boys can swim” (Seinfeld reference)
Non-functioning: “Boys can’t swim”
 
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