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Paul_Rimmer
Guest
I’ve chosen to skip over two sections of your remarks on this post. First, any remark that says “ok” means, in my mind, that you understand my argument at at least agree that it follows, even if you don’t agree with its content. So I ignore these.
I also ignore most remarks you make to my objections. These objections are not things I agree with, but the best arguments I have heard thus far against my position. I already admit that they are flawed. I am grateful, however, for your remarks on one of them, which I don’t list here, as they provide a better response to one of the objections than I previously had. Thank you.
Clearly, the statement of faith and morals, that we are commanded by God to be fruitful and multiply, applying to married adults, means every family should try to have many children (understood differently for different families). Planning never to have children in a marriage is in clear violation to the moral aspect of this disciplinary teaching and is always wrong.
However, the material point is that you object to the argument. If the argument can be used to defend abortion, then it is wrong. How is it wrong?
I also ignore most remarks you make to my objections. These objections are not things I agree with, but the best arguments I have heard thus far against my position. I already admit that they are flawed. I am grateful, however, for your remarks on one of them, which I don’t list here, as they provide a better response to one of the objections than I previously had. Thank you.
It’s not simple, in the philosophical sense, because it’s composite. It’s not simply: “God commands: don’t contracept” or “the Church commands: don’t contracept” but a more complex argument involving concepts of the type: “contraception interferes with procreation” “procreation is commanded by God”. However, just as the prohibition of the marriage of priests is composite, and disciplinary, so the prohibition of contraception in every single sexual act is composite and so disciplinary. Most humans would have many children if they contracepted every other time they participated in the marital act. Forbidding it every time is a disciplinary rule, and so forbidding it at all is a disciplinary rule.How is the teaching on contraception not simple? The simple teaching is "contraception is immoral - don’t contracept"
Clearly, the statement of faith and morals, that we are commanded by God to be fruitful and multiply, applying to married adults, means every family should try to have many children (understood differently for different families). Planning never to have children in a marriage is in clear violation to the moral aspect of this disciplinary teaching and is always wrong.
I’m not sure what you mean by this statement.The long, reasoned arguments are only necessary to counter long arguments in its favor. It seems to me that your own argument took 4 posts to get into this forum.
I’d agree. And, since it’s impossible (in normal circumstances) that every marital act lead to the production of children, that can’t be the right end of every single act, but of the acts taken together. So we have that it would be wrong, by natural law, to prevent the natural end of this group, or series of acts. The purpose of some of the individual acts will naturally be children. The purpose for all of them, taken individually, would be an expression of unity and of love.er - “any disordered act is immoral” is more of a definition here so one could equally say “any act which does not tend toward its natural purpose is immoral”
Abortion involves the killing of an innocent human life. This is wrong in every case, by natural law. Contraception can be used to cause a spacing between children. This is not clearly wrong in natural law.At any rate, I don’t see any practical difference between the syllogism on abortion and the one on contraception.
However, the material point is that you object to the argument. If the argument can be used to defend abortion, then it is wrong. How is it wrong?