strugglingalong, I’ve reached a frustration point with this discussion, so forgive me if I don’t reply in full. I’ve bracketed the two bits of your quote together below because I think they indicate a facet of this issue that you have not addressed.
High standards or high standards in practice? Just because they expected a higher standard does not mean they practiced it.
Actually the Catechism states that what ought be revealed should remain hidden.
I note that where you respond to the Catechism above, you do not address
CCC 2524 that states that culture plays a role in modesty of dress. Modesty in dress (not the virtue itself) is relative to culture and era. Thus, as you note with your very first quote above, revealing less skin/shape in dress than we do today does not necessarily produce virtue. One needs to take both Catechism passages together.
Lest you take the above paragraph as the sum total of my thoughts on the matter, I’ll direct you to my reply on your other thread (
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=4142261&postcount=29)) and my previous posts listed below.
…But I should know better than to expect any rational response, as I’ve gotten none thus far.
It’s always good to get a little unnecessary jab in there.

It’s good to paint your opponent as irrational.
Believe or not, that was not intended as a jab, (although I can see why you might be offended at the word “rational”) but as a reminder to myself not to “get my hopes up” (as when I posted the above you had left the bulk of
my original post (except in mockery),
this and
this unaddressed.)
I apologize for offending you. It has been my experience that posters who propounds the “no-pants” simply ignore counter-arguments.
But, I think it would be fair of you to hold yourself to the same standards of discourse that you require from other people. As far as I’m concerned you (still) owe me, and every woman in a dangerous situation not of her own making an apology for this-
I wonder how women in earlier ages survived attacks in their dresses and skirts? It’s a wonder they didn’t all die off in their dresses!
which belittles the very real threats and dangers we face.
In my mind two things occur to me: (1) is to protect someone’s purity as much as possible and (2) to protect their physical well-being.
SNIP and REARRANGE
I’m guessing you are appalled that I was unable to say whether a woman should wear pants to avoid risk or wear a modest dress and be in risk.
In sum, it sounds to me as though your argument is – a “good” dress code = modesty and modesty = purity. This strikes me as literally backwards. (Purity of heart already cultivated in the soul inspires standards of modesty which inspire a dress code, seems to me to be what the Church teaches.)
When this equating of purity with particular garments leads you, a man (and I believe in the traditional view that part of the duty of a man, particularly a Catholic man, is to protect women) to be unable to make the judgement that physical safety is more important than clothing, I can’t help but be appalled. I find an attitude that can’t place human life at higher priority than ordinary clothes appalling.