I absolutely agree. This is one more reason why I think the argument that “same sex marriage has never existed in previous civilisations so must be wrong” is silly. It is based on both a false assertion and a fallacy.
To the best of my belief, all of them. The most obvious cases being the hittite
code of law and the ones where I have given quotes.
Certainly, many anti-gay marriage historians (especially catholics) have spent a lot of ink on trying to discredit them, but have, in my view, failed.
After all, if
you are trying to make the argument that “same sex marriage has never existed in previous civilisations” it is up to
you to prove your basic assertion. Not just demand that others disprove it or accept it as true. I have given you examples of civilisations that are reported as having had same sex marriage, with no reason to believe that these marriages were treated differently from any other. The ball is in your court.
Have you read it? Were you impressed?
Because I find it appallingly amateurish - the language is blatantly perjorative and biased, the argumentation sloppy, and many of the sentiments appalling. Take this quote:
So we are to believe that examples drawn from african or native american culture ‘don’t count’ because they are not “major and important world civilizations” like nice european judeo-christian cultures?
Likewise the case of the Igbo is simply dismissed on the assertion that the relationship was not sexual.
a) So what? This does nothing to change the clear identification of this same-sex union as
marriage - if anything it only highlights how ‘marriage’ has meant many different things to different cultures. The only universal common denominator I can suggest is forming new family units.
b)amusingly, this assertion is supported solely by the opinion of modern Igbo. Yet elsewhere the authors sneer at a detailed and fully referenced book by Will Roscoe merely because he is a gay native american. Presumably either because he is gay, and so
must be lying, or because he is a member of a “small”, “tangential” culture such as the Native Americans and so doesn’t ‘count’.:dts: But who better to advise us on Native american attitudes to homosexuality? White heterosexual middle class Catholic Law Students?