Sorry, I was probably a bit too terse. My argument was that since choosing not to drive a Toyota is analogous to abstaining from fat rather than to taking Orlistat and eating fat, the analogy doesn’t prove the acceptability of the latter. So it still seems that on the principles of your original argument, Orlistat would be the moral equivalent of The Pill.
Yes, but there is nothing illicit about the pill itself – only when taken for the purposes of contracepting.
As far as I can tell, Orlistat seems to have been designed and is currently taken for the purpose of blocking the natural digestive processes. Furthermore, isn’t it the telos of these natural human processes, and not the telos of artifacts, which is the issue? I haven’t heard anyone argue that interfering with the telos of artifacts is per se sinful. If I use a book as kindling, it’s bad for the book but doesn’t necessarily make me a bad person.
We’re not talking about interfering with the telos of an object here but whether or not the object interferes with the operation of a human faculty – more precisely, whether one takes it for the purpose of interfering with the operation of a human faculty. Hence why the Pill can be taken for some reasons (i.e., controlling hormonal disorders) but not for others (i.e., contraception).
You’re probably right that most people who take snuff do so for the nicotine, but if we imagined someone who took it for the sake of the sneeze, would this be sinful? Or leave aside the snuff–imagine someone who tickled their nostrils to induce a sneeze. (The parallel to masturbation is clear.)
Again, I suppose that relates to the end of sneezing and thus the reason why one is doing so. If you’re inducing a sneeze to clear your nasal passages, nothing has been done wrong. But to elevate the pleasure associated with an end and making it an end in itself is, yes, sinful.
I’m surprised you leapt to the example of sneezing by the way, when the much more relevant example of eating is readily at hand. Our digestive system exists to provide nutrition; food tastes good for that reason; to treat the tastiness of food as an end in itself is a sin (gluttony, e.g., barfing so that one can taste more food). Are you genuinely asking this as a question or are you simply positing an absurd scenario in the hopes that my response will discredit an entire swath of Church teachings?
What the Hell are you people talking about? Is this Aristotle on crack cocaine, taking hits of pot?
A good place to start would be the original post… which it appears very few people in this thread have *actually *read.
I put so much work into it, too.
Although artificial contraception is condemned as a mortal sin by the Church, nevertheless, a large number of American Catholic women are on the pill, according to public statistics. Why do so many women disregard official Church teaching?
Presumably because they’re ignorant of the rationale behind the Church’s teachings, because the Church (evidently) does a terrible job of catechizing people.
I suppose it is the case for some that they simply wish to gratify their passions without consequence.