Grace & Peace!
Biggie, I’m very glad for your reply! I’m enjoying our conversation.
Within the context of the assertion that homosexuality is genetically selected is the logic that other sexual preferences (and beyond, other behaviors in general) are genetically selected, a possibility you allowed for in your response as to Pedophilia. Neither I, nor apparently you, believe the science is there yet if it ever will be to fully assert that genetics accounts for sexuality. We are therefore left with scant knowledge, anecdotal accounts and the logic of argument. Logically, if you are staking everything on the belief that the specific behavior of the homosexual has been selected for him, you have no basis to conversely say that the specific behavior of the pedophile or any other behavior has not been genetically selected.
I certainly see your point. But I do want to be clear, particularly with reference to your last sentence there, that when we’re talking of sexuality, we’re talking not of behavior but of an orientation toward attraction to one gender or another, which orientation I believe to be due to natural causes (genetics being one of several possible causes).
We can also talk of orientation toward a specific behavior, but once we do so, the tendency will be to reduce sexuality to a complex or a pathology. I think this is what opens up the possibility of a comparison between homosexuality and pedophilia or heterosexuality and rape. Perhaps this, then, is where the conversation goes wrong initially.
Strictly speaking, then, I do not think sexuality explicitly implies a particular behavior–it implies a particular attraction to men or women. That attraction and the subsequent consciousness of that attraction has consequences for behavior, e.g., it has consequences for a person’s self-understanding and their understanding of who they are in relation to others, which understanding(s) can tend to influence personality traits, aesthetic judgment, how we behave in the world or perform who we are for others, etc. Sexuality, however, does not compel us to have sex, but does dispose us to the possibility of sex. Whether or not we choose to pursue that possibility is a related, though a different, issue.
If it were somehow able to be shown that behavior is genetically determined, there would no longer be a basis for punishment or guilt, no longer a need for redemption, but also no basis for freedom, justice, love. It is, in the final analysis, dehumanizing.
I absolutely agree. To be clear, then, perhaps we should consider not talking of the genetic determination of behavior but of a natural disposition towards a variety of possible behaviors. This latter smacks less of fatalism and dehumanization to me.
Also, given this understanding, the language of compulsion is more easily recognized as indicative of a pathology foreign to a healthy sexuality.
But that would still leave the act that follows from the attraction, which I would assert is within the control of the actor, whether to perform it or not, which Fits is appealing that he wouldn’t have chosen if he could choose. So you and I may agree that the compulsion to perform the act doesn’t exist, but that appears to be insufficient to satifsy the expectations of the homosexual argument.
From Fits’ other posts, I think the issue is not that he or she would have chosen not to act after having responded to an attraction through action, but that he or she would not have chosen to have that attraction to begin with. I think he or she is saying that homosexuality remains such a cross in our culture that, if homosexuality (read: homosexual attraction) were a choice, he or she would not have chosen to experience it. Being a heterosexual would be easier. Fitswimmer would be the best person to explain his/her own perspective, though!
As the ability to chose or reject the act exists, so to does responsibilty for the act exist, and culpability if you accept the act as evil. And as I indicated earlier, I accept culpability exists in concupiscence, not simply in homosexual conduct. Even at the beginning, for example, the faithful heterosexual holds himself culpable for impure thoughts on which he dwells.
Agreed.
If the behavior can be avoided, then the notion of class as well as innocence vanishes.
I’m not sure I completely agree–a specific behavior may be absent, but the attraction remains, the fact of one’s sexuality remains. That fact in itself is enough to elicit irrational hatred and/or cruelty from others. If the question asked is then, “Why reveal your sexuality if, by lack of sexual indulgence, it’s a moot point?” The answer is, “because it isn’t a moot point–what is being required of the homosexual is a living of their life as if they had no sexuality at all and as if that sexuality played no part in their formation as complete human beings. That level of dishonesty is not required of heterosexuals, why should it be required of homosexuals?” But the understanding of homosexuality as an intrinsic disorder enforces this requirement, revealing in the process that that understanding is unjust.
You, yourself, first reject the idea that homosexuality is chosen asserting that such a condition would make it a subset of heterosexuality. You later, however, deny that it is compulsion. I would clarify by saying that choice makes it a subset of concupiscence, even as hetersexuality is except within a specific context.
I don’t think that asserting that homosexuality is not a choice, nor representative of a compulsion, but a naturally occurring, non-pathological orientation toward members of the same sex contradicts the assertion that it, like heterosexuality, is capable of healthy expression within a loving relationship.
Your last sentence there makes me wonder–do you define all sexuality as a species of concupiscence? That is, there is concupiscence and there are right and wrong expressions and/or understandings of it–heterosexuality happens to be right and homosexuality happens to be wrong? But unless you’re saying that concupiscence naturally tends to be heterosexual, one still cannot fail to treat homosexuality and heterosexuality on their own terms and evaluate whether homosexual or heterosexual relationships are conducive to producing the fruits of the spirit if you are serious about determining their moral value. Otherwise, right concupiscence and wrong concupiscence come off as arbitrary judgments which bear no resemblance to reality, which does morality generally no great service.
I could not agree that something becomes good because of its effect. Weeds flourish, though undesireable, and experience teaches that evil does not necessarily fail nor does good necessarily succeed.
I’m not arguing that something becomes good based on its effect, only that: by their fruits you shall know them. I’m not arguing that an evil means is productive of a good end. Certainly not! I don’t believe it at all! Nor am I arguing that it is permissible to indulge in an evil means if there is the possibility of a good end being produced. No! The good is only degraded thereby.
I’m arguing that the fruits of the spirit do not grow on intrinsically disordered trees. And yet those fruits are visible in homosexual relationships.
We had a disconnect in a prior post over this, with my assertion that something can be a good even if all visible evidence is to the contrary. It would follow also that something can be an evil, even if all visible evidence is to the contrary. Humility and self sacrifice may lead to a base life of poverty. Selfishness and pride may lead to success and wealth.
Goodness does not follow from effect.
Goodness does not follow from effect–but I think you do yourself a disservice by comparing material goods (which are not good in themselves) with spiritual goods (which are good in themselves) in order to make your point. Riches are not necessarily particularly good, nor is poverty a moral evil. I do not believe that love is the fruit of selfishness or pride, but humility and self-sacrifice are certainly part of love–as any loving relationship, homosexual or heterosexual, will demonstrate.
Under the Mercy,
Mark
Deo Gratias!