And you failed. I see nothing “harmful”.
I gave you two options in my last post that you would have to take a side on. Each had their consequences…you didn’t give an answer but I’ll basically reiterate.
It seemed to me that contraception redefined sex. You said no explicitly yet then later seemed to agree. I asked you which it was and you didn’t answer. If your answer is yes it does redefine sex (which seems quite obvious based on the posts of many who disagree with Catholic sexual morality/lives of those who disagree/secular worldview on sex) then we have to look at the implications of that redefinition as I have said. If you look through my posts, I have made the point more than once that this redefinition involves a trivialization. The reason being simply that contraception turns sex from an act of giving fertility (which includes emotional/physical bonding) to an act that is just emotional and physical bonding. It does not involve intent necessarily. I am saying that the
act of contraception (deliberately rendering the marital act
ie sex sterile) changes sex. It obviously gets rid of the procreative potential in the act. If you need clarification on this point I will give it but the most important thing I am trying to say is that the morality in question is act based not necessarily intent based.
This trivialization I said was wrong because it was offensive to God. This is the Church’s justification for teaching contraception is immoral (at least one of the justifications). I have said though that this stance is not absurd. Regardless of belief in it being offensive to God, I have tried to illustrate that this is harmful.
A world that sees sex as mere pleasure touching misuses sex for the worst. A handful of problems I have given are increased abortion, unwanted children, higher divorce rates, unhappier marriages, rejection of the child, objectifying of women, letting lust rather than reason rule, etc.
You can :
- Deny that contraception redefines sex
- Deny that this redefinition leads to these problems
or
- Deny that these problems are bad.
I think if you single one of these out the discussion is easier. I have attempted to explain 1 and 2 in detail (esp. 1). In short 1 is true because contraception gets rid of an obvious game changer of sex (kids) and 2 because this big change is naturally gonna lead people to take less care and caution and involve less love when having sex and 3 is just those problems are generally considered bad.
Theology. There is no such thing as “intrinsically ordered” in a secular world.
Well maybe not in the sense that something being intrinsically ordered is designed but clearly even in an atheistic world certain elements are ordered in a certain way. I would say that the mouth is intrinsically ordered to eating (and other functions, but yes still eating) even if you would consider that mere evolution and not design at all.
Besides, I am emphasizing why the Church teaches this. It does include the idea of a designing God. Without that idea obviously things would change big time.
Theology. And if people do not want to have children it is their business. Why is it “dogmatic”? Not all people want to procreate, and even they want to, they do not want to do it each and every time they have sex. Your only answer to that is that they should abstain. The question is “why”? And there is no rational answer.
I have given rational answers about why contraception is immoral.
You should explain why that fails.
I clearly stated there are reasons contraception can be harmful and thus bad but the leap to immoral can be tough without some immaterial objective standard.
I think your approach has a big flaw in excluding God completely. From a Catholic standpoint, the sin of contraception is
primarily a sin against God. It is part of natural law, (unlike other common sins against God like skipping Mass on Sunday). So when looking at why the Church teaches something is a sin against God, we cannot assume the non-existence of God.
Now, I have tried to keep God in the background by explaining why contraception is 1) unnatural, and 2) harmful/dangerous. I think I have made some valid points that you have failed to respond to. Just because I mention the word God doesn’t mean the argument falls apart. When I said for example children should be treated as gifts from God—the point still stands without God. The point that children should be warmly embraced with love rather than seen as a burden is my point. You can argue that point if you want but it isn’t theology just because I said “God”
Further, God is part of philosophy…not just theology. I have not argued with theology. But, if you want to have a completely
atheistic conversation on contraception then you are asking for something different, something that you have not yet admitted you are asking. I believe this can be difficult because I think it is difficult to come to a common foundation for morality with atheiests. If there is an objective foundation for morality without God (which I highly doubt, topic of another thread though) I still think it is very difficult to come to a
common objective foundation for morality with Christians. Therefore, your requirements for this discussion make it unfair. Its asking why the Church teaches something from an atheist point of view…
Yet still there are reasons contraception is immoral without God as I have tried to explain.