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Biblepoe
Guest
No. I’m saying that you and your religion are free to call “marriage” whatever you like, but there are also a bunch of standardized laws that apply to people who live as a romantic and sexual couple that is called “marriage”. You may say that the latter does not necessarily fit whatever your religion calls marriage, but it’s clear from actually reading rights and responsibilities of marriages in the United States that it’s something personal (not professional) and that there are good pragmatic reasons to limit it to two people.But that’s just it; you are taking marriage and making it merely a business relationship.
You baselessly claimed that. Actually, living together as long-term sexual and romantic partners predates our species. As far as we know, those primitive “marriages” if you want to call them may were probably preceded by a time when promiscuously mating without staying together as a couple was common, and there is no reason to assume that homosexuals were not among those who first started being long-term sexual and romantic couples. Seriously, this doesn’t even matter though because there’s no reason why we must confine ourselves to the original motives of humans (or pre-humans) for doing something. That has been my point by saying that in the Bible marriage consists sometimes of a woman being forced to marry her rapist and a man having many wives!my previous post showed you how the idea of two people being united always goes back to the generation of babies.
As it has become apparent, by “objectively ordered to produce children” you include infertile couples and exclude same-sex couples for absolutely no practical reason. You’re for codifying discrimination into law.I would be in favor of same-sex couples having all those same standardized protections/privileges if their relationship was one that was objectively ordered to produce children.
Same-sex couples have the same reasons for needing that as do infertile heterosexual couples. You have heard of adoption, aren’t you? Really, are there any practical reasons to grant these things to heterosexual couples who are known to be infertile but to deny them to same-sex couples?Tell me what it is about a homosexual couple that inherently requires them to need this?
Like I had guessed before, you’re trying to sneak your religious belief (“design”) in under the guise of what you call “science.”Using the word “ordered” is meant to get through to people such as yourself who don’t believe in “design.”
Saying that something is “meant” or “designed” to or for something doesn’t have any place in science unless there is a known creator of it (such as an engineer). “Function,” , which doesn’t necessarily imply intention (unlike “design,” “order,” “meant,” and “purpose”), probably is the word that would be used instead. By using words like “design,” “order,” “meant,” and “purpose” you are injecting someone’s intention into it. Gee, I wonder whose intention it could be. It couldn’t be your god’s intention, could it?No, it’s science.
. . .] But things can still have purpose, or call it function if you wish, and “ordered” simply points to that purpose, even if the purpose is not fulfilled in every instance.
Body parts have functions, but they don’t have purpose until someone wishes them to do something.We have sex organs, but gosh, nobody has any idea what they’re for!
I have eyes and ears, but they are not intended for any purpose?
That someone, in the case of eyes and ears, is everyone who makes use of them. A person may intend his ear for the purpose of listening to the radio (a function that has emerged due to evolution), but may also use them some something completely unrelated, such as holding up glasses.
That someone for sex organs is everyone who make use of them. If two adults choose to used their genitals for procreation, than that’s a purpose they have given it. If an infertile straight couple or a same-sex couple have sex knowing they aren’t going to make a child, they are doing it for some purpose other than procreation.
Unless you inject a god into it, the people doing the intending for the “intended function” were the particular individuals copulating. Their intentions are irrelevant to this discussion.Your position is one that even Darwin would scoff at. He might not say that an active agent designed a biological feature, but it sure has an intended function or it wouldn’t have survived the evolutionary process.
“Meaning” is necessarily individual. A same-sex couple may derive as much meaning out of their relationship as an infertile heterosexual couple does.Things can have “meaning” even if there were no designer.
I love how some people will jump to silly conclusions about the positions of others when they don’t buy into their beliefs.Ah, here we go. No such thing as natural law? Then you believe that what’s right for you is right for you, and I can decide what is right for me.
You might be able to get away with that for a short time, but eventually that idea leads to chaos, and like other laws it is a dangerous idea for society. This isn’t religion, it’s common sense. (Why is murder wrong? Please give an answer that isn’t based on natural law, since “there’s no such thing.”)
We don’t have to buy into “natural law” in order to set up a society where 99.99999% of us disvalue murder (which is what “murder is wrong” means) and where it is outlawed to further our goals of living peacefully.