It is a relevant distinction. The automobile is a false analogy for the reason I cite. That you don't specify anything about the campaigners is immaterial. If we assumed that the campaigners had the ability to make prohibition of driving and seat belt use a sin punishable by eternal damnation to those who bought the codswolop we would significantly change the dynamics.
- We know that people break rules in an inconsistent manner.
- We know that people who plan to follow the church's prohibition of fidelity or chastity DON'T take precautions and keep a condom in their wallet in the event they succumb to temptation.
The term is meaningless in that it assumes that other methods are not comprehensive or that they don't take the whole into account. To use the word is at best to say nothing and at worst to mislead.
There in lies the problem. It can't compare. It is a false analogy. It is the moral authority of the Catholic Church that causes the dillemas. At the moment that a person is tempted to violate a sacred rule does that person then violate all rules? That simply does not follow given the dynamics of the relationship of adherent to church authority.If one of the specified parameters of the hypothetical scenario were inconsistent with your point about Catholicism, I might agree that it falsified the analogy. But there is no inconsistency on that point, because the hypothetical is silent on that point.
You make my argument for me. Thank you. It is precisely because of this thought process that sincere individuals aren't prepared in the event of weakness. They are not prepared because the church sets them up not to be prepared.This may be so, but how does it necessarily shift responsibility for a person's subsequent choices onto a third party who might have a problem with that person keeping a condom in his wallet? "Honey, I know we don't use condoms; I'm only keeping this condom in my wallet in case I succumb to temptation and cheat on you. Don't pressure me to throw it away; if I contract HIV from somebody else, I'd hate for it to be on your conscience."
The word does not convey any information. It does not advance the discussion. It presumes that which it cannot. It presumes that there is a view that is not taken in other circumstances. Otherwise, why use the word at all?If I use any adjective ("Xish") to describe something, does it assume that other things aren't X-ish or that they don't take X into account? Perhaps it weakly presupposes that there are at least some things that aren't and don't. But why is that a problem?
It was your "stoneage" thinking that brought it to my mind.I had forgotten about that video. Very appropriate to the topic!![]()
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You don't understand my question, but you know it's weasly. Amazing.This is such a weasly question. By high risk if you mean
You're still beaten a dead horse? What a blatant irrelevance compared to the recent statements the South African health minister made, advocating a diet of garlic, beetroot and lemon to cure AIDS.But Trujillo made scientifically innaccuate statements.
Even if you use condoms correctly, the risk of HIV transmission is still approximately 15% relative to risk when unprotected. Whether that's caused by holes or not is irrelevant. Comment on the 15%, not on the holes!he was saying that even if you use condoms correctly, the HIV virus could pass through the latex holes. This is simply wrong.
Your accusation went "it's a vatican misinformation campaign", you have not corrected yourself. Oh, Trujillo isn't even in charge of health issues. That's his mate Cardinal Javier Lozano Barragán, President of the Pontifical Council for Health Pastoral Care. He put together the HIV survey for Benny recently. You won't even now correct yourself, I know. I'm also a mind reader.ok, it was titled "reflection" - it is still a published document by the president of the Pontifical Council for the Family.
Sure. Especially the ignorant Africans. In particular the blacks.*sigh* If one speaks as a moral religious authority then unfortunately people do take you seriously. That is the problem.
Andy, the wish master again!I really don't see the point of continuing to this "debate" - you wish to ..
Hahaha! I told you, wish, don't try to read minds. You fail horribly...dismiss every single scientific study or NGO report on the matter, you pretend that Trujillo was misrepresented in his views, you cling to a perfect use strawman even though no one is arguing for it, and you fail to offer anything to support your position despite overwhelming evidence that integrated approaches are the best method for tackling HIV/AIDS.
There in lies the problem. It can't compare. It is a false analogy. It is the moral authority of the Catholic Church that causes the dillemas.
Very good. I like it.How about this one:
A company owns a ship that they know is not seaworth. They decide to use it to pick up refugees and transport them to a country that is willing to accept them. However, in order to save money, the company doesn't supply enough lifejackets for the refugees after all, the refugees didn't have them on their own boats.
Once the refugees are aboard the captain (spokesperson for the company) announces that a mistake has been made and instead of lifejackets the ship only has weightbelts which will cause the refugees to drown should the ship sink. Better to just try and swim. Some refugees do ask for lifejackets and are issued the few available but most take the word of the captain.
Sure enough, the ship sinks and all the refugees drown except the ones with lifejackets.
Who is morally responsible? Is it the refugees who drowned because they didn't wear a lifejacket even though some were in fact available? The company for not supplying the lifejackets? The company for knowingly allowing the ship to sail in poor repair? The captain for lying to the refugees?
Does the fact that the company was doing some charity work allow them to totally disregard the safety and well being of their charges as some seem to think the RCC is allowed?
There in lies the problem. It can't compare. It is a false analogy. It is the moral authority of the Catholic Church that causes the dillemas. At the moment that a person is tempted to violate a sacred rule does that person then violate all rules? That simply does not follow given the dynamics of the relationship of adherent to church authority.
You make my argument for me. Thank you. It is precisely because of this thought process that sincere individuals aren't prepared in the event of weakness. They are not prepared because the church sets them up not to be prepared.ceo_esq said:"Honey, I know we don't use condoms; I'm only keeping this condom in my wallet in case I succumb to temptation and cheat on you. Don't pressure me to throw it away; if I contract HIV from somebody else, I'd hate for it to be on your conscience."
Again I reference Kant. That humans will fail is a given. It is our nature. Church prohibitions simply set up dillemas that in the event of weakness the adherent is left without a course of action for safety. A lesser evil of sorts.
ceo_esq said:The word does not convey any information. It does not advance the discussion. It presumes that which it cannot. It presumes that there is a view that is not taken in other circumstances. Otherwise, why use the word at all?
ETA: First line edited to more closely reflect the situation under discussion.
ETA 2: Editings in bolding.
How about this one:
A company owns a ship and they decide to use it to pick up refugees and transport them to a country that is willing to accept them. However, in order to save money, the company doesn't supply enough lifejackets for the refugees after all, the refugees didn't have them on their own boats.
Once the refugees are aboard the captain (spokesperson for the company) announces that a mistake has been made and instead of lifejackets the ship only has weightbelts which will cause the refugees to drown should the ship sink. Better to just try and swim. Some refugees do ask for lifejackets and are issued the few available but most take the word of the captain.
Sure enough, the ship sinks and all the refugees drown except some of the ones with lifejackets.
Who is morally responsible? Is it the refugees who drowned because they didn't wear a lifejacket even though some were in fact available? The company for not supplying the lifejackets? The captain for lying to the refugees?
Does the fact that the company was doing some charity work allow them to totally disregard the safety and well being of their charges as some seem to think the RCC is allowed?
You don't understand my question, but you know it's weasly. Amazing.
Oh:
high-risk sex = sex with prostitutes, drug consumers, homosexuals; promiscuous behaviour in general.
You're still beaten a dead horse? What a blatant irrelevance compared to the recent statements the South African health minister made, advocating a diet of garlic, beetroot and lemon to cure AIDS.
Even if you use condoms correctly, the risk of HIV transmission is still approximately 15% relative to risk when unprotected. Whether that's caused by holes or not is irrelevant. Comment on the 15%, not on the holes!
Your accusation went "it's a vatican misinformation campaign", you have not corrected yourself.
Oh, Trujillo isn't even in charge of health issues. That's his mate Cardinal Javier Lozano Barragán, President of the Pontifical Council for Health Pastoral Care. He put together the HIV survey for Benny recently. You won't even now correct yourself, I know. I'm also a mind reader.![]()
I gather that you mean to analogize condoms to lifejackets and the Catholic Church to the ship operator. What is the ship itself supposed to represent?
How do you know what others know? Your crystal sphere, probably.And yet it is well known among whoremongers that condoms will indeed reduce your risk to nominal.
Says who?Failure rates include lack of use.
Prove that catholic countries are impacted by HIV/AIDS to a higher degree than non-catholic countries. #yaaaaaaaaaawn#How does this bear? The vatican is still not lifting it's ban on condoms. This cannot help but murder believers, who find the church's edicts more compelling than science.
How do you know what others know? Your crystal sphere, probably.
According to a 2000 report by the National Institutes of Health, correct and consistent use of latex condoms reduces the risk of HIV/AIDS transmission by approximately 85% relative to risk when unprotected
Your ignorance is paramount. You should better care about what you know, instead of using your clearvoyant capabilities to speculate about other people's knowledge.
You're boring.
I gather that you mean to analogize condoms to lifejackets and the Catholic Church to the ship operator. What is the ship itself supposed to represent?
Then make up some more lies.
The ocean would represent the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the ship the "A, B" part of the prevention program. The "C" (condom) part is indeed the lifejacket.
But it is an analogy, so it is only to illustrate a point.
Go here, psychic:I know what they know.
This is obivously wrong, visible for every unblinded, literate person:Those are typical use numbers which include people who don't use them every time.
You fail to understand this data, psychic. No specification is given neither about the number of couples, nor about the size of the two cohorts. What you cite is at best meaningless and looks deliberately distorted for the sake of agitation.These are real data:
Better go for the mio, psychic, instead of spreading dangerous nonsense.Hobbyists do know ... Many do however think ...
I've already stated that it wouldn't then change anything.If you think that's crucial to the comparison (which, incidentally, allows for it), then please answer my earlier question: if we further hypothesize that the anti-auto campaigners are a religious institution similar in all material respects to the Catholic Church, how and why does it change our conclusion about the anti-auto campaigners' ultimate (non-)culpability for additional highway deaths?
Stating that it is absurd does not make it absurd. When an institution has such moral authority and can direct human behavior they must take responsibility for their actions.But the point of the example is the absurdity of shifting responsibility for the person's choices onto a third party in this context. In the quoted text, the man is being completely unreasonable; obviously if he contracts AIDS through infidelity, that's on his conscience, not his wife's, notwithstanding that she may have given him a piece of her mind for putting a condom in his wallet for business trips, or what have you.
To the extent that the Church's rules and ability to alter behavior due to moral authority then it absolutely renders them some degree of culpability. Simply asserting that there is no responsibility is not argument.Even if, in a given case, the Church's opposition to condom use is a cause sine qua non of someone's being caught without a condom handy when the decision to be unfaithful is made, it's unreasonable to suggest that it is for that reason a culpable cause of that person's contracting HIV.
It seems to me that you are engaging in the fallacy of limited alternatives. Human fallibility notwithstanding, it is not a given that a person must fail in any particular way or in any particular situation. People do manage, for example, to go through life without engaging in extramarital sex. We know it is extremely unrealistic to expect that everyone will, but it's not clear to me why that removes the fallacy, so long as it remains a bona fide alternative in any given individual instance to act in accordance with the Church's teaching. The "lesser evil" principle is generally invoked in a situation in which there is no course of action available to the individual that does not involve opting for some or other evil. That's not often going to be the case with condom use (though of course you and I don't regard that as even a lesser evil), unless one artificially restricts the alternatives.
Assuming 1 & 2 are different or the same won't resolve the issue as it concerns the term "holistic". You might as well call #1 "XYZ" and #2 "STP". It is arbitrary and conveys no useful information. Declaring that 1 is holistic and 2 isn't, is just silly and does not advance any argument. Using the word "holistic" tells us nothing. Given the baggage that is associated with the word it is at worst misleading. I'm sorry but that isn't going to change.I used the word to distinguish between (1) evaluating the impact of the Church's promotion of marital-monogamous-no-contraception sex as a whole on the AIDS problem and (2) solely evaluating the impact of the "no-contraception" element on the AIDS problem. I hope you will agree that #1 and #2 are not the same thing, and that they will potentially yield very different discussions and conclusions. The word presumes nothing at all. If you think that in using it to distinguish between #1 and #2, I presumed something I ought not have presumed, please let me know. I don't see how pointing out that #1 and #2 are not identical, or suggesting that we devote more discussion to #2, "presumes that there is a view that is not taken in other circumstances." In fact, I'm not even fully sure what you mean by that.
OK, it's a start. It do think that the analogy could be tweaked to work a little better. For example, taking a boat of questionable seaworthiness seems to work well as a parallel to engaging in "un-Catholic" sex.
It presents intrinsically greater risks of drowning than staying ashore does, but most of the time wearing a lifejacket could still save you if the ship capsizes, unless you haven't put yours on properly, or it fails, or it's just your unlucky day. We might analogize the RCC to a group urging everyone, for whatever reasons, to just stay ashore.
Just about everyone can follow that advice, and if followed it will, incidentally, greatly reduce one's chance of drowning. However, we can predict that many people will, in practice, take at least one trip on the boat, because sometimes a boat trip can seem very appealing.