RandFan
Mormon Atheist
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2001
- Messages
- 60,135
Why do you think that the question is weird?They must stop. Why are you asking such weird questions?
Herzblut
Why do you think that the question is weird?They must stop. Why are you asking such weird questions?
Herzblut
Because the answer is self-evident. If the impact of the RCC on people within a society turns out to increase overall HIV infections, the church needs to change its attitude.Why do you think that the question is weird?
I'm likely confusing you with CEO, sorry.Because the answer is self-evident. If the impact of the RCC on people within a society turns out to increase overall HIV infections, the church needs to change its attitude.
Herzblut
Well, do you have any evidence for the damaging impact of the RCC? I don't.I'm likely confusing you with CEO, sorry.
I think you are employing cognitive dissonance here.Well, do you have any evidence for the damaging impact of the RCC? I don't.
Herzblut
?
No, they WOULD be responsible. Of course.
She may very well bear some responsibility. If she knows that her husband is likely to cheat on her with someone of a high risk group then she should leave or tolerate the condom. Absolutely. I see that as a no brainier. I'm not sure why you chose that analogy.
If the church is entirely incapable of controlling behavior then why doesn't the church simply pack it in.
I never said the church was incapable of controlling conduct and I have no idea where you pulled that idea from.
(I'm amazed you don't call me on my claims. I assume you know I'm right and don't want to call me on it, right).
You are conflating two different responsibilities. That individuals bear responsibility for their choices does not release a civic organization from separate ethical and moral responsibility. I'm surprised you would try and make that argument.
We know that abstinance only programs result in increased pregnancy and sexually transmitted disease. Regardless of the Church's intent we know that they are making the problem worse.
When you use terms like holistic it makes it sound like a program that is NOT comprehensive is comprehensive.
...
I understand. The "approach" is not comprehensive. The "approach" does not include teaching safe sex which is shown to be an effective method to reduce pregnancy and sexually transmitted disease.
I just thought this would be a good place for my 666th post.

For the life of me I'm not sure why you think this. We will have to disagree. If I give bad directives to someone who sees me as an authority then I should be held, to a degree, culpable.I thought it was relatively apparent from that hypothetical that the anti-car campaigners could not reasonably be held responsible for increased highway deaths. If I guess we just disagree there.
Again, not a clue why it is obvious to you. A woman has a responsility to protect herself. If she knows that there is danger then she should mitigate that danger. Why is that a difficult proposition?I chose it because it was prompted by your mention that the Church could be responsible for a man not having a condom in his wallet at the moment he decides to do something the Church strongly urges him not to do. I thought that the analogy would help you realize the absence of a valid basis for responsibility. Again, it is apparent to me that the consequences of the husband's act in no way should rest on the wife's conscience. I suppose this comes down to our fundamental disagreement once more.
What makes you think the Church sees controlling people's behavior as its mission?
I can't for the life of me see why the church wouldn't be responsible. Not "solely" responsible. Ultimatly, moral free agents (humans) are responsible for making decisions. However responsibility can be shared and an individual in a position of authority that has the ability to direct behavior is respsonsible, to a point, for that behavior. That's a no brainer. Perhaps the responsibility is simply moral. Do you believe that the Church believes that they (the Church) has moral responsibility for the health and well being of its memebers?I don't know that you're right, but so far I don't think we need reach that determination yet, because I think that even if your characterization of statistics is basically correct it does not result in a valid argument that the Church may reasonably be held culpable for the consequences of free individual actions that it in fact advises against.
Did I say more than a 100%? No, the share some portion of the liability. Of course. I think the church could be legaly and civily responsible under some circumstances but I concede that I'm not a lawyer and will not assert such responsibility. Moral responsibility on the other hand, no question about it. I don't know how much but absolutely.I'm not sure how we can apportion more than 100% of the liability. I have assumed you mean to shift some portion of the liability onto the Church.
Could be worse that if the Church did not exist. I think that is a real possibility. I honestly don't know. There are simply far too many variables. Worse than if the Church stessed abstinence, monogomy and provided the truth about condoms and did not make using them a sin. No question.Worse than what? Worse than if the Church did not exist? Worse than if the Church had no position on sexuality at all?
In the end it is the bottom line that counts. If you don't want to call it a "program" then I don't care. That's a semantical argument. I only care that the actions of the Church have consequences.Also, I query whether we ought to consider the Church's universal moral teachings on sexuality assimilable to a "program" of the sort that has been previously studied. That seems reductive to me. Before looking further into that, however, I will endeavor to review some of the previously linked sources.
I'm sorry but I'm so tired of this argument.By "approach" I did not mean the Church's program, or anyone's program, for reducing STDs. I meant our approach - yours and mine, among others - to this discussion right here in this thread - our way of critiquing the Church's teaching. Nothing to do with whether the Church's program itself is comprehensive, or what have you.
Here's why I think you haven't understood yet. You keep saying things like "holistic it makes it sound like a program that is NOT comprehensive is comprehensive" ... well, I wasn't applying that adjective to any program, so why does it make any program sound comprehensive? Or you'll say "The 'approach' does not include teaching safe sex ..." - well, why would our approach to analyzing a contrary position (independent of subject-matter, really) include us teaching safe sex in this thread? Do you see why I would infer from these comments that you still think, mistakenly, that I meant to suggest that the Church's anti-STD program was holistic (which would have meant something much different)?
I've got a better idea. How about we discuss and debate the issues in a market place of ideas using logic and reason and avoiding fallacy and rhetoric?Let's just blame religion for everything wrong with the world and close the thread.
Just remember that Religion is the political expression of Faith. If Religion were banned, then we'd have to blame politicians, and we all know that every one of them is working diligently in our best interests.
(... yeah ... me neither ... )
....and avoiding fallacy and rhetoric?
I can't for the life of me see why the church wouldn't be responsible. Not "solely" responsible. Ultimatly, moral free agents (humans) are responsible for making decisions. However responsibility can be shared and an individual in a position of authority that has the ability to direct behavior is respsonsible, to a point, for that behavior. That's a no brainer. Perhaps the responsibility is simply moral.
Do you believe that the Church believes that they (the Church) has moral responsibility for the health and well being of its memebers?
Did I say more than a 100%?
Could be worse that if the Church did not exist. I think that is a real possibility. I honestly don't know. There are simply far too many variables.
Worse than if the Church stessed abstinence, monogomy and provided the truth about condoms and did not make using them a sin. No question.
In the end it is the bottom line that counts. If you don't want to call it a "program" then I don't care.
So, if I understand you, so long as person A makes a decision of his own free will and choice then that individual bears all moral responsibility for their behavior regardless of the actions of anyone else?I'm not a big fan of specific rules about with whom one should or shouldn't have consensual sex. But it seems to me that, in most cases, an intervening deliberate choice to engage in a risky act that ends up damaging one's health or the health of another supersedes what otherwise might (possibly, though not necessarily) be culpable proximate causes. Under what I perceive as the prevailing school of moral thought - at least in the West - relating to novus actus interveniens, the earlier actor doesn't share responsibility under those circumstances.
Yes, save a life or save a soul? Does the use of latex truly doom souls? I know, you don't speak for the Church but I think that the Church is capable of change. They have changed doctrine in the past. If there were enough outcry from people I think they would change. If they can vacillate on limbo and eating meat on Friday they can change their stance on condoms.I think the Church believes that it has responsibility in some general sense for the well-being of human beings, but not in the sense that it believes that it is necessarily a culpable party for everything that adversely effects that well-being. Also, I think that the Church believes that its primary responsibility in that regard concerns the spiritual well-being and eventual salvation of human souls, and I think the Church sincerely believes that each of its doctrinal teachings is relevant to that goal (whether the Church is right about that is, of course, beyond my ability to say).
Understood but no. If my friend goes to the bar without arranging for a designated driver and gets in an accident on the way home he is responsible. If I could have offered to give him a ride but was lazy then I might feel some moral responsibility. That I do doesn't change my friends responsibility. It might be in societies best interest to convince people that they have some responsibility for their friends and loved ones and to "not let friends drive drunk".Not as such, but your comments seemed to imply it, since I read them in the aggregate as suggesting both (1) that the Church should assume some portion of the responsibility for the consequences, and (2) yet the share of the responsibility allocated to the individual (which would otherwise be 100%, absent exculpatory circumstances) would not be diminished. In other words, that Church should be allocated a portion (say, 10%) of the overall responsibility, but that the individual's share of the overall responsibility (100%) should not thereby be reduced - which prompted my comment.
That's not my position. Clearly the Church does many good things. I can't weigh the net effect of removing the Church entirely from the equation. Something would be worse somethings would be better. The net? I don't know. Let's assume that the net would be worse for humanity. That it would doesn't excuse any problems of the Church's stance on condom use.Well, if we can't be reasonably sure that the Church's actions placed someone in a worse position than if it had taken no actions at all, then it's probably premature to be assigning responsibility.
To a point, this isn't about what the Church believes (I would have to disagree with "objectively"). This is about what I believe and what society believes. If I believe that the Church's actions are causing harm then I have a moral responsibility to speak out against the Church and try to persuade them and others that it is so.All that tells us is that the Church could adopt a more helpful stance with regard to this problem, not that the Church's position is in any way morally culpable or even unhelpful.
Of course, from the Church's perspective, it hasn't made using condoms a sin. It thinks using them happens to be a sin (assuming the general conditions of sinfulness are present, etc.). Whether or not condom use really is sinful, the Church sincerely believes that it objectively is sinful and thus significantly detrimental to a person.
I would say no because your intent was to cause harm.Imagine that I think I have very good cause to believe that the antibiotics you're taking have been contaminated with a toxin that will seriously harm you in some respect. However, I decide to keep that information to myself while I'm watching you take them; I even assure you that the pills will do you nothing but good. Now imagine further that my belief is mistaken - your pills are, unbeknownst to me, entirely uncontaminated. So there's no toxin to adversely effect you, although I believe there is. Are my actions morally justifiable?
I would have to see evidence that Catholics are some how different than other people (in a cultural or social sense).Well, it raises the question of whether we can reliably extrapolate to the Church's doctrine the conclusions about specific "programs" that have been studied.
So, if I understand you, so long as person A makes a decision of his own free will and choice then that individual bears all moral responsibility for their behavior regardless of the actions of anyone else?
Sylvia Browne claims that she can talk to the dead. She prays on people in grief and makes a lot of money pretending to talk to the dead.
Her customers (marks) are free to decide whether to believer her or not.
If they, of their own free will choose to believe her then that fact release Sylvia Browne of all responsibility, right?
Yes, save a life or save a soul? Does the use of latex truly doom souls? I know, you don't speak for the Church but I think that the Church is capable of change. They have changed doctrine in the past. If there were enough outcry from people I think they would change. If they can vacillate on limbo and eating meat on Friday they can change their stance on condoms.
That's not my position. Clearly the Church does many good things. I can't weigh the net effect of removing the Church entirely from the equation. Something would be worse somethings would be better.
To a point, this isn't about what the Church believes (I would have to disagree with "objectively"). This is about what I believe and what society believes. If I believe that the Church's actions are causing harm then I have a moral responsibility to speak out against the Church and try to persuade them and others that it is so.
If they can change rules about eating meat on Friday then they can change this rule.
I agree. Now apply the same kind of reasoning to the Church here. The Church thinks it has good cause to believe that condom use is sinful and, accordingly, will cause you serious harm (in the form of sullying your immortal soul, or whatever the case may be). But let's say the Church decides not to warn you about this; perhaps it even affirmatively encourages you to think that no such harm will come to you by using condoms. Now let's assume (arguendo) that the Church is mistaken; in reality there is no sin associated with condom use that could adversely effect you (maybe there's not even any such thing as "sin"), although the Church believes there is. Is it morally justifiable for the Church to refrain from warning you that condom use is sinful, or to tell you affirmatively that condom use is not sinful? No, according to the reasoning we employed just above.I would say no because your intent was to cause harm.ceo_esq said:Imagine that I think I have very good cause to believe that the antibiotics you're taking have been contaminated with a toxin that will seriously harm you in some respect. However, I decide to keep that information to myself while I'm watching you take them; I even assure you that the pills will do you nothing but good. Now imagine further that my belief is mistaken - your pills are, unbeknownst to me, entirely uncontaminated. So there's no toxin to adversely effect you, although I believe there is. Are my actions morally justifiable?
If someone believed that slavery was moral are they right? Many people sincerly believed that slavery was ok at one time. Many used the bible to justify their beliefs. Others used the Bible to argue against slavery. Who was right?
I would have to see evidence that Catholics are some how different than other people (in a cultural or social sense).
Wow, I can't believe the results of this poll.
I have just joined a forum of sceptics...
... that are suggesting that its worth over-looking all the wars, persecution, sexism and slavery created in the name of religions, for the sake of argument?
Religion did give us sexual repression and an irresponsibility of thinking for ourselves so not all bad, I guess...
I suppose religions aren't bad, the problem is that people do insist on believing in them.
As I keep asking, do we persecute people on their past? Do we judge Germany, Italy and Russia on today's form, or where they were 70 years ago?
The other point is that nobody's asking anyone to overlook anything . . .
Sure, religion has caused plenty of sexual repression, but some parts of some religions have also done tremendous good, but we mustn't discuss that, else my "christian apologist" label might spring back up.
If Germany, Italy and Russia were still armed to the teeth with a psychopath at as their leader, we would still judge them in the same way. but, they have changed so we can look at how they are now when judging.
Perhaps religion could take a lesson from this. Make some changes and clean up its act.
Look back at your last statement that I quoted, you definitely asked him to overlook things.
We've been willing to discuss it all along! Unfortunately you haven't been able to give any examples of this supposed goodness that religion is.