As an aside, I've often used this example when I insist that marriage is, indeed, very much about reproduction and, amazingly, people dispute that contention.
Meadmaker, hi. Sorry I'd missed this the first time through, but it brought something to mind that I'd like to run by you. Just thinking in text here...so here goes: *note that I'm only discussing American (USian, whatever) society* I think, personally, it's about more than just reproduction. Now, I know this won't be a popular thought (and I don't expect it to be, really--my views are sometimes so antiquated even I'm ashamed of myself), but...I think marriage is also about order. Not "natural" order, but civilized order. For instance, in the framework of traditional marriage, historically (and even in modern times though we'd probably not admit it), marriage, as ponderingturtle keeps pointing out, put multiple people under the direct authority of one person. Generally, yes, the husband/father...although having a matriarch isn't really all that uncommon. But legally, marriage placed a lot of responsibility, and control, on the head of the family, usually the husband/father. It is, in our society, relatively recent that the same burdens (financial support of children, for example) legally fell to both spouses...just as it is relatively recent that women were as entitled to equity in marital property.
It is my position that marriage, while it may SEEM to be mostly about reproduction, was, in fact, constructed legally in a way that worked out to be a kind of authoritarian entity that reduced dependence on government and placed an unreasonable amount of power in the hands of husbands. This is why I say marriage has evolved. Because society has evolved, as I'm sure we'll agree. (We might disagree about that being good or bad, but that's another argument for another time).
Just as, in any society, there has to be order, the same holds true for any household. A group of people cannot function together without some kind of order, after all...and that's really not so far fetched. Even animals in the wild have orders within their individual "societies". Marriage, I think, is one of the primary building blocks of societal order--and it makes sense, historically. But it also produced some major problems, historically, since those who built the framework did so in the interest of their own authority.
I *do* think that our society is still struggling against "traditional" ideas...because those old ideas and moralities, if you will, are SO entrenched in our legal system and our upbringings, it is hard to fathom too many changes at once. While many folks make fun of the "religious right" regarding their seemingly irrational fears, it kind of makes sense, in an odd way, to me (not that I agree, but I can sort of see where the fears come from). Because our society was built on a pretty solid (and pretty oppressive, to most everyone but white men) foundation. Unfortunately, the bad parts of society, because there have been so many changes to the old ways of thinking over the past three or four decades, are all too easily related TO those changes, in the minds of people who fail to think very critically.
And can we really *blame* people, for not thinking all too critically, when, for the majority of the population, the historical ideas of what society was supposed to be didn't *expect* critical thought from anyone but the head of the household or family? In the overall scheme of things, we're only a generation and a half or so beyond the time when women were expected to be at home in the kitchen in a starched skirt with dinner in the oven. And that was, pretty much, the norm regardless of children being in the house or not! So, in my mind, it's more about structure, less about procreation. Procreation just falls naturally into that structure. Does any of that make sense?