Marriage and Atheism

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charlou
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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by charlou » Sat Jan 23, 2010 1:20 am

no fences

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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by JimC » Sat Jan 23, 2010 8:32 am

Well, it's worked for me for over 26 years, but, as many in this thread have said, it is only one out of many arrangements that people end up in, and has no special status for me other than the societal one.

Hominid mating arrangements are potentially tricky, so attempts by society to exert some form of control are not unexpected. That does not mean such controls are sensible or desirable for every circumstance...
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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by MrFungus420 » Sat Jan 23, 2010 8:40 am

It's a great institution. Not everyone needs to be institutionalized, though...
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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by JimC » Sat Jan 23, 2010 8:44 am

MrFungus420 wrote:It's a great institution. Not everyone needs to be institutionalized, though...
Boom boom... :lol:

Was that a Groucho line?
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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by Trolldor » Sun Jan 24, 2010 11:48 am

floppit wrote:
It is precisely that, as it currently is (at least in Australian society) it's pretending that you are in a state seperate to, usually superior to, unmarried couples. In that way, it's nothing but a performance.
TWADDLE! My best friend had been with her partner 5 years when I got married, superior my tush, she was one of the more important role models to me in terms of her relationship - infinitely more so than my married parents! I've seen some god awful marriages and was in no hurry to even be in a relationship for social approval - I spent 10 years alone, but then I had something that is a once in a lifetime thing, a second chance with the one person in all my life who I loved as much as a friend as I did as a lover.

I have another good friend who says strong words are when the heart and the mouth speak one language not two like a politician. marriage is only, and no more than, the extent the heart and mouth are speaking one language from BOTH people. I don't care if 6 billion people marry to impress the Jones', I don't care if 6 billion people marry at all - I care that they can, (only a recent occurrence for my best mate) and I care that whether or not two people are married, if they have given that life long commitment to each other then it should be respected.
The simple fact is marriage is an unnecessary and absurd ritual.
Are two people committed because they are married? Or married because they are committed?
The answer should be neither. Marriage is 'divorced' from committment in a relationship which one would classify themselves as 'in love'. It adds nothing and produces nothing tangible to the relationship bar financial benefits in some places. A marriage should not take place as a 'final show' of commitment, because then it really is a performance. It should not be the deciding factor as to whether the relationship continues. There should be no pressure for two people in a long-term relationship to get married. It should not signal the union of families or the blessing of a relationship. A marriage should mean nothing because that is precisely what it is. If a relationship can not survive in the absence of a metal circle and a state-certified contract, then it is not a relationship but a temporary partnership of convenience.
But on the matter of choice, every (legal age) couple should have the freedom to be wed, even if they have no intention of marrying. The freedom to make a choice is a far more precious commoditity than making the choice itself.
"The fact is that far more crime and child abuse has been committed by zealots in the name of God, Jesus and Mohammed than has ever been committed in the name of Satan. Many people don't like that statement but few can argue with it."

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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by MrFungus420 » Sun Jan 24, 2010 5:03 pm

JimC wrote:
MrFungus420 wrote:It's a great institution. Not everyone needs to be institutionalized, though...
Boom boom... :lol:

Was that a Groucho line?
I thought it was WC Fields, but on checking, it has been attributed to Fields, Groucho and Mae West...
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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Sun Jan 24, 2010 5:06 pm

born-again-atheist wrote:
floppit wrote:
It is precisely that, as it currently is (at least in Australian society) it's pretending that you are in a state seperate to, usually superior to, unmarried couples. In that way, it's nothing but a performance.
TWADDLE! My best friend had been with her partner 5 years when I got married, superior my tush, she was one of the more important role models to me in terms of her relationship - infinitely more so than my married parents! I've seen some god awful marriages and was in no hurry to even be in a relationship for social approval - I spent 10 years alone, but then I had something that is a once in a lifetime thing, a second chance with the one person in all my life who I loved as much as a friend as I did as a lover.

I have another good friend who says strong words are when the heart and the mouth speak one language not two like a politician. marriage is only, and no more than, the extent the heart and mouth are speaking one language from BOTH people. I don't care if 6 billion people marry to impress the Jones', I don't care if 6 billion people marry at all - I care that they can, (only a recent occurrence for my best mate) and I care that whether or not two people are married, if they have given that life long commitment to each other then it should be respected.
The simple fact is marriage is an unnecessary and absurd ritual.
Are two people committed because they are married? Or married because they are committed?
The answer should be neither. Marriage is 'divorced' from committment in a relationship which one would classify themselves as 'in love'. It adds nothing and produces nothing tangible to the relationship bar financial benefits in some places. A marriage should not take place as a 'final show' of commitment, because then it really is a performance. It should not be the deciding factor as to whether the relationship continues. There should be no pressure for two people in a long-term relationship to get married. It should not signal the union of families or the blessing of a relationship. A marriage should mean nothing because that is precisely what it is. If a relationship can not survive in the absence of a metal circle and a state-certified contract, then it is not a relationship but a temporary partnership of convenience.
But on the matter of choice, every (legal age) couple should have the freedom to be wed, even if they have no intention of marrying. The freedom to make a choice is a far more precious commoditity than making the choice itself.
If you look at marriage from a strictly pragmatic level then why not just an inflate-a-mate and cut the complications?
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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by AshtonBlack » Sun Jan 24, 2010 6:15 pm

I really don't care for marriage. But, looked at in another way, I suppose, a civil type registration could protect those entering into co-habitation. I definitely agree that it shouldn't be seen as any more "superior", financially, to any other living arrangement.

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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by floppit » Sun Jan 24, 2010 9:02 pm

I think I'll just agree to differ BAA. It was the motive suggested by calling it acting I was disputing but ultimately that's the thing about judging motives, it can neither be proven nor refuted.
"Whatever it is, it spits and it goes 'WAAARGHHHHHHHH' - that's probably enough to suggest you shouldn't argue with it." Mousy.

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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Sun Jan 24, 2010 10:30 pm

floppit wrote:I think I'll just agree to differ BAA. It was the motive suggested by calling it acting I was disputing but ultimately that's the thing about judging motives, it can neither be proven nor refuted.
BAA employs the Argument from OGB.
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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by Trolldor » Mon Jan 25, 2010 3:14 am

Gawdzilla wrote:
born-again-atheist wrote:
floppit wrote:
It is precisely that, as it currently is (at least in Australian society) it's pretending that you are in a state seperate to, usually superior to, unmarried couples. In that way, it's nothing but a performance.
TWADDLE! My best friend had been with her partner 5 years when I got married, superior my tush, she was one of the more important role models to me in terms of her relationship - infinitely more so than my married parents! I've seen some god awful marriages and was in no hurry to even be in a relationship for social approval - I spent 10 years alone, but then I had something that is a once in a lifetime thing, a second chance with the one person in all my life who I loved as much as a friend as I did as a lover.

I have another good friend who says strong words are when the heart and the mouth speak one language not two like a politician. marriage is only, and no more than, the extent the heart and mouth are speaking one language from BOTH people. I don't care if 6 billion people marry to impress the Jones', I don't care if 6 billion people marry at all - I care that they can, (only a recent occurrence for my best mate) and I care that whether or not two people are married, if they have given that life long commitment to each other then it should be respected.
The simple fact is marriage is an unnecessary and absurd ritual.
Are two people committed because they are married? Or married because they are committed?
The answer should be neither. Marriage is 'divorced' from committment in a relationship which one would classify themselves as 'in love'. It adds nothing and produces nothing tangible to the relationship bar financial benefits in some places. A marriage should not take place as a 'final show' of commitment, because then it really is a performance. It should not be the deciding factor as to whether the relationship continues. There should be no pressure for two people in a long-term relationship to get married. It should not signal the union of families or the blessing of a relationship. A marriage should mean nothing because that is precisely what it is. If a relationship can not survive in the absence of a metal circle and a state-certified contract, then it is not a relationship but a temporary partnership of convenience.
But on the matter of choice, every (legal age) couple should have the freedom to be wed, even if they have no intention of marrying. The freedom to make a choice is a far more precious commoditity than making the choice itself.
If you look at marriage from a strictly pragmatic level then why not just an inflate-a-mate and cut the complications?
Blow-up dolls can't cook or clean.
"The fact is that far more crime and child abuse has been committed by zealots in the name of God, Jesus and Mohammed than has ever been committed in the name of Satan. Many people don't like that statement but few can argue with it."

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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by JimC » Mon Jan 25, 2010 5:53 am

born-again-atheist wrote:
Gawdzilla wrote:
born-again-atheist wrote:
floppit wrote:
It is precisely that, as it currently is (at least in Australian society) it's pretending that you are in a state seperate to, usually superior to, unmarried couples. In that way, it's nothing but a performance.
TWADDLE! My best friend had been with her partner 5 years when I got married, superior my tush, she was one of the more important role models to me in terms of her relationship - infinitely more so than my married parents! I've seen some god awful marriages and was in no hurry to even be in a relationship for social approval - I spent 10 years alone, but then I had something that is a once in a lifetime thing, a second chance with the one person in all my life who I loved as much as a friend as I did as a lover.

I have another good friend who says strong words are when the heart and the mouth speak one language not two like a politician. marriage is only, and no more than, the extent the heart and mouth are speaking one language from BOTH people. I don't care if 6 billion people marry to impress the Jones', I don't care if 6 billion people marry at all - I care that they can, (only a recent occurrence for my best mate) and I care that whether or not two people are married, if they have given that life long commitment to each other then it should be respected.
The simple fact is marriage is an unnecessary and absurd ritual.
Are two people committed because they are married? Or married because they are committed?
The answer should be neither. Marriage is 'divorced' from committment in a relationship which one would classify themselves as 'in love'. It adds nothing and produces nothing tangible to the relationship bar financial benefits in some places. A marriage should not take place as a 'final show' of commitment, because then it really is a performance. It should not be the deciding factor as to whether the relationship continues. There should be no pressure for two people in a long-term relationship to get married. It should not signal the union of families or the blessing of a relationship. A marriage should mean nothing because that is precisely what it is. If a relationship can not survive in the absence of a metal circle and a state-certified contract, then it is not a relationship but a temporary partnership of convenience.
But on the matter of choice, every (legal age) couple should have the freedom to be wed, even if they have no intention of marrying. The freedom to make a choice is a far more precious commoditity than making the choice itself.
If you look at marriage from a strictly pragmatic level then why not just an inflate-a-mate and cut the complications?
Blow-up dolls can't cook or clean.
Yet...

Wait till realistic androids of either sex, with decent AI capabilities and capable of both sex and household tasks, enter the marketplace. Probably not in my lifetime, but quite possibly in yours, BAA...
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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by floppit » Mon Jan 25, 2010 8:51 am

What's OGB?
"Whatever it is, it spits and it goes 'WAAARGHHHHHHHH' - that's probably enough to suggest you shouldn't argue with it." Mousy.

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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by floppit » Mon Jan 25, 2010 8:52 am

Ok - found it. Busy reading.....
"Whatever it is, it spits and it goes 'WAAARGHHHHHHHH' - that's probably enough to suggest you shouldn't argue with it." Mousy.

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Re: What do you think about marriage?

Post by The Dawktor » Tue Jan 26, 2010 2:01 pm

I am a hypocrite- I married in a Cathedral- what a show-off!
I have no objections to it as a legal institution. My evil ex-wife could have caused me somewhat less aggravation if we hadn't been married. But, with the right woman I wouldn't say no. But she'd have to ask very nicely! ;) :eddy:
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