bananabrain said:
A marriage is not just an economic transaction though, a business deal. It is first and foremost an emotional commitment. You can't just ignore the emotional aspect to marriage since that is the main component.
All this other stuff about how each partner is treated and terms of divorce etc is all very well but it's not the main point of marriage. The point of marriage, under nearly all religious systems, is that the two people are making a commitment to each other for life. You don't get married to someone in the expectation of getting a divorce further down the line.
I say "nearly all religious systems" because I think there is such a thing within shia islam as a temporary marriage, although I think you can only do this under certain very specific circumstances.
If I marry a woman I am committing myself totally to that woman, emotionally and in every other way. If I, even on the day of my wedding itself, intend to keep looking for other wives after the wedding then I don't see how that can be a total commitment to that woman.
It's only a partial commitment. So it's uneven - the woman is making a total commitment but the man is making a partial commitment. It's not a balanced arrangement.
Also there is a completely separate argument to all this. If I married a woman I wouldn't want to go out hunting for other women afterward. I call into question the morality of muslim men who marry more than one woman. Why do they even want to?
Their commitment to the woman they have married is less than my commitment would be. Therefore their moral values are lower. Likewise with all muslim men who don't actually marry other women but who defend the system.
Just my opinion but I would question their moral values - if they marry a woman with anything less than full emotional commitment
So this backs up my point. That all the religions say different things and aren't progressions from one another ie they can't all be right. This means that EITHER only one of them is right OR they are all wrong.
If one of them is right, why do all the others exist?
Not quite. What I am saying is that religions create their own "problems" and then create the system to solve these "problems". A lot of the problems that religions solve aren't actually problems at all, or rather, they are only problems because the religion has made it into a problem.
islam is the worst offender at this. It cures all kinds of "problems" none of which are problems in the first place. A good example of this kind of thinking is the argument that Mohsin used re polygamy. That there aren't enough men to go round and therefore islam solves this problem by allowing polygamy. He created his own problem - there are enough men to go round. Lack of men is not a problem.
So islam creates a non-existant problem - lack of men - and then provides the solution. This was just one example but it happens all the time in all areas. Consider the hijab argument, this is another example.
Islam says that hijab protects women's modesty. If you ever talk to muslims defending the hijab you would get the impression that the streets are full of male rapists wandering around just waiting for a chance to get at a woman, and the hijab solves this problem.
The fact is the problem isn't there in the first place. So many of islam's "solutions" don't actually solve real problems, they solve imaginery problems which islam has invented itself.
Islam invents a whole boatload of "problems" and then provides the "solutions".
Well you need to use common sense and judge each situation by it's own merits.
Imagine if you have got two people in their mid 30s. They've both been around the block a few times and know what's what. They are both single but, for various reasons, they don't want to get married. But they do fancy each other and want to have sex.
Religion would stop them, why? They are not harming anyone else. Islam would give them a hundred lashes but christianity bans it too (sex outside marriage).
They won't do any harm but religion says that they WILL do harm. So this is another case of religion creating a problem where none exists.
i personally don't see what is so bad as treating marriage as a contractual arrangement providing the terms are fair..... if you ask me; without an understanding on this you are not looking at the whole picture and effectively making emotive arguments.
A marriage is not just an economic transaction though, a business deal. It is first and foremost an emotional commitment. You can't just ignore the emotional aspect to marriage since that is the main component.
All this other stuff about how each partner is treated and terms of divorce etc is all very well but it's not the main point of marriage. The point of marriage, under nearly all religious systems, is that the two people are making a commitment to each other for life. You don't get married to someone in the expectation of getting a divorce further down the line.
I say "nearly all religious systems" because I think there is such a thing within shia islam as a temporary marriage, although I think you can only do this under certain very specific circumstances.
If I marry a woman I am committing myself totally to that woman, emotionally and in every other way. If I, even on the day of my wedding itself, intend to keep looking for other wives after the wedding then I don't see how that can be a total commitment to that woman.
It's only a partial commitment. So it's uneven - the woman is making a total commitment but the man is making a partial commitment. It's not a balanced arrangement.
Also there is a completely separate argument to all this. If I married a woman I wouldn't want to go out hunting for other women afterward. I call into question the morality of muslim men who marry more than one woman. Why do they even want to?
Their commitment to the woman they have married is less than my commitment would be. Therefore their moral values are lower. Likewise with all muslim men who don't actually marry other women but who defend the system.
Just my opinion but I would question their moral values - if they marry a woman with anything less than full emotional commitment
it's not that difficult. this circle is squared by the fact that judaism has only ever said that circumcision is obliged for JEWS, not for everybody. christianity says it's not necessary for christians and islam says it is necessary for muslims.
So this backs up my point. That all the religions say different things and aren't progressions from one another ie they can't all be right. This means that EITHER only one of them is right OR they are all wrong.
If one of them is right, why do all the others exist?
er. this is like arguing that getting rid of religion solves all problems, whereas actually, we know from experience that you get a whole bunch of nastier ones instead.
Not quite. What I am saying is that religions create their own "problems" and then create the system to solve these "problems". A lot of the problems that religions solve aren't actually problems at all, or rather, they are only problems because the religion has made it into a problem.
islam is the worst offender at this. It cures all kinds of "problems" none of which are problems in the first place. A good example of this kind of thinking is the argument that Mohsin used re polygamy. That there aren't enough men to go round and therefore islam solves this problem by allowing polygamy. He created his own problem - there are enough men to go round. Lack of men is not a problem.
So islam creates a non-existant problem - lack of men - and then provides the solution. This was just one example but it happens all the time in all areas. Consider the hijab argument, this is another example.
Islam says that hijab protects women's modesty. If you ever talk to muslims defending the hijab you would get the impression that the streets are full of male rapists wandering around just waiting for a chance to get at a woman, and the hijab solves this problem.
The fact is the problem isn't there in the first place. So many of islam's "solutions" don't actually solve real problems, they solve imaginery problems which islam has invented itself.
Islam invents a whole boatload of "problems" and then provides the "solutions".
that whole "they aren't hurting anyone" argument is frankly bollocks - i think we all know that "a bit of jiggy jiggy" can be perfectly harmless, or have incredibly serious consequences for the people involved and without the proper controls, you're not going to know what those are. i can certainly say from my own experience there are a lot of things in that department that with the benefit of hindsight i wish i'd never done. i'm sure all the men here can remember times they weren't thinking with the right part of the body.
Well you need to use common sense and judge each situation by it's own merits.
Imagine if you have got two people in their mid 30s. They've both been around the block a few times and know what's what. They are both single but, for various reasons, they don't want to get married. But they do fancy each other and want to have sex.
Religion would stop them, why? They are not harming anyone else. Islam would give them a hundred lashes but christianity bans it too (sex outside marriage).
They won't do any harm but religion says that they WILL do harm. So this is another case of religion creating a problem where none exists.