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Old 06-17-2003, 08:28 PM   #101
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Originally posted by QueenofSwords
Originally posted by winstonjen
No, sometimes students grow at a greater rate than their teachers, and can end up surpassing teachers that grow as well.

Perhaps this would go against the natural authority of teachers, not to mention everyone's intuitive knowledge, assuming it hadn't been bred out of them by centuries of cannibalism.
Yeah. Nothing's better than tradition.
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Old 06-17-2003, 08:32 PM   #102
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Still no explanation of "natural authority", not that I was expecting any different.
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Old 06-17-2003, 09:01 PM   #103
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Still no explanation as to why only yguy gets to assume facts not in evidence.
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Old 06-17-2003, 09:16 PM   #104
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Still no explanation as to why a penis is a prerequisite for family leadership.
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Old 06-17-2003, 09:22 PM   #105
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Still no explanation as to why IIDB doesn't charge admission to read yguy's posts.
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Old 06-17-2003, 09:24 PM   #106
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Dammit, all these snappy one-liners posted as I typed this... I feel so left out.

Quote:
Originally posted by yguy
Isn't the increase in gender confusion a compelling reason to re-examine the abolition of traditional marriage?
No. Hmmm... where to begin? I have never suggested the abolition of traditional marriage. That's addressed in my previous post, I think.

Gender confusion, as you use the term, means such an array of things. I've seen you use it to mean everything from homosexuality to Michael Jackson to men who cuddle their kids. I assume the term can also be applied to women, although I don't think I've seen you use it that way. At any rate, I see no inherent harm in gender confusion and I don't see inherent value in traditional gender roles.

I also don't see where non-trad families necessarily to lead to gender confusion nor how trad families necessarily avoid gender confusion. Gay children do come out of trad families and gay couples do raise straight kids.

Finally it ends up in a circle. It is necessary that adults drink coffee because if adults stop drinking coffee many more people will drink tea. See what I mean? Unless you can show the inherent value of coffee and the inherent wrongness of tea, it doesn't make sense. If my partner cuddles our son and so our son grows up to be a man who cuddles his sons, where's the bad?

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Would you want your daughter to have a choice between dating a guy who looked like Michael Jackson and one who looked like Tim Curry?
This question cracked me up so much I've told half a dozen people about it already. I propose a new rule. Invoking the name of Michael Jackson shall end any discussion, like invoking th name of Hitler. It's calling up the most extreme and inexplicable example of bizarre personalities. Whatever MJ's quirks are, I'm thinking gender confusion gets lost in the mix.

But anyway... If my daughter were interested in 2 men who looked like them and were deciding between, and they both treated her well, I'd be fine with that. If my son were deciding between men who looked like that and they made him happy, I'd be fine with that. If my daughter or son came home with a guy who looked like Vin Diesel or like Bruce Willis, and he beat her/him up or made her/him miserable, then I've got a problem with it.

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Inevitably, if you dissect anyone's logic enough, they will get to a point where their only answer is, "It's self-evident".
Right, but I don't think we're at that point yet. And in many cases, the person will say "It's self-evident to me," or "I just have faith that it's true." Most of the time, people don't say it's intuitively obvious to everyone, which is what you have been saying.

Quote:
When Eve tempted Adam with the forbidden fruit, he had the opportunity to say, "Hey, knock that off. Dad said not to mess with that", but wanting to feel like a god, he submitted himself to her authority (as Abraham did to Sarah's in the matter of Hagar). This is evidenced by the fact that when God called them on it, he blamed Eve. I don't guess there's a woman alive who can't identify with that. And men have been making this mistake for millenia.
OK, so it's a story I don't believe in, but at least it provides a starting point. But where do you get that he submitted to her authority? She made a suggestion and he liked it and went for it (not all that surprising given that he didn't yet have the knowledge of good and evil). The story is not that she gave him the forbidden fruit and said, "This is what we're having for dinner tonight. Eat it or go hungry."

You've been telling us that a husband should consider his wife's opinions and consider the areas where she has more knowledge along with all other factors when he makes his decision. But if we take just the story above, shouldn't the husband refuse to hear his wife's opinions at all, lest he be tempted by his weakness for her and make the wrong choice like Adam did? When she speaks, shouldn't he plug his ears and chant, "La, la, la, I can't hear you"?

Quote:
The man's need for the woman's love tends to be addictive, meaning that the man can't speak up to her any more than the junkie can speak up to his pusher. Children can't have respect for a man like that...and neither can the woman.
Sure, I wouldn't respect a guy like that, nor let him in the house. That's creepy. You're reducing this man to a caricature, and this woman has no weakness. Remember, Eve was tempted too... by a big old snake, if you like symbolism. In reality, this guy has a mind and this woman has desires.

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That makes a boy lose respect for his own masculinity, and a girl lose respect for whatever masculinity she finds in other men.
Or maybe they both just think Dad's a loser. And in a traditional family, maybe they both grow up thinking Mum is weak. Sometimes in the traditional family the boy grows up thinking all women are weak and so he doesn't respect them, and the girl grows up thinking, well, that she shouldn't bother with thinking. Sometimes. It's always sometimes.

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I didn't escape it entirely, but I did have a male role model or two once I left home. But for that, I shudder to think how I would have ended up.
But of course there's your evidence that it's possible. It happens quite a lot, in fact. And based on your description of your mother as "psychologically abusive," imagine how much more easily it can work out when the parents in question are doing their damnedest to raise healthy kids and provide them as many positive role models as possible.

Quote:
In general though, all men have a trace of gender confusion.
If all men have got it, it's not confusion. It's the nature of being male.

Dal
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Old 06-17-2003, 09:41 PM   #107
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Did I turn off all the quips? Somebody say something! Please!
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Old 06-17-2003, 09:47 PM   #108
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Originally posted by Daleth
The story is not that she gave him the forbidden fruit and said, "This is what we're having for dinner tonight. Eat it or go hungry."

Eve : Here is the forbidden fruit. Eat it or I won't have sex with you.
Adam : But honey, your attempt to captain our ship will result in our children being Michael Jackson.
Eve : Who died and made you President?
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Old 06-17-2003, 09:59 PM   #109
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And Adam looked around and saw that no one had died because there wasn't anybody else, shrugged, and took a bite.

Thank you, now I've got the movie trailer for The Story of Cain and Abel starring Michael Jackson and Tim Curry going through my head.
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Old 06-17-2003, 10:41 PM   #110
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Quote:
Originally posted by Daleth
There are still some questions you're avoiding. How exactly would you define "natural authority" and what is your basis for believing a man has it?
It is a faint wisp of the authority Adam had and lost, and which Christ had and retained - and demonstrated when He told the adulterous woman to go and sin no more. An egotistical person having it directed at him/her will hate it, at least temporarily.

Quote:
You've said over and over again that it is intuitively obvious to each and every person at birth or at least as soon as the mind is developed enough to grasp such a concept. I hold that it has never been obvious to me.
If male authority figures you have encountered tended to be at all phony or shallow, you would tend to confuse that sort of authority with the kind I'm talking about.

Quote:
I grew up in a fairly traditional family. Dad worked. Mum stayed home with the kids. Mum had her ideas about how things should be and shared them with him, but when it came down to making decisions, Dad's word was law. He didn't do a bad job of it. He made some small mistakes but no major ones, at least not until I was a teenager, and the family was fairly well off. No one was abused. There was no violence and little raising of voices (except to the extent that voices have to be raised to be heard over the din of 8 kids). And you know how it seemed to me intuitively? It seemed unfair. It was obviously unfair to me. Mum was smart. She worked hard. She had a lot of gifts. She was a grown-up like Dad. Why did she have to defer to him all the time? Why, for instance, did the kids have to ask Dad whether they could be excused from the dinner table rather than Mum, who cooked the dinner? She wasn't complaining about it, either. I doubt she saw anything wrong with it then or now, so I didn't learn that it was unfair from her.
That means you don't know for sure whether she did or not. Let's say she really didn't. Why would you think it unfair if she was happy in that role?

I rather suspect, however, that she was not, outward appearances notwithstanding. If I had more info, I'll bet I could show you that your example doesn't really contradict what I'm saying, but I don't know that you want to go into all that on open or otherwise.

Quote:
So was a born a freak of nature who lacked all normal human intuition?
I know from some of our past conversations that you are not without intuition. However, I don't anyone's intuition escapes childhood unimpaired. Perhaps this is a blind spot for you.

Quote:
Based on our previous conversation about women's power, I'm going to go out on a limb and say that you don't really think that it's intuitively obvious to all and sundry that men have natural authority in a marriage, rather that women at all times have incredible power over men because men are so weak and needy about sex and that men must be given authority in marriage just to counter-balance that power. Am I close?
If that were my idea, of course, it would amount to the woman pretending to be under the man's authority. A woman should ideally look for a man who is aware of his weakness and is determined to get over it, with or without her.

Quote:
I'll tell you what leads me to that thought. You don't seem to believe that all men are more capable, intelligent, or knowledgeable than all women. If a man is not "better" just by virtue of being a man, why should a woman submit to a man at all?
If he isn't, she shouldn't enter a contract that requires that, which traditional marriage does, as I use the term.

Quote:
Well, it's because she naturally has this incredible power over men by virtue of her sex, and it creates this imbalance. So what she should do, as a responsible part of society, is allow her power to be tempered. She should find a man who has greater abilities than her, and should submit to him, thus at least partially correcting the imbalance.
If he's really better than she is, there is no imbalance - with the proviso that "better" doesn't mean more egotistical.

Quote:
If you like, I could bring quotes from the previous conversation into this thread.
I don't personally see the need for that, but do as you will.
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