Arthur Brain
Well-known member
Typical liberal. :nono:
Typical copout...
Read his reply properly.
Typical liberal. :nono:
I don't see why not. Same mechanism in both....By the very nature of holy marriage, a husband forcing sex upon his wife cannot be seen as 'rape' in the fashion of two people not married-they are one in the flesh.
Sorry to hear it. Well, God can literally work miracles, so I hope you're braced if the level of empathy to accomplish that ever arrives.A wife crying rape by her husband is something I just don't take so seriously.
And she's his wife, someone he is to treat with respect (I Peter 3:7) and someone he is to be gentle with (Colossians 3:19). Violent, non consensual sex, also known as rape, doesn't fit either bill.It's her husband.
You wouldn't catch blacks voting a century ago, but it doesn't mean they didn't want to.It's a victim complex, it's not actually real but something imagined. That's the effect that feminism has done, you wouldn't catch women acting that way about it a century ago.
Typical liberal. :nono:
We're talking about a rather specific topic, why wonder off to discuss propositions in general?
Typical copout...
Read his reply properly.
For any given proposition x, do you hold that x is true only if at least one woman asserts that x is true? Do you hold that the assent of a woman is a necessary condition for the truth of a given proposition?
Note, these comments are irrelevant to the question at hand (i.e., is such a thing rape)
:liberals:He made the following claim:
Every woman thinks that it is rape if a husband forces himself on his wife.[
I asked:
So what? Is the opinion of a woman a necessary precondition for the truth value of a given proposition?
He replies basically by begging the initial question.
At any rate, I'll answer for you and for WoO:
The opinion of any given person is irrelevant to the truth of that thing. It is logically possible for all woman surveyed to hold x, but for not x to be the case.
Simply asserting that all woman surveyed agree that it is rape if a husband forces himself upon his wife is not a proof that it is, in fact, rape.
If you reply in turn that women disagree and will insist that it is rape if their husbands force themselves on them, then you are simply begging the question.
Note, these comments are irrelevant to the question at hand (i.e., is such a thing rape). I am making a purely logical point.
How about we go with any given loser who thinks it's okay to force himself on his wife against her will and go from there?
How about we go with any given loser who thinks it's okay to force himself on his wife against her will and go from there?
:liberals:
Who made that claim?
If a wife does not agree that a husband can force himself on her against her will, then the husband and the marriage will have a big problem. :duh:
He made the following claim:
Every woman thinks that it is rape if a husband forces himself on his wife.
I asked:
So what? Is the opinion of a woman a necessary precondition for the truth value of a given proposition?
He replies basically by begging the initial question.
At any rate, I'll answer for you and for WoO:
The opinion of any given person is irrelevant to the truth of that thing. It is logically possible for all woman surveyed to hold x, but for not x to be the case.
Simply asserting that all woman surveyed agree that it is rape if a husband forces himself upon his wife is not a proof that it is, in fact, rape.
If you reply in turn that women disagree and will insist that it is rape if their husbands force themselves on them, then you are simply begging the question.
Note, these comments are irrelevant to the question at hand (i.e., is such a thing rape). I am making a purely logical point.
Or how about we ignore the question of who's making the argument or who believes the given proposition, and attend to the actual arguments either for or against the given proposition?
Basic rape education 101:
If someone forces themselves upon another then that be rape Trad.
You strongly implied it.
1. By definition, a wife cannot agree that a husband can force himself on her against her will. That would be a contradiction of terms.
2. That's irrelevant to the question of whether it's rape.
Oh, and please get rid of your daft 'Judge Dredd' avatar Trad. Judge Dreck would be way more apt...
She's tired, she's sore, she's menstrating, she's angry with him, etc and tells him that she does not want to have intercourse at this time. He ignores her will and forces her to have sex despite her objection.
Married or not, the nature of what rape is doesn't change.
For what it's worth, I simply don't know the answer to the question:
If you assert that every instance of forcible sexual contact, contrary to the will of the recipient, is rape, then clearly, so called "marital rape" is rape.
If, however, you see rape as the forcible sexual appropriation of what is not one's own, then so called "marital rape" cannot be rape, since one's wife is, in fact, one's own.
There possibly are other ways of looking at it, and I daren't attempt an enumeration of such things. I find the issue confusing, and I don't have at hand the opinions of authorities on the matter.