Takes the valuable resource from the victim without reducing the degree to which they have that resource or provide it to others for their own benefit.
I don’t support advocating equivocation between these or any other moral or ethical issues. Because they are different and degree of abstract similarity is not important.
Takes the valuable resource from the victim without reducing the degree to which they have that resource or provide it to others for their own benefit.
Uh, rape often reduces the degree to which one can provide sex / fertility to others. I don’t think that’s the best analogy.
Uh, rape often reduces the degree to which one can provide sex / fertility to others.
I originally included caveats (like gentleness and maybe birth control) but decided that wasn’t really necessary. After all when we call copying movies ‘stealing’ we don’t bother to include disclaimers about things like “while breaking into your house to steal your TV they destroyed your door and broke your arm when you tried to stop them”.
I don’t think that’s the best analogy.
It quite possibly isn’t—I’ve hardly done an exhaustive search. I expressed only a comparison to stealing.
Takes the valuable resource from the victim without reducing the degree to which they have that resource or provide it to others for their own benefit.
What disturbs me about this model is that my mind is now telling me ‘yeah, sure you can consider sex as a resource’, while 100 seconds ago (right after I read the comment) it was telling me, with equal certainty, ‘wtf? sex isn’t a resource!!’
What disturbs me about this model is that my mind is now telling me ‘yeah, sure you can consider sex as a resource’, while 100 seconds ago (right after I read the comment) it was telling me, with equal certainty, ‘wtf? sex isn’t a resource!!’
How could you not consider sex a resource? It isn’t just a resource, or merely a resource but it is one of the most significant resources out there. There are entire industries out there for the buying and selling of sex. There is an industry for capturing and selling people from whom this resource can be harvested. The most rudimentary of marketing tactics is to find ways to make other resources associate with sex in the minds of the consumer.
I … really don’t think this is a useful model.
It is one of many models useful for understanding human behavior. It need not be one that is used for describing or selecting moralities.
How could you not consider sex a resource? It isn’t just a resource, or merely a resource but it is one of the most significant resources out there.
Just a thought that had never occurred to me. However, I’m still wary of accepting this interpretation because my mind completely bought into it after just a few seconds of thinking about it. Ergo, either it’s a blindingly obvious fact, as you suggest, or my mind is overfitting the data, and....
.… Who am I kidding? I’ve already accepted this interpretation.
Come to think of it on the pure abstract level it is more closely analogous to rape.
I thot of suggesting rape, but decided against it because it seemed too far off. Explain.
Takes the valuable resource from the victim without reducing the degree to which they have that resource or provide it to others for their own benefit.
I don’t support advocating equivocation between these or any other moral or ethical issues. Because they are different and degree of abstract similarity is not important.
Uh, rape often reduces the degree to which one can provide sex / fertility to others. I don’t think that’s the best analogy.
I originally included caveats (like gentleness and maybe birth control) but decided that wasn’t really necessary. After all when we call copying movies ‘stealing’ we don’t bother to include disclaimers about things like “while breaking into your house to steal your TV they destroyed your door and broke your arm when you tried to stop them”.
It quite possibly isn’t—I’ve hardly done an exhaustive search. I expressed only a comparison to stealing.
What disturbs me about this model is that my mind is now telling me ‘yeah, sure you can consider sex as a resource’, while 100 seconds ago (right after I read the comment) it was telling me, with equal certainty, ‘wtf? sex isn’t a resource!!’
I … really don’t think this is a useful model.
How could you not consider sex a resource? It isn’t just a resource, or merely a resource but it is one of the most significant resources out there. There are entire industries out there for the buying and selling of sex. There is an industry for capturing and selling people from whom this resource can be harvested. The most rudimentary of marketing tactics is to find ways to make other resources associate with sex in the minds of the consumer.
It is one of many models useful for understanding human behavior. It need not be one that is used for describing or selecting moralities.
Just a thought that had never occurred to me. However, I’m still wary of accepting this interpretation because my mind completely bought into it after just a few seconds of thinking about it. Ergo, either it’s a blindingly obvious fact, as you suggest, or my mind is overfitting the data, and....
.… Who am I kidding? I’ve already accepted this interpretation.