mentalgymnast wrote:What points and/or facts in the following extract from this article . . . do you take issue with?
Here goes:
Dr. Victor Cline has posited four progressive effects of pornography: (1) addiction, where the need to view pornographic materials leads to a loss of free control over behaviour; . . .
That applies to nearly anything. Addictive personalities may choose alcohol, gambling, video games, whatever. It's no surprise that the pornographic arts would be one of many things on that list.
. . . (2) escalation, where the person delves into progressively harder pornography, usually to attain the same level of sensation and arousal; . . .
That hasn't been my experience. I still don't like anything having to do with lesbianism, anal, BDSM, etc.
. . . (3) desensitization, whereby the user is no longer morally sensitive to the shocking, illegal, repulsive, perverted or immoral quality of the material, but instead views it as acceptable and begins to look upon others as objects; . . .
That's begging the question. Although some forms of pornography are illegal, the only reason he labels the rest as "shocking," "repulsive," "perverted," or "immoral" is because his religion told him to think that way. If he hadn't been raised with an artificially negative view of the pornographic arts, he would probably have found it "acceptable" himself.
As for "looking at others as objects," well, guess what? We're all objects to someone else. As has already been mentioned, the mailman is an object to someone who wants to receive his mail. The butcher is an object to someone who wants to get some cold cuts. Therefore, it's perfectly normal and natural for an erotic performer to be an object for someone wishing to partake of an erotic performance.
That's merely market specialization for you.
. . . and (4) acting out, where the fantasizing becomes overt behaviour.
As long as the kids and the animals are left out of it, what's wrong with acting out? If more people acted out, there would be a lot fewer wars in this world.
Additionally from a moral point of view, there are three reasons why pornography is wrong and sinful behaviour
And here he exposes the reason for his opposition: His religion has artificially taught him to view it as a sin.
First, pornography offends the dignity of the participants (actors, vendors, the public).
If this is true, it's only because the participants have been taught by their religion or their parents (or both) to have their dignity offended. Without all that fiat conditioning, there's no loss of dignity.
Did you walk outside today without wearing your burqua? If so, did you suffer a loss of dignity like your fundamentalist Muslim sisters would have?
Each one is exploited or exploits others in some way for personal pleasure or gain.
"Exploited." Such a harsh term. The only ones who are truly exploited are those who don't consent.
Erotic performances are nothing more than a job. And anyone with a job is being exploited for his/her labor.
In all cases, the dignity of the human being -- whether the person posing, the person producing, the person distributing, or the person enjoying -- is debased.
If so, it's only because they
think they're being debased. Had religion and/or their parents not falsely conditioned them to feel debased, they wouldn't feel debased.
When I partake of the joys of the pornographic arts, do I feel debased? No. On the contrary, I feel enlightened and just a little happier to be alive.
Second, those who engage in pornography immerse themselves in a fantasy world, withdrawing from reality.
And therein is no sin. Anyone who has ever read a fiction novel has also immersed themselves in a fantasy world, withdrawing from reality. So it also goes for anyone who has ever watched a movie that wasn't a documentary.
Seems that's the entire point of entertainment in general, no?
While genuine love always involves a self-giving of oneself for the good of others, pornography entices a person to withdraw into a selfish world of perverted fantasy which may later be acted out to the detriment of oneself and others.
"Perverted" fantasy? The author inadvertently reveals his religious bias once again.
Third, pornography offends against the virtue of chastity and constitutes an assault on marriage.
"Chastity" is an artificial construct of religion, born out of a bunch of bronze age goatherders' obsession over the virginity of their women. Chastity is a state of mind, not body. If one recognizes that sexual activity is a perfectly normal, natural (and enjoyable!) biological activity, then chastity is not offended.
Once more, pornography is in no way an assault on marriage. The other person's freaking out and filing for divorce is the assault on marriage, not the pornography itself.
Each of us must respect the sanctity of our own human sexuality, which involves the integration of his physical and spiritual being. Furthermore, conjugal love which reflects the union of husband and wife, and the enactment of their vows is sacred. The conjugal act ought to express that faithful, permanent, exclusive, self-giving and life-giving love between husband and wife.
I agree with all of the above. Pornography doesn't inhibit the expression of any of the above.
If you take issue with any of the points and/or facts in this article, where is your evidence that your personal POV is more reliable than those that have studied the effects of pornography?
Simple. That guy only studied people already addicted to pornography. If he had made an exclusive study of people
not addicted to pornograhy, his results would've been much, much different. Likewise, if he hadn't been LDS, his results would've been much, much different.
There have been a number of people on this thread that have pretty much said that pornography is really nothing to be overly concerned with at all, that it's not a scourge and we're getting too worked up about it. I'm guessing Dr. Cline would disagree wholeheartedly. So who's right and who's wrong?
In
Return of the Jedi, Obi-Wan Kenobi told Luke, "You'll find that many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our point of view." Long ago religious folks flipped a coin and decided that pornography was wrong, so they began conditioning all their believers to have the same point of view. Likewise, each generation has jumped on the bandwagon and instilled the same set of neuroses into the next.
"Many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our point of view." My point of view is that pornography is one of the greatest gifts that God has given us, to be relished and partaken of in the spirit of joy and thanksgiving. So who's right and who's wrong?
I'm thinking that it might be wise to go with the experts.
Dr. Cline is only one such expert. In my textbook for my human sexuality class, the experts noted that most men who viewed pornography had a greater respect for women than those who didn't, since they saw women as free agents in control of their own sexuality and not mere females to be captured and dominated like we see in the animal kingdom.
So it all depends on your expert.
"Finally, for your rather strange idea that miracles are somehow linked to the amount of gay sexual gratification that is taking place would require that primitive Christianity was launched by gay sex, would it not?"
--Louis Midgley