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Overview of the Vatican Declaration on Human Sexuality New Vocabulary: ESSENCE -VS- ACCIDENT An ESSENCE is a feature of something that is the same everywhere and always. The essence of water is that its chemical composition is H2O An ACCIDENT is something that is sometimes present, and sometimes not.
Many social arrangements are accidents. ETHICAL RELATIVISTS say that all of the things we use in making moral decisions are accidents. They say that there are no essential features of actions that make them moral or immoral. They conclude that moral evaluation is based on nothing but social norms, which change (and which are cultural accidents). ESSENTIAL PURPOSE (also known as FINALITY) In some cases, the essence of an activity is its fundamental purpose.
MORAL DEBATES ABOUT SEXUAL ACTIVITY FOCUS ON THIS ISSUE: Does sexual activity have any essential purpose or purposes that make it morally good? All of the four assigned readings about sex in this course think that sexual activity does have an essential purpose. The Vatican, Bradshaw, and Schulman are in strong agreement about what this essence is. Although Corvino is defending sex between consenting homosexuals, he also thinks that sexual activity does have an essential purpose. THE VATICAN (page 263) Sex has a dual finality, and to be moral, sexual activity must allow for the fulfillment of both. The two purposes are (1) procreation and (2) mutual self-giving. Sexual activity is wrong if it cannot simultaneously advance both. (However, if failure to procreate is an accidental feature of the activity—for example, the woman is sterile but not through her own choice—then failure to procreate does not make the sex immoral, provided there is genuine mutual self-giving.) Homosexual sex is essentially, not accidentally, incapable of procreation, so it is wrong. |
Last updated March 18, 2007