Why? Appetition follows upon apprehension. You pursue or avoid because you perceive or know. If you like chocolate (consider it desirable), this is only because you are apprehending the chocolate under some notion or aspect. What notion of the chocolate bar do you have, or under what aspect are you considering the chocolate bar, which makes it desirable?
Presumably, you perceive it as good for you, or as conferring some benefit.
If you were an angel, you presumably would not consider chocolate to be an object of appetition. You wouldn't binge eat on chocolate bars.
The reason you consider a chocolate bar to be an object of appetition is because you conceive it as good for you in some respect. The reason for this is because you are conceiving of the chocolate bar as food, to which you have a natural impulse. But the natural impulse is teleological: it is impulse for food for the sake of nourishment.
Or ... maybe she just like chocolate. Who'd of thunk it? Eating a snack for the pleasure of the taste buds.
But it doesn't nourish.
1. Pleasure follows upon activity. Aristotle says this in the Nicomachean Ethics.
2. Appetition follows upon apprehension, as stated above, and as St. Thomas Aquinas insists.
Pleasure comes in all forms ... including sitting down and watching a movie with your kids or reading a book.
Perhaps Aristotle was a diabetic. :think:
I sooo do not have to be hungry to eat chocolate. :chuckle:
Based upon the OT, all forms of contraception could be labeled as sinful - for it undermines God's design for marriage and sex - to produce children.
It is a verb, and it involves determined action to stay with somebody, out of deep love and commitment; It is not just emotional; it is not passive; it is the attitude and activity of staying close to someone. It is adherence rooted in a shared will or intent.
Which proceeds from the natural desire to eat, which itself proceeds from the need to do so.Or ... maybe she just like chocolate. Who'd of thunk it? Eating a snack for the pleasure of the taste buds.
That's not necessarily true. The additives are the diminishing factor, wherein the chocolate itself is actually very good for you.But it doesn't nourish. I eat chocolate because I enjoy it. I know full well it is not a nourishing food.
What are your thoughts on prematurely ending a pregnancy through the means of ending the life of the human in the womb?And so it begins... the psychology of a chocolate bar!
As for what forms of contraception I find immoral? None, I don't see preventing unwanted pregnancy as immoral, only common sense/ideal.
What are your thoughts on prematurely ending a pregnancy through the means of ending the life of the human in the womb?
You didn't avoid the question.After 26 weeks? I find it immoral (depending on the circumstance)*, and a stupid stupid idea. Under regular circumstances, after 22 weeks is wrong in an ideal world.
But... if a woman killed an unborn baby on purpose even though she could have EASILY got an abortion (which is probably rare) then she has committed murder - yet I'd give her a lesser sentence than someone who murders a born child.
I wouldn't really judge me through my position on sentences because they are non-intuitive in reverse. If I say that I wanted someone who murdered a 6 year old to spend longer in prison than if they murdered a 5 year old (or vice versa), it could just mean that I want to punish somebody more, not somebody less. (You'd have to be understanding to consider that, so I'm not expecting that from anyone here.)
I don't think that many here fully concede the difficulty of actually getting an abortion in a lot of states (you'd think they'd want to praise themselves for their success, sadly they prefer fear tactics of being overwhelmed).
If you fear constitutional rights... you have a very uphill battle on your hands, perfect for self-inflicted worry.
Thanks for your time reading, I hope I cannot be accused of avoiding your question, I certainly cannot be accused of brevity.
- I don't expect someone who murders a 6 year old to get longer than a 5 year old, but for example: If someone steals a baguette as opposed to a car... either way it's still stealing yet you expect harsher consequences for the car.
Anything that aborts the child at any stage of his development.The TheologyOnline.com TOPIC OF THE DAY for February 25th, 2013 08:15 AM
toldailytopic: What forms (if any) of contraception are immoral?
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I really admire the way you supported your position with evidence, such as medical facts.None.