04-07-2009, 05:55 PM | #31 | ||
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Hell, looking at the Terry Schaivo case, even marriage isn't enough sometimes. In short, marriage as an institution covers a lot of financial, medical, and other legal areas in one fell swoop, where building a semblance of it from scratch is probably more difficult and expensive than is fair.
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04-07-2009, 06:20 PM | #32 |
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What blues said reflects a little bit what I was trying to say. You can call something separate but equal all you want, that doesn't make it true or right in practice.
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04-07-2009, 06:40 PM | #33 |
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Okay I was obviously misunderstood, or misworded whayt I was trying to say there was I don't see why the government CREATED the statute of marriage in the first place, outside of religious tradition. I wasnt saying civil unions, which I disagree with for the same reasons as previously stated, are an alternative or anything else of that nature, just some minor pondering.
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04-07-2009, 09:09 PM | #34 | |
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04-07-2009, 09:28 PM | #35 | ||
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In short, while marriage now seems to be relatively equal in what we consider the civilized world, we need only take a look at places like Africa and the Middle East to realize that it has roots that could be considered crude and barbaric in the promotion of male dominance. Government only serves to preserve it as the status quo, and we Westerners weren't quite so different only a hundred years or so ago, when the only way a woman could own basically anything was if she was a widow and didn't re-marry.
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04-07-2009, 09:42 PM | #36 | |
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That was my only point. Western countries are currently moving away from marriage as an insitution that was coopted for a long time by religion, but secular marriage isn't new.
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04-07-2009, 11:25 PM | #37 | ||
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The truth is that secular recognition of marriage is a hazard of maintaining the rites of religion and that secular marriage has only really developed in the last hundred years or so, as a progression of increasing secularism in government as more systems of belief are added to the mix and it becomes harder to favor one or a few without drawing ire from those excluded. Atheists are now allowed all the rights of marriage that people of religion are because of the legal ramifications of a formerly religious institution which were granted during times when only one or a few religious beliefs were the norm and were granted the favor of the ruling government to keep things friendly. My use of the term "forever" was hyperbole, but deliberate, in that religious rites predate most recognizable government, be it monarchical, democratic, or theocratic, by safely thousands of years, because religions were around long before complex societies and in many cases probably helped create them in a progression from family groups to tribal groups and larger until such time someone has amassed enough power to unify it all into a semblance of regional government. If you can provide examples predating the late 1700s (when the French and American Revolutions took place) of secular marriage, by all means, do so. I might well be wrong, as my knowledge of Asian history is nowhere near as good as Western history and China might well have developed it before Europe in its extra 5000 years or so of history at the time.
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04-08-2009, 12:23 AM | #38 | |
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04-08-2009, 01:42 AM | #39 | ||
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You have: - A massive, sprawling empire. - Many different peoples absorbed. - A multitude of different religions that are impossible to consolidate. - Enhanced travel due to the Roman road system. With travel introducing many systems of belief together, you have conditions very similar to those produced by America's melting pot (on a scale that's scarily comparable). In terms of the Roman take on things, their conquests were all about amassing more money, so as long as people sat quiet and paid their taxes, everything was fine. In terms of the religious ceremonies of marriage, very few were not left intact, minus the Celts. In terms of Roman record-keeping, having some way of keeping track of these unions was necessary for the books back home, so a secular form of recognition was in order. Whether that translated into purely secular marriages, I honestly don't know, but it honestly wouldn't surprise me, since it wouldn't interfere with taxes, and if I recall correctly, there was a marriage tax on top of it. In short, while Rome had very little influence on the modern world due to the loss of pretty much all their progress for thousands of years, it does provide a good parallel to modern views on secular marriage.
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04-08-2009, 03:37 AM | #40 |
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Ancient Egypt didn't have:
- A massive, sprawling empire. - Many different peoples absorbed. - A multitude of different religions that are impossible to consolidate. Yet, "Marriage in ancient Egypt was a totally private affair in which the state took no interest and of which the state kept no record. There is no evidence for any legal or religious ceremony establishing the marriage, although there was probably a party." So, I'll take your explanation with a grain of salt. Note that it's probable that other such examples can be dug up with minimal effort, but my original (modest) point is already well backed up: it's not new. You seem to insist that it was always deviation in some way but I don't think that's been shown, not with the Romans or in general, to be true.
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