

Same-
Ross Farrelly
Knowing that you are the product of two people, two families, two lineages which come together in a unique manner to form you gives you a more complete understanding of who you are and where you came from.
The gay community is again calling for the legalization of gay marriage. We should
resist any such extension of the term marriage to include gay couples not as a matter
of principle but, because it will be inextricably linked to same-
The question of same-
Of all the perspectives considered when discussing the ethical dilemmas offered by
such changes, there is one which is often overlooked -
Here the child is wronged in a very real and significant
way. The relationship of a child with his biological mother is unique, and that it
is a natural good. The child is being denied the natural good of the aforesaid relationship
and is therefore wronged. Furthermore the truth about one’s biological origins is
a basic human good and the child is denied this truth and is therefore wronged.
To many people, the thought of a child being reared solely by males is rather repugnant.
If we do not find it repugnant we at least pity the child and feel that he is missing
out on something very significant. The Declaration of the Rights of the Child issued
by the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights, which draws its principles
from a broad spectrum of cultures and beliefs, declares in strikingly decisive terms
the central role of the mother. “The child … shall be entitled to grow and develop
in health; to this end, special care and protection shall be provided both to him
and to his mother. … A child of tender years shall not, save in exceptional circumstances,
be separated from his mother.”2
This repugnance is not simply a result of old-
Leon Kass has put forward a convincing argument that such feelings indicate an innate wisdom of that which is conducive to human flourishing and that such feelings should be respected as meaningful and indicative of human nature, not merely ridiculed as prejudice.4
As Kass admits though, repugnance in itself is not an argument, and so in what follows
I will attempt to show why such feelings warrant serious consideration.
Biological
uniqueness of blood relationships
It is obvious that an individual’s blood relations
are biologically unique. Each individual has exactly one biological mother and one
biological father. This will remain the case for the foreseeable future (unless the
Raelian vision of a cloned society is realized more quickly than seems feasible at
the moment). Although the modern conception of the human being celebrates individuality,
our biological makeup reminds us that we are not isolated beings but that each of
us springs from two other people: a biological mother and a biological father. Its
very universality means that our parents also have parents, as do their parents,
and so, whether we like it nor not, each of us is part of a lineage of blood relations
whom we did not choose and whom we cannot deny. When we are born we are willy-
Not only are these blood relations unique, there is a natural
genetic hierarchy among them. With respect to any given individual, some blood relations
have a large number of genes in common with them -
Maternal and paternal genes have a
standard social meaning.5 The undeniable uniqueness of our biological relations has
a profound impact on us as social beings. Such relationships “go beyond the contractual
and the voluntary, in them we incur responsibilities not of our own choosing.”6 It
is these blood ties which prevent us from descending into a solipsistic isolation
and society disintegrating into the “dust and powder of individuality.”7 Blood relationships
are not only physically unique but they are also socially unique because they are
not subject to personal choice but are given to us by powers beyond our control.
They are not matters of opinion but are matters of fact with which we must live -
The biological parents also have a unique obligation to
rear and nurture their offspring because they, and only they caused the offspring
to be born. The fact that one has made something immediately obliges one to care
and take responsibility for it. As H. L. Nelson and J. L. Nelson put it:
Those who contribute genetically to a child can be said to cause that particular child to exist, and if the ethics of the family adopts a causal rather than a contractual model of responsibility, then the child’s genetic parents would seem to have a prima facie obligation to remain in the child’s life.9
Uniqueness of relationship with biological mother
Thus far we have discussed the uniqueness
-
One
liberal conception of the sex and gender is that sex is biological but that gender
is socially constructed -
On
the other hand there is, predating this conception of humanity, and boasting a long
and respected tradition in many cultures, the idea that the nature of a man and woman
are inherently and fundamentally different and complementary. Such thought is now
described as “stereotyping” but it is hard to dismiss the notion, observable in virtually
every aspect of nature, that species are naturally divided into male and female and
that members of the two sexes have distinct roles.
Are men and women really different?
Consider the extreme case of a child raised in the company of men only. Can we really
suppose that a community of men could raise a child as well as a community comprising
both men and women? Could we honestly say that the child would lack nothing so long
as he comes into contact with a broad cross-
Not only is the natural
division of roles observable in nature, it is also embedded in the mythology and
culture of the major civilizations. The primeval division of male and female is one
of the fundamental dualities used to symbolize universal forces: Purusha and Prakriti,
Father Heaven and Mother Earth, Yang and Yin, Zeus and Demeter.
It may be argued that
these representations of the male/female duality is merely mythological or symbolic
and tells us nothing about human nature. Joseph Campbell and others have argued extensively
that these myths exist in culture precisely because they do reflect human nature
and the human experience.10 It is not my intention to undertake a full discussion
of the vexatious issue of the differences in the nature of man and woman and into
the roles most suitable for them to fulfill, but merely to point out that there is
a difference between the sexes -
One variation
on this essentialist view of gender has been proposed by Carol Gilligan who argued
that “women are more ‘care orientated’ while men are more ‘justice orientated.’”11
Gilligan's findings are controversial and she has been attacked by Christina Hoff Sommers and others, not so much for finding a difference between male and female, but for the poor light in which she casts young men and for the changes she believes are necessary to the way in which children are taught.12, 13
It is worth noting that the assertion that men and women have different natures does
not imply that one is superior to the other. They may be different, complementary
and equally valuable.14
This fact, together with the fact of the uniqueness of the
biological parents, indicates the uniqueness of the child’s relationship with his
biological mother.
But the uniqueness of one’s relationship with one’s biological
mother does not rely on the traditional male/female duality. Even if you reject this
understanding of human nature and insist that gender is a social construct, the fact
that such social construction has been going on for millennia means that today, men
and women are very different, but for a different reason. Socio-
It may be objected
that the social role of mother only exists when the biological mother explicitly
assumes that role. This view ignores an obvious fact about human nature, which is
that the concept of motherhood (and all close familial relations) is deeply implanted
into the human psyche and cannot be erased by mere thought or will. Witness the impelling
drive for adopted children to discover their birth parents, or the sense of loss
experienced by many women who have abortions.
Such a unique relationship is a natural good because women have
evolved over millennia to love and protect and nurture their biological offspring
more than any other child. Societies throughout history have utilized the “love of
one’s own” to ensure that children are nurtured. This strong natural tendency of
love from mother to child is so deep-
Throughout the months of fetal development, and from the moment of birth, the baby’s
hope is hugely invested in its mother. Relatively helpless compared with many other
new-
Having a mother and knowing who she is a natural good because it is central to one’s
ontology. To establish one’s place in the world one needs to know one’s kinship,
ancestry, and lineage. Having a father is only half the story. Every human is the
unique result of a familial nexus. Knowing that you are the product of two people,
two families, two lineages which come together in a unique manner to form you gives
you a more complete understanding of who you are and where you came from. This cannot
compare to the shallow concept that you are the product of your father’s sperm and
some other mysterious person who was used only as a tool to produce you. Knowing
that you are the product of a financial agreement between your father and an anonymous
women whom he did not love, in fact hardly knew, but with whom he had an financial
agreement cannot and does not compare to the knowledge that one is the product of
the loving union of your father and mother. Leon Kass explains this co-
Through children, a good common to both husband and wife, male and female achieve some genuine unification (beyond the mere sexual “union” that fails to do so): The two become one through sharing generous (not needy) love for this third being as good. Flesh of their flesh, the child is the parents’ own commingled being externalized, and given a separate and persisting existence; unification is enhanced also by their commingled work of rearing.17
Furthermore, truth is a natural good -
I have argued that a child
is wronged by being brought into the world with the explicit intention that he be
raised by two men and not by his mother. I will now explore some of the implications
of this.
Adoption: It may be claimed that although the child may be wronged by being
raised by a same-
The rights of the same-
Furthermore the United Nations Convention
on the Rights of the Child states that the best interests of the child, as the weaker
and more vulnerable party, are to be the paramount consideration in every case.20
Is
homosexual parenting conducive to the flourishing of the child or does his welfare
come second to the desire of the two homosexuals to ‘have’ a child in some way which
their biology will not allow? I have argued that the child’s relationship with his
biological mother is a unique natural good which is denied to the child who is raised
by two men. The denial of this natural good constitutes a serious wrong to the child.
The child is further wronged by being denied the truth of his biological origins.
[i]
Muehlenberg, B., ‘Unrestricted IVF: Who Protects the Child?’, News Weekly. 29th July,
2000, p 6.
[ii] ‘Declaration of the Rights of the Child’, Principles 4 and 6, accessed
2 October 2003, http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/25.htm .
[iii] Dalrymple, T., “The
Starving Criminal”, accessed 2 October 2003, http://www.city-
[iv]
Kass, L., 1998, “The Wisdom of Repugnance”, The Ethics of Human Cloning, AEI Press,
pp 17 – 24.
[v] Nelson, H. L. and Nelson, J. L., 1995, ‘Family’, Encyclopaedia of
Bioethics, MacMilliam, Vol 1, p 805.
[vi] Ibid, p 802.
[vii] Burke, E, Reflections
on the Revolution in France, Oxford University Press, 1999 p. 96
[viii] This concept
is comes from by an argument developed by Roger Scruton in An Intelligent Person’s
Guide to Modern Culture, St. Augustine’s Press, 2000, p 8 ff.
[ix] Nelson, H. L. and
Nelson, J. L., op. cit., p 806.
[x] Campbell, J., 1972, The Hero with a Thousand Faces,
Princeton University Press.
[xi] Dodds, S., 1998, ‘Sex Equality’, Encyclopaedia of
Applied Ethics, Vol 4, Academic Press, p. 57.
[xii] Benfer, A., ‘Battle of the Celebrity
Gender Theorists’, http://archive.salon.com/mwt/feature/2001/03/09/sommers/ (accessed
1 November 2003).
[xiii]White, T., ‘Two Ethical Styles: The Debate About Gender’,
accessed 1 November 2003, http://www.ethicsandbusiness.org/kg1.htm
[xiv] Dodds, S.,
1998, ‘Sex Equality’, Encyclopaedia of Applied Ethics, Vol 4, Academic Press, p.
55-
[xv] Howie, G., 1998, ‘Gender Roles’, Encyclopaedia of Applied Ethics, Vol
2, Academic Press, p. 371.
[xvi] Whitfield, R., ‘Why we all Need Committed Somebodies’,
For a Change Magazine, accessed 22 October 2003 http://www.forachange.co.uk/index.php?stoid=342.
[xvii]
Kass, L., 1998, ‘The Wisdom of Repugnance’, accessed October 22, 2003, link.
[xviii]
Siegel, D., 1998, ‘Adoption’, Encyclopaedia of Applied Ethics, Vol 1, Academic Press,
p. 32.
[xix] Muehlenberg, B., ‘Unrestricted IVF, Who Protects the Child?’, News Weekly,
29 July, 2000 p. 6.
[xx] http://www.uncrc.info/ Convention on the Rights of the Child, Part 1, article 3.
Source: http://www.intellectualconservative.com/article3703.html
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