Originally posted by: cKGunslinger
Originally posted by: Rainsford
It is not a perfectly valid argument, regardless of what you may think. No eye-rolling either, I promise.
Your argument amounts to a slippery slope fallacy. To sum up what you said, "Once we change the definition of marriage to include more than 'one man with one woman', adding all additional lifestyle choices to the definition will be the logical conclusion." Please let me know if I'm wrong here.
Close. My argument is that some are in favor of lifting the "man/woman" clause of traditional marriage to allow a minority lifestyle segment of the population to participate in the system to gain the recognition and benefits of said system. And if we allow a certain minority to change this based on the cry of "equality," how can anyone, especially those in that minority, object to a 3rd or 4th party minority clamoring for the same treatment. It's not so much a "slippery-slope" argument, as it is outright hypocrisy.
Slippery slope arguments are generally wrong because they assume there are never additional factors in the decision further down the "slope". As people have pointed out, there are considerations with polygamy that aren't present with gay marriage that would allow some people to support one and not the other. Supporting gay marriage does not obligate you to support anything else because there are reasons to be against other kinds of marriage that would not apply to gay marriage.
Mostly agreed. But what are these reasons? I haven't seen any, other than the standard "eww... that's just wrong" argument that some use for homosexual marriage as well.
The classic example of this kind of argument is if we legalize pot, pretty soon everyone will be doing heroin and we'll all be drug-addicts. This argument ignores that many people would have reasons for not doing heroin that do not apply to pot (serious physical addiction is always a good one). This is almost always true with slipperly slope arguments because no two situations are the same. People can support spanking children without thinking they should be beaten with a rubber hose. People can support spending $20,000 a year on college and not support spending $40,000 a year on college. People can support keeping religion out of public schools without thinking all Christians should be shot.
Hmm.. I agree with everything you say here. I just fail to see how exactly this relates to the topic at hand. To me, I see your objections as more like, "I support the idea of interracial marriage, as long as no Hispanics are involved!" Once you open up an idea like changing marriage to accept alternate lifestlye choices, how can you arbitrarily set a limit on how far you will go? I agree that in the sake of decency, we should limit it to CONSENTING HUMAN ADULTS, but after that, who sets the limits and for what reason?
Also, thanks for the rational discussion and lack of eye-rolling.