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N. 42, October 2003
Bush, the Pope, and gay rights
George Bush (the Second) has recently called for legislative action to
prohibit gay marriages, something that--thanks to initiatives in Canada
and a few US states--is becoming a real (and apparently threatening to
some) possibility in this country. Bush’s position is that he
“believes” that a marriage is, by definition, the union of a man and a
woman. Ergo, gay marriages are an oxymoron. Of course, one could point
out that definitions are arbitrary human concepts (unless they are part
of mathematical proofs, which ain’t the case here). But that would be
pointless, since we all know where Bush gets his belief: from his
reading of the Bible, apparently still shared by a majority of
Americans.
In this George II is not alone. The Pope himself agrees that gay unions
are abominations, but his reasoning is a bit more sophisticated (as one
would expect), and yet fundamentally fallacious. John Paul II has
stated that the reason gay marriages shouldn’t be allowed is because
they are “unnatural,” and they are unnatural because they do not lead
to procreation. Well, it is hard to disagree with the observation that
gay unions don’t produce biological offspring, although the term
“unnatural” hardly applies, because a lot of unions in nature--human
and not--don’t yield progeny (e.g., bonobos, the pigmy chimpanzees,
have sex in order to mend social relationships. If only we would follow
such a wise example!). But let us concede for the sake of argument (and
only as a purely intellectual exercise) that sex without at least the
intent of procreation is “unnatural.” To then claim that it should be
prohibited because immoral, is a flagrant example of what philosophers
call the naturalistic fallacy.
David Hume, in his A Treatise of Human Nature (1739), pointed out that
there is no logical connection between what is (in nature) and what
ought to be (in human morality). In other words, as both Bush and the
Pope would probably readily admit if the point were pressed on them,
just because something is not natural it doesn’t follow that it is
immoral. Surely, flying (in airplanes, as both George and John Paul
regularly do) is not natural for human beings, but I doubt either of
them is going to call for a ban on air travel on moral grounds any time
soon. Closer to the moral realm, although plenty of animals engage in
limited forms of altruism--usually directed at close kins--there is no
natural equivalent of organized charities, on which the Catholic Church
heavily depends, and which Bush thinks is the answer to anything except
war.
Ironically, a similar fallacy is sometimes committed by advocates of
gay rights. While initially resistant to a biological interpretation of
their sexual preferences, sectors of the gay community have recently
been emphasizing research purportedly showing that homosexuality has at
least in part a genetic component. Such research is controversial
(scientifically, not morally) in itself, since it is often based on
small samples, and since the genetic component may account for only a
fraction of the variation in sexual orientation in the human
population. Be that as it may, an homosexual could point to genetical
studies to claim that her orientation is part of the biological range
of behaviors observable within the human species, and hence “natural.”
Furthermore, one could argue that if homosexuality is biological, than
it makes no more sense to ask a gay person to “convert” to
heterosexuality than it does to pretend that somebody changes race
(although, of course, the letter request would be rather unpopular even
among conservatives today--gosh, could we really be making progress
after all?).
But such biological “defense” of homosexuality is misguided for three
important reasons. First, ample research has shown that just because a
trait has a genetic basis, it does not follow that it is unalterable by
changes in the environment, or through behavioral shifts. For example,
we have a natural craving for fats and sugars but, as hard as it often
is, we can avoid walking into McDonald’s, by a sheer act of will power.
Second, a genetic basis for homosexuality would certainly make it
“natural,” but religious conservatives could still argue that it is
“wrong” because it is akin to a disease. After all, sickle cell anemia
is natural, but it is something to fix, not to brag about.
However, the most important reason not to advocate a biological defense
of the gay lifestyle is because one would fall into the same temptation
that got the Pope, and against which Hume warned us: the naturalistic
fallacy. Again: just because something is natural, it does not follow
that it is good. We can determine by observation and study what is
natural and what is not. But we need to arrive at moral rules by
agreement (when possible), and tolerance (when the alleged “immoral”
behavior does not actually hurt others).
Therefore, Bush’s personal beliefs about what “really” constitutes a
marriage are (or should be) irrelevant, and the Pope (as well as his
Protestant fundamentalist counterparts in the US) has no business
deriving an ought from an is. Regardless of what biologists will
continue to find out about homosexuality, rational philosophy is the
best weapon in the fight for personal sexual choices.
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