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Summary - H573/02 Religion and Ethics - Sexual Ethics

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Notes covering the H573/02 Religion and Ethics topic of Sexual Ethics, with explanation and notes covering all the necessary content for the exams.

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July 15, 2023
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Dillon Precious Sexual Ethics


Sexual Ethics:

 Key ideas:
o Conception.
o Contraception.
o Homosexuality.
o Premarital / extramarital sexual relationships.
 Love: intense feelings of empathy.
 Sex: the act of sexual activity / intercourse.
 Sanctity of life: religious people may use this phrase to describe how God has given life so
therefore God should be the only being to take it away.
o The fact that God has given humans life means that we should treat all life with
utmost respect. In Genesis 1:27 it states, “God created human beings making them
to be like himself.” Interfering with this process is “playing God.”
 Chastity: refraining from sex.
 Celibacy: abstaining from marriage and sex.
 Cohabitation: the state of living together and having a sexual relationship without being
married.
 Casual Cohabitation: not fixed living with someone.
 Trial Marriage Cohabitation: a practice / trial marriage.
o “Human love does not tolerate ‘trial marriages. It demands a total and definitive gift
of persons to one another.” – Catechism of the Catholic Church.
 Promiscuity: casual sex.
 Substitute Marriage and Ideological Cohabitation: when someone does not agree with
marriage but is essentially in the state of “marriage” with someone else.

Conception and Contraception:

 Conception: the act of conceiving a child.
 Contraception: methods of preventing pregnancy.
o Just as people pursue their “right” to conceive, so to many pursue their “right” not
to conceive.
o Historically, contraception has always existed but it as the introduction of the pill in
the 1960s that changed people’s perception of sex.
o The Church has traditionally been more concerned with contraception, which for
Catholics is still traditionally forbidden (except by natural means).
 According to Natural Law every act of sexual intercourse must be open to the possibility of
procreation.
 Augustine said that contraception introduced moral corruption into the marital relationship.
Many Christian couples practice contraception to plan the timing of their family responsibly.
 Some methods of contraception may be considered less viable than others. IUD acts as an
abortifacient and the “morning after pill” prevents implantation rather than fertilisation.

, Dillon Precious Sexual Ethics


Reproductive Ethics – do not want children:

 Not Pregnant:
o Contraception – choices available are celibacy, sterilization, chemical means,
mechanical means, rhythm method.
 Some ethical issues: separates the proper purpose of sex which is to be
both unitive and procreative. Can trivialise sex and reduce respect for
persons.
 Pregnant:
o Abortion – choices are surgical abortion, use of abortifacients (such as RU486), the
morning after pill, some types of the contraceptive pill.
o Some ethical issues: what is the status of a foetus? Protection of the innocent set
against unwanted pregnancy and an inadequate quality of life.

Development of the Foetus:

 Before it is known as an embryo it is referred to as a zygote.
 25th day – heart beating.
 28th day – legs and arms begin to form.
 Sixth week – bones appear.
 7th week – digits formed,
 10th week – organs nearly formed.
 12th week – vocal cords, sexual organs formed.
 16th week – half its birth length.
 22nd week – eyebrows and eyelashes form.
 24th week – cut-off point for abortions.

Question of survival limits:

 The legal limit for an abortion is 24 weeks.
 35% of foetuses survived at 23 weeks.
 70% of foetuses survived at 24 weeks.
 90% of foetuses survived at 26/27 weeks.
 Earliest premature baby survival is 21 weeks and 5 days.

What constitutes as a person?

 Being capable of rational thought? The ability to solve problems using the power of reason.
Using rational thought to process decisions. This is what distinguishes animals from humans.
 Having a form of consciousness, the ability to feel pleasure or pain? Problems arise from
this when trying to define a person.
 Some would argue that personhood needs self-awareness. Others might argue that a being
requires the need to survive independently, not as a parasitical body.
 Judith Jarvis Thomson:
o She accepted that the foetus is a person at conception but argued the foetal right to
life was overridden by the woman’s right to self-defence and the woman’s right to
her own body.
o This was developed using the analogy of the Violinist.



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