Abstract:The New Natural Law Theory (NNLT) argues against the morality (and legality) of same sex-unions on the basis that homosexual (and non-reproductive heterosexual) acts are unnatural, unreasonable, and therefore immoral. In this paper, we explore and critique the foundational principles -biological and personal complementarity, their subcategories, and the interrelationship between them -that the NNLT uses to justify its claim. We propose alternative principles -orientation, personal, and genital-biological compl… Show more
“…62 A report by UK Criminal Law Revision Committee in 1984 into marital rape took a similar view, arguing that marital rape was more of a problem for social workers than for the criminal law. 63 In R v L, Justice Brennan argued that the law of marriage is to be found in the ecclesiastical courts rather than the common law courts. He claims that a review of those relevant cases shows that connubial rights are an essential part of marriage but 'do not exhaust, the legal incidents of marriage'.…”
Section: R V L and The Removal Of The Marital Immunity For Rapementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Marriage is to be defined by its intrinsic value and this value is to be found in friendship (love) and parenthood. For Finnis then, 'the moral importance of the marital act … is determined by its intrinsic procreative and unitive meanings, not by any instrumental, that is extrinsic meaning', 63 such as procreation.…”
Section: Christianity and Marriagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…These developments paved the way for romantic love. 63 Like courtly love, romantic love cherishes and idealises the love between men and women. It too ennobles lovers and sees love as ritualistic and spiritual, and as a means by which a oneness between lovers is created.…”
Section: Tristan and Iseult A Twelfth Century Poem Trans J H Caulkinsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…62 The coming together of love and marriage has been documented by Stephanie Coontz in her book Marriage, a History: How Love Conquered Marriage. 63 Coontz shows that the idea of marrying for love was a highly radical idea, which came to be accepted in the west by the end of the seventeenth century. Before this time, marriage served a variety of social, economic and political purposes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…She says, 'the High Court has taken judicial notice of a feature of the marital relationship which is highly unusual: a fully competent adult may choose to remain ignorant of her legal affairs without being careless, and this fact is notorious'. 63 58 Trust is discussed as an element of romantic love for another purpose in Delaney, 'Love and Loving Commitment' 342. 59 To date the defence has been very limited, although it has been applied to a child-parent relationship in To be successfully applied, therefore, Garcia requires a fact situation which 'hinges not on wrongdoing but on excusable ignorance' and where that excusable ignorance is a 'notorious feature of the relationship', 64 a 'normal and unremarkable incident' 65 of the relationship.…”
“…62 A report by UK Criminal Law Revision Committee in 1984 into marital rape took a similar view, arguing that marital rape was more of a problem for social workers than for the criminal law. 63 In R v L, Justice Brennan argued that the law of marriage is to be found in the ecclesiastical courts rather than the common law courts. He claims that a review of those relevant cases shows that connubial rights are an essential part of marriage but 'do not exhaust, the legal incidents of marriage'.…”
Section: R V L and The Removal Of The Marital Immunity For Rapementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Marriage is to be defined by its intrinsic value and this value is to be found in friendship (love) and parenthood. For Finnis then, 'the moral importance of the marital act … is determined by its intrinsic procreative and unitive meanings, not by any instrumental, that is extrinsic meaning', 63 such as procreation.…”
Section: Christianity and Marriagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…These developments paved the way for romantic love. 63 Like courtly love, romantic love cherishes and idealises the love between men and women. It too ennobles lovers and sees love as ritualistic and spiritual, and as a means by which a oneness between lovers is created.…”
Section: Tristan and Iseult A Twelfth Century Poem Trans J H Caulkinsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…62 The coming together of love and marriage has been documented by Stephanie Coontz in her book Marriage, a History: How Love Conquered Marriage. 63 Coontz shows that the idea of marrying for love was a highly radical idea, which came to be accepted in the west by the end of the seventeenth century. Before this time, marriage served a variety of social, economic and political purposes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…She says, 'the High Court has taken judicial notice of a feature of the marital relationship which is highly unusual: a fully competent adult may choose to remain ignorant of her legal affairs without being careless, and this fact is notorious'. 63 58 Trust is discussed as an element of romantic love for another purpose in Delaney, 'Love and Loving Commitment' 342. 59 To date the defence has been very limited, although it has been applied to a child-parent relationship in To be successfully applied, therefore, Garcia requires a fact situation which 'hinges not on wrongdoing but on excusable ignorance' and where that excusable ignorance is a 'notorious feature of the relationship', 64 a 'normal and unremarkable incident' 65 of the relationship.…”
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