bobover3 (imported) wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2010 12:25 am
You're right that most sexual behavior isn't necessary for procreation, and that many people who don't reproduce feel lust. Still, the genetic/biological purpose of sexual desire is to encourage reproduction. Everything else that human beings make of it - emotional intimacy, social bond, romance, recreation, self-expression, etc. - is secondary and derivative. All this may be rewarding, but every species must propagate itself, and most (though not all) animals reproduce instinctively without the elaborate trappings human beings add. People might choose to reproduce because they understood the need, but dogs and cats wouldn't reproduce themselves without lust. Human beings are animals too, and our intellectual advances have not freed us from the instincts which governed our species' forebears. Biology is still destiny, no matter how we may chafe at that. I've never had children. That I've frustrated nature's purpose doesn't negate the existence of that purpose.
Your point being?
You're also right that lust sometimes leads to unwanted children. My response is that it leads to wanted children as well, who make up the core of the human population. Also, though it may sound harsh to say, the reproductive instinct is indifferent to our other feelings and cares. There is a blind drive to procreate, which sweeps away much else that we consider important.
Between love and lust, which one leads to more wanted children
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2010 12:25 am
, who make up the core of the human population?
Our species is at a point where we need to pay more heed to our mind and less to lust. We have not evolved this far to only consider primal instincts at the expense of other things as valuable, if not more so, than lust.
I am not sure I appreciate that when you make a statement you make it seem like you are speaking for the whole human race, of whom I am one of. If you insist that
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2010 12:25 am
the reproductive instinct is indifferent to our other feelings,
how come I, and truth be told, a large part of the human race seems to be able to hold it in check and not constantly engage in sexual activity? Why are most of us able to know when sexual behaviour is appropriate, why are most of us, even at the horniest of times, able to refrain from wanking off in a lift full of strangers? Because lust is NOT indifferent to our other wants and carse. Because, what you consider to be powerful, lust, is still subservient to an even more powerful emotion: sensibility. You constantly attempt to seperate lust, but you do not understand it cannot be seperated.
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2010 12:25 am
If lust is self-gratification, then it allies itself to a purpose which far transcends the self. The human condition is indeed absurd, and you may laugh or cry at it as you please, but denial will not help you.
But I don't deny anything. It is not like I do not engage in self-pleasure. As with everything in life, I say that its fine to do it as long as you do not affect others negatively or hurt others. You use a definition of lust that may have once been relevant WHEN the human race as a species did not have its survival assured numbers-wise, but things have changed, and you cannot hold onto that definition anymore. Lust is no longer about reproduction, it is about pleasure. The problem with pleasure is that its an inherently selfish thing. We, as intelligent beings, should seek to ensure that we should not end up hurting others in our pursuit of selfish pleasures. Or do you disagree with that sentiment?
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2010 12:25 am
We may disagree about this, but we should be able to keep our disagreement civil. I wrote that I "
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2010 12:25 am
20]
sometimes find myself attracted to Tgirls.
" This does not imply that Tgirls are anything other than an infrequent interest. I've always felt free to follow my feelings in matters of both love and lust. You may be surprised to hear that I'm an incurable romantic who's given much of his life to chaste loves, not the roue lusting after Tgirls you seem to imagine. The two great loves of my life were both virile men, neither of whom ever had sex with me. If you despise
[/quote]
men who chase Tgirls, then you have nothing against me.
What I am against are the admirers who frequent bars and pubs in their crusade to get their quick fix. Just as I have always said I despise the paedophiles who hurt others for their own selfish gratification, I admire those who can be good people despite what has to be said, is a trait unfortunately bestowed upon them by nature. If anything, given the degree of self-control a paedophile must need to never lay hands on a child or contribute to the child abuse/pornography industry, that is certainly deserving of more respect than can ever be given. Whatever they get up to inside their own heads, that tiny bit of privacy is theirs to own.
If you can proudly claim that despite your fetish for T-girls, you've never led any of them into the vicious circle of mistaking being lusted after as validation of their inner-self, then good for you, you're worthy of the respect I've mentioned above. You could even be a valuable tool for assisting with helping other fetishists to see that their inconsiderate actions are selfish and harmful to the transcommunity when it comes to the struggle to get the rest of mainstream society to see us for who we are: people, rather than see us all as a product of some dirty misguided lust because of a very small but very visible misled transgirls trapped in a vicious lust-validation circle.
You also need to remember that validation thru lust is like taking a drug. Soon they will need to be lusted more and more after for the same amount of validation. It is simply a destructive route for any tgirl to go down, especially given that we all age, and that generally attractiveness affecting lust decreases with age. If you also care
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2010 12:25 am
for us Tgirls then I hope you can see the sense in this.
All I've said is that I consider love and lust to be separate, and that I'm impatient with the rhetoric which extols love at the expense of lust, as if the two emotions were somehow in competition with one another. Freud spoke of "sublimation" - "to divert the energy of a sexual or other biological impulse from its immediate goal to one of a more acceptable social, moral, or aesthetic nature." I prefer to speak about human life without the polite evasions of sublimation. If you insist that lust is a "simple, base emotion," my response is to point to
the vast cultural edifice that has been built upon it.
You can't. That is just over simplifying things. Love and lust, like it or not, go best hand-in-hand. Lust can still exist independently, yes, but independent lust often are where problems stem from. You do not get my point, I am not extolling love at the expense of lust. I am PUTTING DOWN lust that is harmful.
As for lov
ot, and should not, be in competition with one another. They are complimentary, co-dependent.
To your response that there is a vast cultural edifice built upon lust, I reply that just because a complex culture has been built out of something does not mean that something itself is not a simple base emotion. Look at the need to eat. That is another simple base emotion, one borne out of survival instincts. Yet, dare you say that our culinary culture that has been built upon it is anything but complex and vast? The vastness, the complexity, the variety of our cultural edifice that rose from lust is not because lust itself is complex. Rather, it is because WE are complex beings, capable of taking the most simple of emotions,
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2010 12:25 am
and weaving the most complicated pictures as we perceive it.
In saying that love and lust should not be independent, the word "should" brings corruption. Wishes in defiance of biology and of human rea
lity only cause pain. We lie to ourselves at our peril.
Ok. I will amend the statement. Love and lust ARE best co-dependent. Unfortunately on one hand you talk about human biology and on the other, you quote freud. Lust is as much a psychological response as it is a biological one. Like I previously pointed out, wanting to pork someone fit you see does not arise out of a biological need to procreate today as much as recent as 100 years ago. We evolve, we evolve along the lines of how the entire species is doing, our minds can evolve, and to be fair, so can our biology, in a very subtle sense. What sounds hollow is when you talk about not defying our biology and human reality when the truth is, biology is no longer an adequate justification for lust, and human reality is that lust is now a product of a desire to satisfy oneself, not a desire to survive.
As for causing pain, I think you might want to rethink that statement when you meet a tgirl who has been drawn down the lust-validation vicious cycle. It is the thoughtless admirers, who, thru their selfishness and ignorance who cause more pain in the long run than any "prude" you might care to label, who understands what it genuinely means to identify as women, who does not buy into all that superficial "non-defiance of our biology" nonsense. Arguing with biology to justify lust is very dangerous and very ignorant, because it is precisely "biology" that has been used to argue against homosexuality and transsexualism as being unnatural.
Technically, denying oneself recognition of the truth is more the act considered lying, than understanding what drives lust and know
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2010 12:25 am
ing where to draw the line when embracing one's own lust.
I cher
ish love. I can not help but respect the power of lust.
I don't respect the power of lust in the same way you do. I respect it... as I would treat a loaded gun. Recognise its poten
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2010 12:25 am
tial to do harm, and be very careful when indulging in it.
You seem to be a very nice person. I hope that we can disagree
without your making hurtful assumptions about who I am.
I don't think I've made any hurtful assumptions about you, not publicly anyway, but I certainly am entitled to my own private thoughts. Thus far what I have posted in reply to you, is in response and rebuttal to the points, claims and statements you make, not personal attacks on you. Hopefully you can see that.