Norval D. Glenn. Sept/Oct. 2004. The Stuggle for Same-Sex Marriage. Society. Vol. 41 No. 6 p.25-28
Title: Norval D. Glenn. Sept/Oct. 2004. The Stuggle for Same-Sex Marriage. Society. Vol. 41 No. 6 p.25-28
Category: /Society & Culture
Details: Words: 315 | Pages: 1 (approximately 235 words/page)
Norval D. Glenn. Sept/Oct. 2004. The Stuggle for Same-Sex Marriage. Society. Vol. 41 No. 6 p.25-28
Category: /Society & Culture
Details: Words: 315 | Pages: 1 (approximately 235 words/page)
The moral legitimacy of marriage between two people of the same sex hinges on how the authoritative definition of marriage is derived. If marriage is to have a religious foundation, the interpretation of religious texts and traditions will be key; if marriage is a social institution or even a purely economic coupling, pragmatic arguments will have more force, though moral issues will no doubt still arise. Gay rights advocates assert that marriage is a civil
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learn early what we all know: that homosexuality is as permanent a feature of the human condition as heterosexuality. Nothing is gained in denying this. But neither should we deny that the two are inherently different. The gay marriage movement denies this difference in order to borrow "normalcy" from marriage. Thus, it is a movement born more of self-denial than self-acceptance, as if on some level it agrees with those who see gays as abnormal.