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Pornography: Formula for Despair.


On January 26 of this year, the Supreme Court of Canada The Supreme Court of Canada (French: Cour suprême du Canada) is the highest court of Canada and is the final court of appeal in the Canadian justice system.[1]  ruled that the country's law against child pornography Child pornography is the visual representation of minors under the age of 18 engaged in sexual activity or the visual representation of minors engaging in lewd or erotic behavior designed to arouse the viewer's sexual interest.  was constitutional; i.e., not opposed to the Charter of Rights. Viewing child pornography online, for example, is illegal under this legislation.

There is a body of water in Eastern Canada Eastern Canada (also the Eastern provinces) is the region of Canada generally considered to be east of Manitoba, consisting of the following provinces:
  • Ontario (1 July 1867)
  • Quebec (1 July 1867)
  • New Brunswick (1 July 1867)
  • Nova Scotia (1 July 1867)
 that has the improbable name of "Lake Despair". This sinister appellation ap·pel·la·tion  
n.
1. A name, title, or designation.

2. A protected name under which a wine may be sold, indicating that the grapes used are of a specific kind from a specific district.

3. The act of naming.
 is an accident of language. The French originally called it Lac d'espoir (Lake of Hope). English-speaking settlers in the region, accustomed to hearing only their own language, misperceived its name. And so it became known, culturally and cartographically Car`to`graph´ic`al`ly

adv. 1. By cartography.
, as Lake Despair. This type of metamorphosis occurs just as easily on a moral plane.

Pornography takes human sexuality, with its hope of love, fidelity, family, and fulfillment, and turns it into an empty and lifeless husk. It does this as a predator destroys its prey, by eviscerating sexuality of all its inherent grace. This transmogrification, which some mistake as emancipation, takes place through processes that are neither liberating or enriching, but depersonalizing, enslaving, self-destructive, preposterous, alienating, isolating, reductionistic.

The process can be subtle enough that, for some, it goes unnoticed. But ultimately, the difference between the reality of human sexuality and its residue in pornography is all the difference in the world. It is the difference between what "gift" means in English and what "Gift" (poison) means in German. Indeed, it is the difference between hope and despair, heaven and hell.

Depersonalizing

Pornography displaces love with lust. The fundamental reason that lust is listed as one of the Seven Deadly Sins is precisely that it gives pleasure primacy over the person. Lust prefers the experience of pleasure to the good of the person. Rather than loving the other, lust prefers to appropriate the other for the self. Such an inversion of proper values is at once unjust to the other who is regarded primarily as an instrument of pleasure, and destructive of the self in as much as it undermines his own nature as a loving being.

In his "Theology of the Body Theology of the Body refers to a series of 129 lectures given by Pope John Paul II during his Wednesday audiences in the Pope Paul VI Hall between September 1979 and November 1984. ," John Paul II John Paul II, 1920–2005, pope (1978–2005), a Pole (b. Wadowice) named Karol Józef Wojtyła; successor of John Paul I. He was the first non-Italian pope elected since the Dutch Adrian VI (1522–23) and the first Polish and Slavic pope.  states that lust "'depersonalizes' man, making him an object 'for the other'. Instead of being 'together with the other'--a subject in unity, in fact, in the sacramental unity 'of the body'--man becomes an object for man: the female for the male and vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. ." [1] With lust, the subjectivity of the person gives way to the objectivity of the body.

In his book The Case Against Pornography, David Holbrook argues that pornography is connected with the same processes of objectivization that are essential to the Galilean-Newtonian-Cartesian tradition that lower nature and man "to the status of dead objects". [2] Psychiatrist Leslie Farber and others have described the depersonalizing effects of pornography most vividly by stating that it transfers the fig leaf to the face. [3] Pornography is not interested in the face, through which personality shines, but the objectivized and devitalized de·vi·tal·ized
adj.
Devoid of vitality or life, as a tooth with destroyed pulp.
 body. Pornography represses personality and exalts the depersonalized, despiritualized body.

Enslaving

The process by which one objectivizes the other results in an objectivization of the self. This is the basis of slavery. "The enslaving of the other," writes Christian existentialist ex·is·ten·tial·ism  
n.
A philosophy that emphasizes the uniqueness and isolation of the individual experience in a hostile or indifferent universe, regards human existence as unexplainable, and stresses freedom of choice and responsibility for the
 Nikolai Berdyaev, "is also the enslaving of the self." [4] Viewing the other as a depersonalized, despiritualized object is incompatible with communion. Only through interpersonal communion is one liberated from the world that is enclosed in the material. "By objectivization," Berdyaev goes on to say, "the subject enslaves itself and creates the realm of determinism." [5]

Pornography enslaves by imprisoning people in the material. It also enslaves because it erodes personal freedom. "There are people who want to keep our sex instinct inflamed in order to make money out of us," wrote C. S. Lewis. "Because, of course, a man with an obsession is a man who has very little sales-resistance." [6]

A third way in which pornography enslaves is through chemical addiction. When the pornography addict indulges in his habit, the adrenal gland adrenal gland (ədrēn`əl) or suprarenal gland (sprərēn`əl), endocrine gland (see endocrine system) about 2 in. (5.  secretes the chemical epinephrine into the blood stream. According to David Caton, author of Pornography: The Addiction, epinephrine goes to the brain and assists in locking in the pornographic images. These locked-in images can result in severely changed behaviour, including an obsession with pornography that has much in common with chemical addiction. [7]

Self-destructive

The depersonalizing and enslaving effects of pornography are inevitably self-destructive. The high rate of suicides among pornography actresses is a graphic indication of this.

The notion of "stripping," especially when applied to the pornographic film, goes far beyond the act of disrobing. It represents the stripping away of inner qualities as well: character, moral values, shame, fundamental decency, restraint. The logical end-point of such pornographic stripping is the complete dissolution of the self. In this regard, pornography leads to sado-masochism and death, as illustrated in the infamous "snuff' films.

Canadian Business magazine reports that "Hard-core Capitalists" stand to make so much money in peddling illegal porn that they are undeterred by the criminal sanctions against it. One producer, that fittingly calls itself Dead Parrot Productions, caters to the appetite for sado-masochism and self-destruction. [8]

Preposterous

Preposterous, as its etymology etymology (ĕtĭmŏl`əjē), branch of linguistics that investigates the history, development, and origin of words. It was this study that chiefly revealed the regular relations of sounds in the Indo-European languages (as described  indicates (prae + posterius) means putting before, that which should come after. Trying to remove your socks before you have taken your shoes off, rather than after, is clearly preposterous. Pornography is preposterous because it puts sex before personhood per·son·hood  
n.
The state or condition of being a person, especially having those qualities that confer distinct individuality: "finding her own personhood as a campus activist" 
, lust before love, pleasure before conscience.

When Adam awakened from a deep sleep and looked upon a woman for the first time, he joyously exclaimed: "This at last is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh" (Gn. 2:23). He rightly understood that his partner was first and foremost a human being, like himself, and secondarily sexual. He did not exclaim ex·claim  
v. ex·claimed, ex·claim·ing, ex·claims

v.intr.
To cry out suddenly or vehemently, as from surprise or emotion: The children exclaimed with excitement.

v.
: "This at last is the opposite sex, a convenient instrument for my sexual gratification." The human relationship comes first; the sexual relationship must be grounded in personal love.

As a result of the Fall, Adam and Eve Adam and Eve

In the Judeo-Christian and Islamic traditions, the parents of the human race. Genesis gives two versions of their creation. In the first, God creates “male and female in his own image” on the sixth day.
 began to get things backwards. They experienced shame because they suddenly regarded each other first as sex objects and secondarily as persons. They then made aprons of fig leaves to cover themselves. Pornography and pornovision, by placing the part before the whole, sexuality before personality, is preposterous and therefore, in a sense, ludicrous.

Alienating

The porn world is not without rules. One cardinal rule is that its performers remain safely alienated from their clients. Because pornography is primarily centered on the despiritualized, depersonalized body, alienation is essential to it.

In the telephone sex industry, operators are instructed to advise customers who want to arrange a tryst that "company policy" forbids it. Also, because pornography in its various forms relies heavily on illusion, it cannot abide the light of realism. The voyeur voy·eur
n.
1. A person who derives sexual gratification from observing the naked bodies or sexual acts of others, especially from a secret vantage point.

2. An obsessive observer of sordid or sensational subjects.
 is obliged to remain an alienated spectator. The tenuous relationship between the voyeur and the exhibitionist exhibitionist /ex·hi·bi·tion·ist/ (ek?si-bish´in-ist) a person who indulges in exhibitionism.
exhibitionist An exhibitor exhibiting exhibitionism, see there
 evaporates once personality enters the picture. As C. S. Lewis pointed out in his Allegory of Love, lust seeks "for some purely sexual, hence purely imaginary conjunction of an impossible maleness with an impossible femaleness." [9]

Isolating

Alienation between people leads to the isolation of the self. This isolation of the self from a significant other and from community must not be confused with the right to privacy. Privacy means two things. In the first sense, it is contrasted with what is public. Sexual intimacy between husband and wife is private in this sense. John Paul II has rightly criticized pornography and pornovision for violating this legitimate right to privacy of the body. [10]

On the other hand, privacy can refer to self-isolation, withdrawing from social encounters. Pornography violates legitimate privacy and encourages the illegitimate privacy of isolation. It exposes a personal privacy that should be protected, while it promotes an isolated privacy that should be avoided. Consequently, it is highly injurious in·ju·ri·ous  
adj.
1. Causing or tending to cause injury; harmful: eating habits that are injurious to one's health.

2.
 to marriage and the family, often leaving spouses, particularly husbands, isolated from the rest of their kin.

Reductionistic

Pornography reduces the person to a thing. Perhaps a more revealing way of putting it is to say that pornography exchanges a name for a number. Hence its preoccupation with numbers: the size of the organs, the duration of intercourse, the number of partners, the frequency and intensity of orgasm. The so-called "vital statistics" do not denote life as such as much as a person reduced to a thing.

Mechanization mechanization

Use of machines, either wholly or in part, to replace human or animal labour. Unlike automation, which may not depend at all on a human operator, mechanization requires human participation to provide information or instruction.
, which invariably in·var·i·a·ble  
adj.
Not changing or subject to change; constant.



in·vari·a·bil
 stamps things with sameness, has a strong affinity with pornography. They are both highly impersonal processes whose language is not of names, but of numbers. Pornography forces the impression upon the imagination that a human being is not an individualized in·di·vid·u·al·ize  
tr.v. in·di·vid·u·al·ized, in·di·vid·u·al·iz·ing, in·di·vid·u·al·iz·es
1. To give individuality to.

2. To consider or treat individually; particularize.

3.
 person, but an amalgam of parts. One of the more pernicious consequences of the Freudian reduction of the person to conflicting parts is the willingness to ascribe rights to its most basic part, namely, the id. O. Hobart Mowrer has inveighed against Freudianism for "championing the rights of the body in opposition to a society and moral order which were presumed to be unduly harsh and arbitary." [11] Nonetheless, a human being is not a conflict of parts but a dynamic whole that has a communal nature and a personal destiny.

The porn industry, with its words, voices, and videos, is, indeed, a formula for despair. From its very essence springs the need to create the illusion that the body is in fundamental conflict with the unified person. Its unremitting aim is to bring about a condition of utter shamelessness through the gradual annihilation of authentic personality.

Pope John Paul's response, in his "Theology of the Body," to the wave of pornography that is sweeping over the world, is to remind us of Christ's words in the Sermon on the Mount Sermon on the Mount

Biblical collection of religious teachings and ethical sayings attributed to Jesus, as reported in the Gospel of St. Matthew. The sermon was addressed to disciples and a large crowd of listeners to guide them in a life of discipline based on a new law of
 and to elaborate their meaning: "Blessed are the pure of heart, for they shall see God" (Mt. 5:8).

Dr. Donald DeMarco is professor of philosophy at St. Jerome's University Saint Jerome's University is a public Roman Catholic university in Waterloo, Ontario. It is federated with the University of Waterloo.

St. Jerome's, within the University of Waterloo, combines academics and a residence. Students may both reside at and take classes through St.
 within the University of Waterloo The University of Waterloo (also referred to as UW, UWaterloo, or Waterloo) is a medium-sized research-intensive public university in the city of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. The school was founded in 1957. , Waterloo, ON.

Footnotes

(1.) John Paul II, The Theology of the Body (Boston, MA: Pauline Books & Media. 1997, p.27

(2.) David Holbrook et al. The case Against Pornography (La Salle, IL: Library Press, 1972

(3.) Cited in Rollo May, Love and Will (New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, NY: W.W. Norton & Company, 1969, p.57

(4.) Nikolai Berdyaev, Slavery and Freedom (New York, NY: Scribner's Sons, 1944, p.6

(5.) Ibid., p.6

(6.) C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity (London: Collins, 1996, p.88

(7.) David Caton, "Former addict offers pointers for conquering the porn habit," AFA AFA

In currencies, this is the abbreviation for the Afghanistan Afghani.

Notes:
The currency market, also known as the Foreign Exchange market, is the largest financial market in the world, with a daily average volume of over US $1 trillion.
 Journal, Feb. 1989, p.7

(8.) Lisa Jeffrey, "Hard-core Capitalists," Canadian Business, Nov. 1984, p.44

(9.) C.S. Lewis, The Allegory of Love (New York, NY: Oxford university Press, 1958, p.96

(10.) John Paul, Op. Cit., p. 222

(11.) O. Hobard Mowrer, The Crisis in Psychiatry and Religion (New York, NY: D. van Nostrand, 1996, p.92
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Author:DeMarco, Donald
Publication:Catholic Insight
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Jun 1, 2001
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