ImmortalFlame
Woke gremlin
Nobody is saying it should be "unrestrained". Just that such restraints ought to be reasonable. History has shown that regressive and overly-puritanical restrictions on sex and sexuality are universally destructive.I do not think that having sex for pleasure is a bad thing in and of itself; pleasure remains a valid instigation to sexual activity, but when that impetus is unrestrained it must lead to problems.
Why do you care if some people devote more time to it or not? It doesn't affect you. I, personally, don't care what people choose to preoccupy their thoughts with, be it sex, gardening, philosophy or painting wax chickens. All things can be excessive, and that excess can always result in harm, but sex is not a preoccupation that is unique in that regard.Again, the defect does not lie in sex itself, but rather in the amount of mental and physical resource devoted to it.
Any actual facts to support that? Modern, western society is currently more productive, powerful and expansive than any society has ever been in all of history. What are we losing, exactly, by having the freedom as individuals to pursue whatever pleases us?My feelings about engaging in sex for the pleasure of it must be understood within the context of my general philosophy of life. I believe, as did Kierkegaard and others, that a life lived primarily in the pursuit of pleasure is one of irresponsibility and what used to be called “dissipation”. Kierkegaard’s opus Either/Or deals with this in some detail, and the continual pursuit of (tactile, auditory, visual, etc.) stimulative pleasure would seem to me to be one of the major problems in modern, western society, with everybody wanting to continually be made to “feel good” while ignoring responsibilities and purpose.
ALL things are only good "within certain bounds". The question is where those bounds OUGHT to be.Within such a philosophical context, the idea of having sex for stimulative pleasure is only a good thing within certain bounds.
And yet modern, western society has never been more productive, wealthier or more influential.In short, I feel that the pursuit of sensual pleasure is good on occasion, but is bad for being irresponsible when pursued as a way of life. In this, the problem is not sex or pleasure, but is self-indulgence. Modern western societies seem extraordinarily self-indulgent.
So, maybe your analysis is flawed?