Koldo
Outstanding Member
Well "emotional infidelity" if such a term exists, seems to be apparent.
In masturbation?
Not really.
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Well "emotional infidelity" if such a term exists, seems to be apparent.
Well "emotional infidelity" if such a term exists, seems to be apparent.
Not in my view. Emotional infidelity to me is much more than just fantasizing about someone else. We're only human, and we have strong sexual desires.
In masturbation?
Not really.
How so?
What? You have a really distorted view of things. :sarcastic
There is clearly a lot of difference.
Then break up with the person and move on. The point is that you should bring it up. If the other person is OK with it, then great. If not, and they don't want to be with you if you want to sleep with other people, then they need to be given that option.
I want to clarify before I respond. By "serial monogamist" do you mean someone who starts a relationship with one person and breaks up with them after a while and moves on to someone else and keeps repeating that? If so, you could call that sleeping around, if the person does it enough. But it's not cheating in any sense.
Now one also shouldn't just keep breaking up with people to sleep with other people. That shows a lack of respect and an inability to take a relationship seriously, that is, if it's a consistent thing.
I don't think talking strictly in a biological sense is helpful. In a biological sense, nothing is morally wrong.
Well "only human" seems to be an excuse to validate fantasizing about someone else.
Similarly a cheater may use the excuse "I have needs" to validate infidelity in a non-sexual relationship.
If you cheat on your spouse or partner, they never find out, and you don't contract any diseases, etc, is it wrong? Why?
Is there any case that it isn't wrong? Is there any case that it can be beneficial?
For all intents and purposes, this makes sense. But why is breaking up and then picking another partner necessarily better?
Is this not culture that has imposed this value on us? I'm not saying that cheating is automatically okay, but rather that these morals are partially, if not totally, social constructs.
In a sense, yes. But we cannot deny biology's role in this, or any other human behavior. Otherwise we lose sight of the driving mechanisms of the behaviors.
If I'm hearing you right, I agree that how often one must change partners to consider it as serial monogamy, is subjective. But I believe that in quite a few cases, polyamory is a much better lifestyle than repeatedly dumping and finding one partner at a time.
Strong resistance from society is what degrades polyamory into cheating: If someone *needs* multiple partners to be satisfied, but society imposes these artificial mores that doing so is "bad," then that breeds an environment that encourages cheating. Repression of sexuality is being and has been tried, and it fails miserably, time after time. That, in my opinion, is the real culprit of cheating, not people who can't "choose" to control their innate desires.
you always have the option to at least discuss it with your partner first. Just going through with it without doing that is what makes it cheating.
Not trying to be repetitive, but just making sure i didn't misunderstand you the first time. This rule of course doesn't apply literally always, right?
I mean it does, except for at least the two cases we agreed upon, right?
Yes, in extreme situations like your partner being in a coma and in situations where you have been relieved of your responsibility due to the actions of your partner, it does not apply.
Because here (and particularly the second example) the promise can be justly broken and not telling the partner can be justified, thanks.
Just trying to understand & reinforce the point, because this has been my point the entire thread, i hope you didn't mind my repeated question.
I'm not sure I'd call it breaking the promise in those cases. I think the agreement between two committed people is that they'll be faithful as long as the other person does their part in the relationship (not abusing their partner, etc.) and to a reasonable degree - meaning if the other person is presumed dead (in a case like war), is actually dead or in a long-term coma, the promise ends.
Everyone pretty much agrees that the death of one partner frees the living partner from their promise (unless the promise specifically included even after death, obviously). I think other things like long-term comas act the same way as death there.
Is it really so hard to believe? The goal of nearly every living creature is to survive and reproduce. Nothing else matters. The constant drive to satisfy these two goals of life is as basic as life itself.
Its a violation of trust if the other person is under the expectation that both parties in the relationship are going to be loyal to one another. If you aren't happy with your current relationship and want to be with someone else or on your own then have the guts to be honest with the other person rather than dallying around behind their back.
Certainly a lofty position, and one I once strongly adhered to.
The result was that my friends who went "dallying around" are still happily married, while I took a financial, emotional and social bath by having the "guts to be honest"...
james