I would also like to know why. As I think about it I would say it brings lots of risks when you marry. Still you can justify your sexual needs and so you feel more balanced isn't it? However it also may bring more positive things like someone takes care of you when you get to desperate situation in your life. The problem I have here is that Human males are not monogamous...
I got married for love, companionship, and a life time commitment.
The last one is the logical kicker the first two are just help balance my emotions with my need for a sexual relationship.
Also, as long as my marriage is faithful I have little need to fear of STDs.
I would also like to know why. As I think about it I would say it brings lots of risks when you marry. Still you can justify your sexual needs and so you feel more balanced isn't it? However it also may bring more positive things like someone takes care of you when you get to desperate situation in your life. The problem I have here is that Human males are not monogamous...
I am monogamous and I am quite sure that I am both human and male.
This is not to say I would never be temped not to be monogamous but I hope I would be mature enough to deal with my basic sexual urges responsibly.
Why would one want to even pretend to commit for the rest of one's life? What if one or one's partner changes, thereby rendering the marriage unworkable? Divorce is possible, but if one knew that such an event were possible, then why ever profess a lifetime commitment? For the sake of enjoyment, relationships should last as long as both parties gain from them, and no longer.
As for STD's, isn't the better option simply openness? That is, any number of people can have sex if they all know who their partners are having sex with.
-Duxwing
Why do we marry?
Marriage originally began as a business contract, and was later repurposed to be about love. So really, like anything else, it can be traced back to our pocket books. And even if it is about love or sex, it is still done for purposes of a perceived mutual advantage.
In older times, it was the advantage of the family, for political or financial gain, not in the interests of the bride, but likely the husband and father of the bride. In modern times, it is done out of a spirit of similar advantage, but only between the two parties involved in the marriage, the husband and wife.
If it is about sex, it is about securing a partner of regular availability, and one that is claimed and secured. It is a matter of sexual convenience. If about love, it is about intimacy derived from assured exclusivity. If it is about money, it is likely about taxes, or otherwise reduced expense, or perhaps older notions of political gain. It is likely that all three, or four, motivators are at work here.
This guaranteed exclusivity that comes with marriage also potentially makes procreation easier, as one has the protection and division of labor that comes with their partner. It is easier to raise a child between two responsible people than one.
Why do children have to be raised only by their parents, shouldn't the whole world voluntarily and cooperatively raise younger generations?
Marriage is a scam, why do you need the label of "married" to reproduce or have a committed relationship with someone? I am committed to family and yet I don't have a contract to prove it. Same with my relationship with my Company, and if i quit I don't have to go to a judge to justify myself. OH HONORABLE PLEASE VALIDATE MY DISCOMFORT
Why would the whole world voluntarily and cooperatively raise your children? Personal responsibility is important.
You don't need to be labels married to reproduce or have a committed relationship with someone. At least not were I live I am not sure were you live so I can't be 100% sure.
Anyway all you need to reproduce is to have sex. Marriage is a about security and commitment. Having sex is just about sex.
And that same security and commitment cannot be achieved by a simple question, "Will you help me raise the kids and take care of me when I'm hurt?"
-Duxwing
Why would the whole world voluntarily and cooperatively raise your children? Personal responsibility is important.
You don't need to be labels married to reproduce or have a committed relationship with someone. At least not were I live I am not sure were you live so I can't be 100% sure.
Anyway all you need to reproduce is to have sex. Marriage is a about security and commitment. Having sex is just about sex.
And that same security and commitment cannot be achieved by a simple question, "Will you help me raise the kids and take care of me when I'm hurt?"
-Duxwing
This is true you can take this approach if you wish. However, if you are willing to make it work then what does it hurt to make it official.
I am not saying you have to or your should even.
Of course it can, but because marriage is legally binding, it ensures security. The non marital agreement is easy to get out of, as it has no legal or contractual basis. Marriage adopts the coercive power of the legal system to keep the other party tied.
Ironically, when a marriage has gone wrong, this same framework imprisons the harmed within the binding framework of the marriage.
That's the point that we're arguing about, so if you can't demonstrate the necessity of marriage, then concede that you can't.
-Duxwing
The party attempting to escape can always file a no-fault divorce, and palimony laws exist to prevent what you've described.
This is why I think that marriage ought to be abolished. It's needless bureaucracy.
-Duxwing
I've been with the same guy for 18 years. We have 3 kids together. We prefer to not be married. We don't need anyone to tell us our monogomous relationship is official. I think its better this way. No one feels forced to stick around. If for any reason one of us wants to leave, we can. I also believe that our friendship is deep enough for us to settle things fairly if we do split up.
Having an "official" marriage is costly to start and costly to end. Plus its based in fear and not love if you ask me. Do you not trust your partner enough to do the right thing? I do...whether we decide to stay togethet or not.
You asked why do we get married? That was the question. I answered why we get married. You didn't ask why you should get married or if everyone should get married. Therefore you are switching the debate in an attempt to win.
This is pointless and very childish.
I would argue that everyone one should get married or you should get married.
For me personally it a religious moral commitment that goes beyond sex, children, barring and taking care of each other when we are sick.
If you are arguing for the league idea of marriage to be removed I would agree.
I still think there should be some other law maybe civil unions or something close to that, that can protect people interests if they are in a long term committed relationship. (I.E. Death rights and property rights type of things).
I think marriage is mostly a religious ceremony that celebrates the union of two people and god.
Therefore I don't see the point in it for atheist.
I mean this with complete respect and everything. If atheist wish to throw a marriage party for joining into a committed relationship that cool to it not a religious thing then.
Your tone seemed positive, so I wanted to see if you were arguing "should" rather than "why". I do apologize about not having mentioned that. Now I've got egg on my face.
Hey, wait a minute! So you do think that it's a good idea. At least I wasn't wrong about that.
Ah, I think that I understand your idea better now.
-Duxwing
Marriage is quite an efficient system really. It's one of the commonest forms of legal agreements. We could have customised marriage contracts instead, but most people would still go for a stock one even if that were the case.
Monogamy is also quite useful; it's fair and ensures that the majority of humans manage to get sexually satisfied. To allow polyandry or polygyny would naturally result in some people being deprived of a sexual partner.
Sorry, I hope you realize that was a typo. I meant to say Wouldn't not would. My brain reacts way faster then my fingers sometimes and I get ahead of myself this is the main reason for my poor grammar.
What makes it worse is that may memory for what I intended to say was also very good. Therefore when I reread my posts it looks right to me. My mind is playing tricks on me. I do generally see the errors latter on however, by this time the post has already been up and read a few times (meaning a lot).
My most common grammar errors are missing whole segments of sentence. Repeating a part of the sentence twice. Missing contractions and similar things that I just over look. My spelling mistakes are almost always using the wrong word this is because I use spell check and auto corrects my words most of the time. Spelling is also a weak point for me. My grammar in real life isn't that bad. However, when I post on hear I am normally typing fast and thinking faster. This adds up to some confusing sentences I realize.
This is not a justification just and explanation how someone who is otherwise a component write could come across so dull and dense on these forums.
My tone seems fine to me, but it always seems fine to me; thus, I am left groping in the dark for the holy grail of tone.
Why do we marry?
P.S. Do I sound condescending in delivering this advice? My tone seems fine to me, but it always seems fine to me; thus, I am left groping in the dark for the holy grail of tone.
Who is "we"? The posters on INTPf? INTPs? Atheists? Americans? Westerners? I don't know why anyone here got married, unless they told me, just like I don't know why anyone here signed a job contract, unless they told me. Job contracts are needless bureaucracy. So are programming development models. So is any protocol, such as TCP/IP. It's all needless bureaucracy.Dear Forum,
Why do we marry?
Who ees thees Duxweeng, who I shud -- how do I say eet -- mar-ree?
Ees he cute? Eees he reeeech? Mayhaps we weel make bootiful -- how do I say eet -- mooseeq togethair?
* heart heart heart squee heart heart lots of hearts and puppies and kitties and excitement oh my pitterpatteepitterpattying*
If I was cool enough to keep quotes as signatures I would definitely, definitely keep this one.
I would argue that monogamy is something intrinsic to some people. Some people might not know they have monogamous tendencies because they just haven't met someone compatible enough with them to desire to bond with that person exclusively. Other people may in fact be polyamorous and so a lifetime bond with one mate may not be the right thing for them.
*chik, chi-chuk* *shoulders his Remington 870, lining the ESFP up in his sights*
Get off my lawn.
-Duxwing
During the epoch of anatomically modern humans, long after we split from earlier primate ancestors, but long, long before the Neolithic and our tendency to settle, there were advantages for offspring in being provisioned by both mother and supportive allomothers. Sometimes those supportive allomothers were sisters or other female relatives of the mother, but, when the father of the offspring would stick around, the offspring tended to have a greater chance at surviving to his/her own reproductive age than otherwise.
So, monogamy, at least, evolved as a behavior that had reproductive fitness advantages.
Over time, when people began abandoning nomadic lifestyles for agrarian ones (and every group on the planet, sooner or later, did this, but for a tiny handful that either were wiped out or otherwise absorbed by other groups), spacing between births decreased as females were better provisioned and had lower caloric loss due to physical labor (which was still intense, just less so than as a nomad). As spacing between births decreased, females tended to have perhaps 5 offspring in a lifetime, rather than 3. Over time, this led to larger communities, a need for division of labor, etc., etc. It also led to patriarchal needs that previously were easier to overlook. No male primates (and this is also true for most mammals) have an interest in raising offspring on their own. There are endocrinological means for being aware of such things, but, they're unreliable. The mother and others in the community had 100% certitude of maternity, but no such certitude of paternity.
So, since males wanted a guarantee, but neither males nor females evolved to be monogamous (except serially, to raise a single offspring, when it was advantageous to do so), so, males developed rules to guarantee paternity. (We can see similar rules in other primates, and other mammals, but, they are most developed in humans, and in settled rather than nomadic humans.)
As we're a symbolic species, we have a tendency to mythologize, rationalise, and seek meaning for things. So, we made up rules of marriage as well, and chose to force them to conform to the rules that helped establish the patriline. (Interestingly, in the US, after Bacon's Rebellion, we see a similar issue develop along lines of color instead of sex.)
Anyway, today, many people marry for reasons having to do with this ancient history, which itself was swallowed up by other meaning-seeking systems, like religion and government. People like to believe that there is meaning in life. People like to believe that things are "meant to be" or "supposed to be" one way or another. There are, of course, reasons for this as well. But, for the vast majority of people, reasons to marry are tied into all of this stuff.
For some, of course, marriage is something else. And, for many of them, what marriage is for one pair, it isn't for another.
I think the answers are too broad to cover. Social convention, religion, love, economics, status, hormones etc. Basically the same reasons that humans do anything.
Perhaps the economists amongst us will find joy in this paper. http://www.csom.umn.edu/Assets/71503.pdf
The broad idea is that sex is a female resource which by males (the article only discusses heterosexual relations) for various amounts of commitment and discusses how this market, the price of sex so you will has fallen, due to various social changes, the widespread use of contraception etc and the implications this then has on human relationships.
I can't help but feel a little skeptical with respect to this theory's explanatory power, but it is fascinating nonetheless![]()
All true. Still I would look for "reasons of power." Power in physics = the rate of transfer of energy. Energy = the ability to do work. These look like good defs to apply to marriage.There's so many reasons people get married. Looking at the particular reasons for marriage in particular instances is what has fueled many a gossip mag. "She married him for the x", but "he married her because y".