I put the question on another thread--what's the big problem with objectification? Just because I sometimes view a woman as a sex object does not mean I can't also in other contexts view that same woman in other ways.
Gen replied with this link:
http://www.melted-dreams.net/definition/2006/03/14/but-dont-you-like-to-be-objectified-sometimes/
Here's my reply:
The implicit claim in the above statement though goes far beyond that, that the REAL WORLD object is there for no other purpose, and/or that the person doing the objectifying in one moment is unable to perceive the real world object in a different way in a different moment--or even in the SAME moment.
Human brains are complicated things that operate on multiple levels simultaneously. I will put his claim out there: I am able to look at a woman I'm fucking and simultaneously sexually objectify her, and I mean, really view her purely as an object for my sexual pleasure, and at that same moment also view her as my friend, an intelligent co-workers.
Yes, simultaneously: The human mind operates on more than one level and is capable of holding more than one thought at one moment. The human mind is not even very logical so it matters not whether or not there is some sort of conflict between the ideas.
People are complicated things. I really AM an object, to the extent that I am a physical thing in the world and other people are capable of physically interacting with me, manipulating me. I am an object in concept too for the same reason. That does not mean that is ALL that I am, the people that interact with me do so on many levels--physical, sexual, emotional, economic, intellectual, companionship.
This is arguing against fact, in my view.
So again what we have here is a conflation of the subjective fantasy of one person with the reality of another. The line of argument assumes that they are linked, but they are not linked--one exists in the real world, and the other exists only in the mind of the objectifier.
Just because someone objectifies me in one moment does not mean they will do so in the next moment. Moreover, they may simultaneously be objectifying me on one level, while interacting with me intellectually on another level.
The author supposes that these things are mutually exclusive but they are not mutually exclusive.
Gen replied with this link:
http://www.melted-dreams.net/definition/2006/03/14/but-dont-you-like-to-be-objectified-sometimes/
Here's my reply:
This is the basis of my issue: I don't agree with this statement. When we speak of sexual objectification we're speaking about fantasy. The object wasn't really made, other than in that moment as a mental concept. The mental concept exists only for sexual pleasure, and that is part of the fantasy.An object exists only for the purposes it was made
The implicit claim in the above statement though goes far beyond that, that the REAL WORLD object is there for no other purpose, and/or that the person doing the objectifying in one moment is unable to perceive the real world object in a different way in a different moment--or even in the SAME moment.
Human brains are complicated things that operate on multiple levels simultaneously. I will put his claim out there: I am able to look at a woman I'm fucking and simultaneously sexually objectify her, and I mean, really view her purely as an object for my sexual pleasure, and at that same moment also view her as my friend, an intelligent co-workers.
Yes, simultaneously: The human mind operates on more than one level and is capable of holding more than one thought at one moment. The human mind is not even very logical so it matters not whether or not there is some sort of conflict between the ideas.
That is wishful thinking in my view. People ARE objects. Moreover, people are sexual objects--at least in the eyes of the individuals who are fantasizing about fucking them, and this is true for men and women in both directions. Radical feminist lesbians when they fuck one another are at some level objectifying each other in that moment--or else they're not really getting off, in my view.people are not objects
People are complicated things. I really AM an object, to the extent that I am a physical thing in the world and other people are capable of physically interacting with me, manipulating me. I am an object in concept too for the same reason. That does not mean that is ALL that I am, the people that interact with me do so on many levels--physical, sexual, emotional, economic, intellectual, companionship.
Most of the time that's true, but at the moment that you consent to sex with another individual it is a physical fact that for the duration of that sexual experience you do in fact exist for that other person and you are in fact a source of pleasure for them.my body, my breasts, my vulva . does not exist for the pleasure of anyone but me
This is arguing against fact, in my view.
The author has not previously supported, in any way, the claim that objectification amounts to abuse. This is therefore an illogical jump in the line of argument--there is no reason to think that objectifying someone amounts to abusing them.Being objectified, being verbally or sexually abused, is often said to merely be the same thing as attraction
Here the author is confusing subject and object. Just because someone ELSE is objectifying me in a sexual moment does not mean that is how I feel. I may be simultaneously objectifying them, and very active. Just because you are objectifying me does not mean that I am submitting to anyting or being passive other than in your fantasy.There is something to be said for the desire to submit, the desire to be passive, in a sexual or romantic dynamic.
So again what we have here is a conflation of the subjective fantasy of one person with the reality of another. The line of argument assumes that they are linked, but they are not linked--one exists in the real world, and the other exists only in the mind of the objectifier.
This conflates moments in time and ignores the fact that humans operate on multiple levels even in a single moment.A real relationship allows for everyone involved to act however they like, to fill whatever role they like. Objectification does not. Objectification forces a role and a purpose onto the object
Just because someone objectifies me in one moment does not mean they will do so in the next moment. Moreover, they may simultaneously be objectifying me on one level, while interacting with me intellectually on another level.
The author supposes that these things are mutually exclusive but they are not mutually exclusive.
Again conflating someone else's fantays with reality--I do not lose any of my free will just because of a fantasy that exists only in your head.I am not willing to accept that anyone on Earth actually wants, of their own free will





