Instigator / Pro
7
1516
rating
9
debates
55.56%
won
Topic
#2680

Homosexuality is not moral

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
3
0
Better sources
2
2
Better legibility
1
1
Better conduct
1
0

After 1 vote and with 4 points ahead, the winner is...

Wagyu
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
20,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
3
1504
rating
2
debates
50.0%
won
Description

THBT : Homosexuality Is Not Moral

Moral = of or relating to principles of right and wrong in behavior

Homosexuality = the quality or fact of being sexually attracted to people of the same sex as you:

Wagyu's burden of proof: "Homosexuality Is Not Moral"
Contender's burden of proof: "Homosexuality Is Moral"

General Rules:
1. No new arguments in the last round
2. Sources should be posted in the debate rounds, hyperlinked or otherwise
3. Burden of Proof is shared

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

RDF

Conduct:
This is the very first thing I'd like to address, as both debaters have arguments regarding whether or not Pro's argument should be considered "presented in bad faith". I find the views of Con regarding to the definition of Moral and what they find the resolution to be about, compared to Con's views on the Pro's "bad-faith"-ness to be contradictory. Con found Pro's interpretation of the debate that pro's goalpost was to prove that it was unrelated to morals as bad, yet whenever pressed for the definition of moral, fell back on the "related to moral principles"....

If you use that definition of moral, then Pro's entire side of the debate is the only one Pro could make, that Homosexuality is unrelated to morality. However, from this, we know that Con actually uses Pro's definition of Morality - relating to the right principles of morality. So this whole thing should tell us two things: That any claim of "bad conduct" is coming from a hypocritical definition of moral, and that Con is awfully shifty with their definitions. I actually deduct the conduct point from Con because they are so insistent that Pro should be penalized. As they obviously support a definition of morality that would have absolutely no problem with Pro's position.

Argument:
Now that that long take on the conduct is done, we can get into the actual arguments of the debate, and we can actually factor in Con's extremely low standard for evidence. They conclude that anything even involving morality as a claimed aspect should be rendered "related". I really don't buy this reasoning, as though Pro's specific claim of chocolate cake isn't the most compelling, the general principle behind the argument is. The core point being - just because some guy claimed something to be moral or immoral, that doesn't mean that the thing is implicitly moral. I find Con's argument less than compelling as they seem to have no real weight behind their arguments. Saying that eating the cake is immoral because the ingredients could have been collected in a immoral way? That seems loose at best, not to mention that their arguments that the mental sphere is damaged seem to be caused by external factors. As Pro points out.

The next look we should take is that the definition of moral is pretty much what Pro claims it to be, heck, even Con used that very definition of moral whenever trying to get a conduct point from Pro. This seems that everyone on the debate actually agrees with this definition and Con is being obtuse in only using the broad definition. Even if Pro presented a definition, clearly that definition isn't the best of the debate, as Pro shows with a very clear demonstration that the majority of the definitions of moral all support his side. It seems likely to me that the benefit of the doubt should be handed to pro in this sense, as no where except for the description does Pro actually contradict his idea of the definition of moral.

The next argument we should take is the argument over the considerations of what is moral, and saying: "A youtuber said this unproved thing" isn't enough to dismantle it, with Pro even clarifying why he used the table and why it applies in later rounds, with no compelling rebuttal from Con. From this we can get into the two spheres - is it an action being taken consciously, which Pro's sourcing brigade seems to prove that is not quite handedly. The second condition is whether the homosexuality affected well-being, perhaps this is where I would differ from Con very much, but we must go off what was actually argued in the debate itself, and in the debate itself, Con presented no proper rebuttal for Pro's arguments, at least not in any comprehensive sense.

From those main contentions, I would Pro wins this point.