Saturday 24 August 2013

Love and Responsibility Sydney Week 1: Getting the Foundation Right - Real Friendship

Plug for L&R!

Did you know that in 2012 the most popular "How to?" search in Google in Australia was "How to love?" People are confused. In an age where the more we attempt to feel technologically "connected", the more isolated we become, and the more we seek to find intimacy and fulfilment in sex, the more disillusioned and heartbroken we become. The only solution for widespread social change is to radically rethink our conceptions of how to go about fostering authentic relationships of all kinds. Karol Wojtyla's books Love and Responsibility provides us with one way of doing that, and L&R is a series of discussion groups on each of the chapters of this book.

Week 1 has been and gone already, and it focused essentially on the fundamentally important principle that every human being has a unique dignity, and is an end in themselves. They should be treated as such, and therefore there is no situation in which it is ok to use another person for our own ends. It also became evident a while that people were conflating intimacy with non-use, and so a good way to think about how we go about all our daily interactions with people is that we should see every interaction as an opportunity to love. Some people we may only get one opportunity to love them, with others we will have many. If we strive to seize each of these opportunities, our relationships can only flourish. (All this will probably make more sense when you've done the reading, below.)


Taking place in the heart of SYD every Tuesday in the UNDA Courtyard, these weekly social discussion forums for young adults will inspire you to grow in your understanding of love and flourish in your relationships. 

Reading for Tuesday 20th August 

What could a young Polish priest professor really teach anyone about love, sexuality, and relationships between men and women?

That's the question Fr. Karol Wojtyla (hereafter referred to as Karol), addressed in the introduction to his book, Love and Responsibility (L&R). Published in 1960, this book was the fruit of his extensive pastoral work with young people and his reflections on this topic while teaching in Krakow — long before the world would come to know him as Pope John Paul II.

In Love and Responsibility, Karol argues that while he may lack direct experience in marriage and sexuality, he has something that gives him an even wider perspective on these matters: a broad “second-hand experience.” As an advisor who worked closely with many young adults and married couples amidst their struggles in love and sexuality, Karol was able to draw from the experiences of a wide range of personalities, relationships, and marriages in a way that the average person could not. L&R is the fruit of this rich pastoral experience as well as his own reflections on love, sex, and marriage.

Let’s begin!

The Personalist Principle

Karol’s first major task in L&R is to lay out what he calls the “personalist principle.” According to this foundational principle for relationships, “a person must not be merely the means to an end for another person”. In other words, we should never treat the people in our lives as mere instruments to achieving our own purposes.

He explains why this is so. We are capable of self-determination. Unlike animals that act according to their instincts and appetites, persons can act deliberately. Through self-reflection, persons can choose a course of action for themselves and assert their “inner self” to the outside world through their choices. To treat a human person merely as an instrument for my own purposes is to violate the dignity of the person as a self-determining being. “[E]very person is by nature capable of determining his or her aims. Anyone who treats a person as the means to an end does violence to the very essence of the other”.

Loving or Using?

What makes it difficult to live out this basic principle for human relationships is the spirit of utilitarianism that pervades our society. In this view, the best human actions are those that are most useful. And what is useful is what maximizes my pleasure and comfort and minimizes my pain. The underlying assumption is that happiness consists in pleasure. Therefore, I should always pursue whatever brings me comfort, advantage, and benefit, and avoid whatever may cause me suffering, disadvantage, and loss.

This utilitarian view affects the way we relate to one another. If my main goal in life is to pursue my own pleasure, then I weigh my choices in life in light of how much they lead me to this goal. Hence, many people today may evaluate a relationship in terms of how useful a person is for me to achieve my goals or how much “fun” I have with this person. Karol says that once these utilitarian attitudes are adopted, we begin to reduce the people in our lives to objects to use for our own pleasure.

This helps explain why many friendships and “dating” relationships (and even marriages) today are so fragile and so easily dissolved. If I value a woman only insofar as she is advantageous for me to know or only to the extent that I derive some pleasure from being with her, then there is not much of a foundation for the relationship. As soon as I cease to experience pleasure or benefit from my time with her — or as soon as I can find more pleasure or benefit with someone else — she no longer is valuable to me. This view is quite far from the personalist principle and even farther from a relationship of committed love.

Love and Friendship

Here, it may be helpful to mention the different kinds of friendship according to Aristotle.

For Aristotle, there are three kinds of friendship based on three kinds of affection that unite people. First, in a friendship of utility, the affection is based on the benefit or use the friends derive from the relationship. Each person gets something out of the friendship that is to his advantage, and the mutual benefit of the relationship is what unites the two people.

For example, many work-related friendships fall under this category. Let's say Bob owns a construction company in Newcastle. He has a friendship with Sam on the Central Coast because Sam sells the kind of nails that Bob needs at the best price. For their business exchanges, Bob and Sam see each other a few times a year, talk on the phone about once a week, and email each other regularly. Over the years of doing business together, they have learned about each other's careers, families, and interests. They get along together well and sincerely wish each other all the best in life. They are friends, but what unites them is the particular benefit they each receive from the friendship: nails for Bob and sales for Sam.

Second, in a pleasant friendship the basis of affection is the pleasure one gets out of the relationship. One sees the friend as a cause of some pleasure for himself. This friendship is primarily about “having fun together.” The friends may listen to the same music, play the same sport, enjoy the same form of exercise, live in the same dormitory, or like to hang out at the same nightclub. The two people may sincerely care about each other and wish each other well in life, but what unites them as friends is primarily the pleasure or “good times” they experience together.

Fragile Foundations

Aristotle notes that while the useful and pleasant friendships are basic forms of friendship, they do not represent friendship in the fullest sense. Useful and pleasant friendships are not necessarily bad but they are the most fragile. They are the least likely to stand the test of time because when the mutual benefits or “fun times” no longer exist, there is nothing left to unite the two people. For example, if Sam leaves the nail selling business to go sell books, what will happen to his friendship with Bob now that he no longer sells the nails Bob needs? Sam and Bob may still exchange Christmas cards and emails every once in a while, but since they no longer need to communicate regularly for their business transactions, their friendship most likely will begin to dissolve. The relationship is no longer mutually useful.

Similarly, in the pleasant friendship, when one person's interests change or they move away and are no longer around to share “good times,” the friendship is likely to fade. This helps explain why friendships among young people shift so often. As they move from high school to college to the professional world, they mature and their interests, values, moral convictions, and geographical locations tend to undergo many changes. If their friendships in these transitional years are not based on something more profound than simply the fact that they happened to live in the same dorm, play the same sport, take the same class, and have a lot of fun together, their friendships are likely to dissolve over time.

Such friendships based on having “good times” together are unlikely to continue when those pleasurable experiences are no longer able to be shared.

Virtuous Friendship

For Aristotle, the third form of friendship is friendship in the fullest sense. It can be called virtuous friendship because the two friends are united not in self-interest, but in the pursuit of a common goal: “the good life,” the moral life that is found in virtue.

The problem with useful and pleasant friendships is that the emphasis is on what I get out of the relationship. However, in the virtuous friendship, the two friends are committed to pursuing something outside themselves, something that goes beyond their self-interests. And it is this higher good that unites them in friendship. Striving side-by-side toward the good life and encouraging one another in the virtues, the true friend is primarily concerned not with what he gets out of the friendship, but with what is best for his friend and with pursuing the virtuous life with his friend.

What Makes or Breaks a Relationship

With this background in mind, Karol gives us the key that will prevent our relationships from falling into the self-centred waters of utilitarianism. He says the only way two human persons can avoid using each other is to relate in pursuit of a common good, as in the virtuous friendship. If the other person sees what is good for me and adopts it as a good for himself, “a special bond is established between me and this other person: the bond of a common good and of a common aim”. This common aim unites people internally. When we don't live our relationships with this common good in mind, we inevitably will treat the other person as a means to an end, for some pleasure or use.

Especially in marriage, there is a temptation to be self-centred, to want our spouse and our children to conform to our own plans, schedules, and desires. For example, when the weekend approaches, I may focus on the things I want to do — house projects I want to get done, work I want to get caught up on, sporting events I want to watch — without giving priority to what my wife and children may need from me. When it comes to family finances, I may joyfully agree to spend money on things that are important to me, but strongly resist my wife's desire to invest in something that may not benefit me directly, even though it may be important for our family.

However, Karol reminds us that true friendship, especially friendship in marriage, must be centred on the bond of a common aim. In marriage, that common aim involves the union of the spouses, the spouses' serving each other and helping each other grow in goodness, and the rearing and education of children.

Our own individual preferences and agendas should be subordinated to these higher goods. Husband and wife must be subordinate to each other and to the good of their children, working to prevent any selfish individualism from creeping into their marriage. As a team, husband and wife work toward this common aim and discern together how best to use their time, energy, and resources to achieve those common goals of marriage.

Karol explains how spouses’ being united in this common good helps ensure that one person is not being used by another or neglected by the other. “When two different people consciously choose a common aim this puts them on a footing of equality and precludes the possibility that one of them might be subordinated to the other. Both . . . are as it were . . . subordinated to that good which constitutes their common end”.

Without this common end, our relationships inevitably will fall into some form of using the person for our own benefit or pleasure.

In the next week, we will consider how crucial these foundational points from L&R are for navigating the emotional and physical attractions we often experience when we encounter people of the opposite sex.

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