How exactly do you justify child-adult sex (in scenarios where you believe it would be permissible)?
Posted: Tue Aug 19, 2025 7:25 pm
I'm curious as to what the various arguments for child-adult sex being circumstantially permissible are, and I think it's meaningful to talk about defending it as permissible in some hypothetical, if not real-life, scenarios because doing so establishes in which scenarios it would be bad or wrong. I know what my position is but it's not the mainstream view (among 'pro-MAP') people. I also have a clear argument when it comes to the logical contradictions in the conventional view about child-adult sex but it has little-nothing to do with my core position (I'll get into both, if anyone's interested), whenever I critique the conventional view online a big part of it has to do with just wanting credit for being right because the incoherency of conventional attitudes about child-adult sex (and age gap relationships between biological or legal adults) and pedophilia (or older people being attracted to younger people) frustrates me.
Are you coming from a libertarian point of view? A hedonistic consequentialist point of view? A preference utilitarian point of view or at least one rooted in the desire fulfillment theory of welfare? Do you just not think that sex has the inherent meaning that most people take for granted or that the expected risk/harm (in a society where it wasn't stigmatized, at least) is exaggerated or what?
It's funny because even though I have to publicly defend the idea that only suffering is inherently bad or harmful I can at least understand why people would have an issue with my stance on cheating or even the permissibility of a trans woman tricking a cisgendered man into having sex with her under false pretenses in some very hypothetical scenario but I genuinely don't understand why people are outraged at the idea of child-adult sex being permissible in some emotionally harmless scenarios. To put that into context I will outline my most basic position on the issue:
-Children are directly harmed only by felt emotional distress (if we should discourage child-adult sex it should be for the purpose of minimizing suffering alone, discouraging it on the grounds that children might suffer as a result of it is not one and the same with discouraging it on principle. Child adult sex is not suffering, child-adult sex is child-adult sex and suffering is suffering, those two things can exist independently) and whatever sexual pleasure they could experience if allowed to have sexual or erotic relationships with adults would be inherently good (sexual pleasure qua happiness being intrinsically good) even if that needs to be weighed against real-life risks and costs. It is immoral to devalue the sexual pleasure of both pedophiles and children (the mainstream position wants children to be asexual for the sake of being asexual; excluding them, on principle, from something that adults inconsistently value as a source of happiness for themselves. Harm reduction can't explain why people are so hostile toward the idea of pedophilia itself being a legitimate 'orientation' or fantasy scenarios in which children enjoy sexual/romantic intimacy with adults without any long-term suffering (the argument isn't just that one is being unrealistic or overly theoretical, it's that an attraction to children is fundamentally evil).
-There are practical scenarios in which children could enjoy sexual intimacy with adults without long-term trauma. In fact, I think children are generally sexual to some degree by the age of 7. I'm not saying that this justifies not discouraging it in practice (I don't think that there would be a reason to discourage it in a society where it wasn't taboo so children wouldn't internalize the idea that they were wrongly exploited in retrospect but I am open to different perspectives when it comes to child-adult sex as an applied ethics issue), I mostly want to focus on the stigmatization of pedophilia itself and child-adult sex in fantasy scenarios where it is pleasurable for children.
So I don't have a problem with cheating in scenarios where a) one can reasonably assume that their partner would not be interested in an open relationship, they might even be hurt by the suggestion, and b) one can reasonably assume that their partner won't suspect or discover or for whatever indirect reason suffer as a result of being cheated on, and I don't have an on-principle problem with a trans woman having sex with a cisgendered man under the false pretense of being a biological woman in some scenario where doing so caused him no immediate or long-term pain but I can understand why that's off-putting to people because we are necessarily at odds with people who don't respect our desires and preferences (if I think that the rainforest is inherently good and you believe that it is neutral or even negative in value, you are not only invalidating my position but I have to worry that in some scenario where you're in a position to contribute to the decline or preservation of the rainforest you will prioritize some other value over preserving it, if not outright act to eliminate it). If you tell people that you don't value what they value, you're introducing a kind of conflict with them (I won't get into why I think that I'm ultimately justified in defending my 'only suffering is inherently bad' stance). With child-adult sex, however, the injustice is framed as one having sex with a child against their will but if it were true that children could not meaningfully consent to sex (an assumption rooted in the idea that they can't comprehend the 'meaning' of sex that adults have traditionally projected on to it in various religious traditions or in socially conservative cultures) it wouldn't follow that lack of 'meaningful consent' means an active desire to avoid sexual intimacy with an adult at any given moment (I care what children's desires are because the felt frustration of desire is inherently painful). So I honestly don't understand the moral outrage surrounding the issue, even from a perspective that rejects my hedonistic framework. It's very clear to me that only suffering is inherently bad, all/everyone's happiness is inherently good and only the de-valuing of happiness/suffering is immoral.
I would rather be a child who experiences pleasurable sexual intimacy with an adult than one who suffers from sexual frustration (ironically), anxiety, depression, body dysphoria, humiliation and shame, grief, boredom, physical pain, etc. The former is not a real problem. Real problems cause people pain. I don't mean that it's not a real problem in that it's comparatively trivial or minor either, I mean that the 'harm' of pleasurable exploitation is incommensurate what with what is self-evidently bad (pain). The counter might be that many things are harmful but suffering has nothing in common with those things that could make them both or all inherently harmful. I genuinely don't understand how people who don't feel the slightest guilt or remorse about causing, celebrating or being indifferent to real pain or trauma think that some guy fantasizing about mutually pleasurable sex with a child he's attracted to is just the harshest most sociopathic thing ever. I can't even put into words how bizarre conventional morality is to me.
Are you coming from a libertarian point of view? A hedonistic consequentialist point of view? A preference utilitarian point of view or at least one rooted in the desire fulfillment theory of welfare? Do you just not think that sex has the inherent meaning that most people take for granted or that the expected risk/harm (in a society where it wasn't stigmatized, at least) is exaggerated or what?
It's funny because even though I have to publicly defend the idea that only suffering is inherently bad or harmful I can at least understand why people would have an issue with my stance on cheating or even the permissibility of a trans woman tricking a cisgendered man into having sex with her under false pretenses in some very hypothetical scenario but I genuinely don't understand why people are outraged at the idea of child-adult sex being permissible in some emotionally harmless scenarios. To put that into context I will outline my most basic position on the issue:
-Children are directly harmed only by felt emotional distress (if we should discourage child-adult sex it should be for the purpose of minimizing suffering alone, discouraging it on the grounds that children might suffer as a result of it is not one and the same with discouraging it on principle. Child adult sex is not suffering, child-adult sex is child-adult sex and suffering is suffering, those two things can exist independently) and whatever sexual pleasure they could experience if allowed to have sexual or erotic relationships with adults would be inherently good (sexual pleasure qua happiness being intrinsically good) even if that needs to be weighed against real-life risks and costs. It is immoral to devalue the sexual pleasure of both pedophiles and children (the mainstream position wants children to be asexual for the sake of being asexual; excluding them, on principle, from something that adults inconsistently value as a source of happiness for themselves. Harm reduction can't explain why people are so hostile toward the idea of pedophilia itself being a legitimate 'orientation' or fantasy scenarios in which children enjoy sexual/romantic intimacy with adults without any long-term suffering (the argument isn't just that one is being unrealistic or overly theoretical, it's that an attraction to children is fundamentally evil).
-There are practical scenarios in which children could enjoy sexual intimacy with adults without long-term trauma. In fact, I think children are generally sexual to some degree by the age of 7. I'm not saying that this justifies not discouraging it in practice (I don't think that there would be a reason to discourage it in a society where it wasn't taboo so children wouldn't internalize the idea that they were wrongly exploited in retrospect but I am open to different perspectives when it comes to child-adult sex as an applied ethics issue), I mostly want to focus on the stigmatization of pedophilia itself and child-adult sex in fantasy scenarios where it is pleasurable for children.
So I don't have a problem with cheating in scenarios where a) one can reasonably assume that their partner would not be interested in an open relationship, they might even be hurt by the suggestion, and b) one can reasonably assume that their partner won't suspect or discover or for whatever indirect reason suffer as a result of being cheated on, and I don't have an on-principle problem with a trans woman having sex with a cisgendered man under the false pretense of being a biological woman in some scenario where doing so caused him no immediate or long-term pain but I can understand why that's off-putting to people because we are necessarily at odds with people who don't respect our desires and preferences (if I think that the rainforest is inherently good and you believe that it is neutral or even negative in value, you are not only invalidating my position but I have to worry that in some scenario where you're in a position to contribute to the decline or preservation of the rainforest you will prioritize some other value over preserving it, if not outright act to eliminate it). If you tell people that you don't value what they value, you're introducing a kind of conflict with them (I won't get into why I think that I'm ultimately justified in defending my 'only suffering is inherently bad' stance). With child-adult sex, however, the injustice is framed as one having sex with a child against their will but if it were true that children could not meaningfully consent to sex (an assumption rooted in the idea that they can't comprehend the 'meaning' of sex that adults have traditionally projected on to it in various religious traditions or in socially conservative cultures) it wouldn't follow that lack of 'meaningful consent' means an active desire to avoid sexual intimacy with an adult at any given moment (I care what children's desires are because the felt frustration of desire is inherently painful). So I honestly don't understand the moral outrage surrounding the issue, even from a perspective that rejects my hedonistic framework. It's very clear to me that only suffering is inherently bad, all/everyone's happiness is inherently good and only the de-valuing of happiness/suffering is immoral.
I would rather be a child who experiences pleasurable sexual intimacy with an adult than one who suffers from sexual frustration (ironically), anxiety, depression, body dysphoria, humiliation and shame, grief, boredom, physical pain, etc. The former is not a real problem. Real problems cause people pain. I don't mean that it's not a real problem in that it's comparatively trivial or minor either, I mean that the 'harm' of pleasurable exploitation is incommensurate what with what is self-evidently bad (pain). The counter might be that many things are harmful but suffering has nothing in common with those things that could make them both or all inherently harmful. I genuinely don't understand how people who don't feel the slightest guilt or remorse about causing, celebrating or being indifferent to real pain or trauma think that some guy fantasizing about mutually pleasurable sex with a child he's attracted to is just the harshest most sociopathic thing ever. I can't even put into words how bizarre conventional morality is to me.