How is a social convention not a commitment? The guy's part of society, so he should be held by its standards. He's committing adultery as much as she is.
These statements of yours imply a wildly different worldview from mine. Which is consistent with my observations during previous conversations between us. With that in mind, and the fact that we will probably be unable to reconcile the differences in our conclusions because our initial premises are different...I will attempt to respond:
How is a social convention not a commitment?
...umm, what? No? Where are you even coming from with this?
Just because something is a convention, that
very obviously doesn't make it a commitment. For example, it's socially normal for women to have long hair and wear makeup. Does that mean women are obligated to do these things? Of course not. A guy holding a door open for a girl is pretty standard convention. Are you obligated to do this? No. Guy being the one to ask a girl to a dance is typical. If a girl breaks that convention and asks the guy out instead, is that wrong? No. Is anyone offended? No. Is it a problem? No.
I don't know where you're coming from to suggest that a convention is a commitment. A social convention is simply an ordinary "expected" and typical way of doing things. It is by no means an obligation. Morally, ethically, legally, culturally...in no way are social conventions commitments. They are merely
expected behaviors. It's expected that you eat dinner before dessert. It's expected that you wear green on St Patrick's day. It's expected that married people have children.
There's nothing wrong with not doing the expected thing just because it's expected.
But if you
agree to do a thing and then don't do it...I perceive error in that. If you go out and eat an eclair before dinner, that's ok even if it's not the social norm. But if you promise somebody that you won't do it and then do it anyway...that's an extremely different situation. Your personal promise to not do something carries more weight than simply living in a society that expects you to not do it.
He's committing adultery as much as she is.
I believe you're technically correct...but I wasn't really expecting the religious angle here.
Even acknowledging your point, it still doesn't change the fact that the girl is
still doing a thing that the guy isn't. The girl made a commitment and is breaking the terms of that commitment. The guy made no commitment. Therefore, she is "committing adultery"
and breaking a personal commitment, whereas the guy is
only committing adultery.
Even acknowledging the adultery angle, which is worse: committing adultery plus breaking a personal commitment, or only committing adultery?
I'll have to disagree with the vast majority of forumites and say that the dude hitting his (ex-)girlfriend is the worse one in both scenarios. 'Not hitting women' is a much, much more fundamental rule of society (or at least society as I perceive it) than 'not hitting people in general'. According to the qualities ascribed by society to men and women respectively, the guy in each scenario is able, at least to a degree, to defend himself, to hit back, making the whole affair a fight between equals, or at least between comparables. The girl on the other hand is - according to these ascribed qualities, again - unable to defend herself, making the violence not a fight but a despicable act of brutality, because
the quintessential idea of fairness is violated.
I find this interesting for multiple reason.
1) It seems to me that basing one's personal views on those of society is both distasteful and dangerous. I would
strongly encourage people to make their own decisions rather than simply looking at societal norms and going with the flow. At one time in this country, slavery was considered socially normal. At one time, beating your wife to keep her in line was considered socially normal. They might not be
now, but how forgiving would you be of somebody who keeps slaves and beats their wife just because everybody else was doing it? Simply looking at the history of human behavior, I think it would serve us well to evaluate and make our own decisions rather than simply going with the flow.
2) Fairly often here on bay12, I'm accused of being a mysogynist. And yet, to me...since the formal, technical application of "adultery" in the judeo/christian sense is not something that carries any weight with me in this case...it seems to me that you're basically saying that it's better to beat up innocent people than a woman, because woman are not equal to men. That women are so helpless that it's more unfair to hit a woman who does something wrong than to hit a guy who doesn't.
Now, I realize that you're qualifying your statements to say that it's not necessarily you personally who sees it this way, but rather
society that sees it this way...but at the same time you appear to be giving weight to the idea of basing one's views on society's views, and agreeing with the conclusion. So qualifying it by saying that it's society's views that see it this way seems like a cop-out.