Freodin said:
What you describe would be the theoretical optimum. Reality looks different.
I don't see how. The theoretical optimum would be a situation in which one
always makes the best choice. As I see it, marriages can fail whether they're arranged or not. The marriage works if the couple learn to make it work, and any given way to choose one's mate may or may not work.
So how is what I described a theoretical optimum situation?
Freodin said:
Simple solutions - that is the problem. In reality, older and wiser heads choose bad as often as they choose well. In reality, older and wiser heads choose influence, power and riches as often as what is good for the couple.
I agree, ultimately, it rests on the couple, to learn to live with each other. But only in hindsight is it possible to say if it worked or not - and sometimes not even then.
That's essentially exactly what I was trying to get across -- that there is no "right" way to choose your mate and that any method may fail. What is "necessary" depends on what the couple wants and needs. Some couples may not care for love, and prefer financial stability. Others may feel they need love in their marriage. It depends on the couple.
My point is simply that you cannot classify arranged marriages as "loveless" and marriages by choice as "loving," because that's only your way to choose a mate -- it has little to nothing to do with whether it works out in the end, IMO.
In any case, I take exception to the idea that one can know at the start of a relationship whether it will "work," and that this knowledge is somehow obtained by using the proper method to choose your mate. In my experience, one constantly learns new things about one's partner and relationship through the course of it, and those new things continuously change the dynamics of the relationship and the likelihood that it will "work."
That is to say, when you start a relationship all you know is that you'd like it to work (unless you were forced into it and simply don't want it, that is -- which brings up the side point that, IMO, arranged marriages are unlikely to work out if the couple disagrees with that method of choosing matches). You don't know whether it will work out until it
doesn't work out or you die. That is in part why I do not ever intend to vow that I will be with somebody forever. I don't think that's a vow I can honestly take.
But back to the original subject -- is there something I said with which you disagree? If so, please enlighten me, because I don't see it.