The Hen wrote:If I fuck or interfer sexually with a child, I am, a pederast.
Exactly.
(Or at least, if one sets aside whether the word "pederast" applies only to a man who has sex with a boy (according to the
Compact Oxford English Dictionary (3d ed. (rev.) 2008, "pederasty" is "sexual intercourse between a man and a boy"), exactly.)
But you may or may not be a pedophile.
Pedophilia is a sexual attraction to prepubescent children: It is the attraction. That's what the "phile" part means, and that is why the "phile" part does not occur in "pederast".
Unsurprisingly, a medical diagnosis of pedophilia also involves one's actions, distress, or interpersonal difficulty. (
See DSM IV-TR Diagnostic Criteria for 302.2 Pedophilia (quoted by
dales above).) Unsurprising, because a condition which has no effect on one's actions, causes one no distress, and results in no interpersonal difficulty is hardly a condition worth diagnosing at all.
But words have meanings. And "pedophile" does not mean "person who has sex with children, regardless of that person's motivation". It means "a person who is sexually attracted to children". (
Oxford again, under the quaint spelling "paedophile".)
Again, a person who has sex with children, regardless of that person's motivation for doing so, is a child-rapist. And I carry no brief for child-rapists.
I do, however, carry a brief for the meanings of words: Language is the engine of meaning; it is the way that ideas are conveyed from one sentient mind to another. If we use words to mean things other than what they actually mean -- or, perhaps worse, if we start attaching to them conventional meanings divorced from their structures and etymologies -- the inevitable result is impairment of communication. Which, it seems to me, can lead only to disaster.
In short, as Mark Twain pithily put it: "Use the right word, not its second cousin." (
Fenimore Cooper's Literary Offenses (1895).)
Reason is valuable only when it performs against the wordless physical background of the universe.