:-! >:O At least you are funny! Imagine - the rapist's rape becomes a badge of honour for him! Who would have thought!For those who recognise what they have done, guilt becomes a badge of honour. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yes there are different kinds of knives, but they all have the purpose of cutting. — Agustino
But what is not up to question is that lust is bad, and chastity is good - regardless of the differences that exist between people. Regardless. — Agustino
Yes it is entirely true for the simple reason that we call a knife a knife because it is an object designed with the function of cutting. Even the knives which spread - they are also designed for cutting, for example butter. And yes, each knife may fulfil this grand purpose on different materials, and in different circumstances. Same for people. People just like knives have an over-arching purpose, which holds true of all human beings.This is not entirely true for a start; some knives are designed for spreading. In any case knives are designed to cut a variety of different materials, just as humans are designed to flourish in a far greater variety of different ways, and that is the point your lack of subtlety fails to recognize. — John
I wasn't explaining Aristotle's conception there, but an Aristotelian one. The Aristotelian tradition is larger than just Aristotle.This is a superficial understanding of Aristotle. He advocated a mean in between extremes. If lust is one extreme and chastity is the other, they are both vices and the mean, or virtue, lies in between. — John
But Aristotle did have the virtue of chastity, only that he didn't separate it. He held it to be within the virtue of continence.And Aristotle, to my knowledge never advocated chastity. This is a later Christian add-on, via Augustine and Aquinas. — John
:-! Yes - I think you should work on your conversation skills - when you clearly can't recognise a fictive example, used for illustrating a concept, and you jump to unwarranted conclusions about your interlocutor's character, that is quite shameful of you sir, and I don't think you have any right, given such track record of horrible judgements, to comment on anyone's philosophical skills. Get your conversation skills in order first before you worry about philosophy - perhaps by reading Dale Carnegie yes.As to your having a very beautiful body and being a very good writer; even if those are true, so what? That you have an unwarrantedly high opinion of your own qualities, abilities and wisdom seems to be a far more significant fact about you. Anyway, I don't reckon much of any value will come from prolonging this 'conversation', perhaps when it comes to your future pontifications, I'll be phronetic enough to lean more toward the vice of abstinence, than the vice of indulgence.
BTW, I think your writing abilities and wisdom would lend themselves to writing some kind of 'How To' kind of book, along the lines of How to Win Friends and Influence People or Think and Grow Rich; that would seem to be about the right level; an ability for any serious philosophy is certainly not evident; not at this stage of your development, at least. — John
To value realising the evil which has been done is not to value the sin. It's to value understanding that irreversible evil has been done. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yes - I appreciate such a valuation, and I think that's good. I was thinking for a moment that you thought they should treat it as if it wasn't something wrong, something to be ashamed of. Yes - the man who is proud of his guilt over having done a crime, that is a good thing!Not the rape, the guilt over the rape-- the realisation of the wrong etched into the eternity of history. The understanding of an immorality which cannot be undone or resloved. — TheWillowOfDarkness
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