Astorre
Astorre
Tom Storm
Astorre
Tom Storm
Astorre
Nils Loc
If evil is privative, why does our culture find it so fascinating? — Leontiskos
BitconnectCarlos
That would depend on whether there is karmic retribution, in which case one's mortality would not be freeing at all. A lot of modern culture is fundamentally nihilist - nothing matters in the end, right? — Wayfarer
ProtagoranSocratist
his wife is an empty shrew living by shallow ideals. — Astorre
it is filmed like an orgasm. — Ast[quote=
baker
The main trick isn't glorifying evil, but removing shame. — Astorre
Astorre
Wayfarer
Malcolm Parry
A man voluntarily chooses to spend his final days on earth destroying the lives of as many people as possible by getting them hooked on meth - what room for nuance is there in our judgement of such a person? — Tzeentch
Wayfarer
baker
Shame is irrational? Perhaps once it is cut off from a traditional metaphysical framework.In my opinion, modern people have almost forgotten what it's like to "feel shame." Films, books, and philosophers merely document its absence. Perhaps the times are now inappropriate, and shame as a tool is no longer necessary, as it is irrational by nature. — Astorre
That's a strange thing to say, given that in much of Asia, there are Dharmic religions, in which renouncing family "for the sake of universal values" is regarded highly (such as becoming a monk in a Buddhist country) or normal (like the vanaprastha and sannyasa stages in the asrama system).I once had occasion to criticize Kohlberg. The ideas at the time were roughly as follows: the approach is "Western-centric," ignoring, for example, the ethic of care as the foundation of community. In Asia or the East, people may be at stages 3 or 4, while stages 5 or 6 would be completely unacceptable for these societies. Renouncing family for the sake of universal values in Asia is far from ideal.
Kohlberg himself posited a possible seventh stage where he linked religion with moral reasoning.The second point is this attempt to objectify ethics (cognitivism and logic); its post-conventional level assumes that the highest morality is a cold calculation of universal principles.
And yet unless one is born and raised into a religion, one must calculate, most coldly, before one can join a religion. You're speaking from the privilege of someone who was born and raised into a religion.Whereas a person can be characterized by "choice under uncertainty," for example, when you simply emotionally decide to act. For objectivists, this is a flaw (imperfection). Religion suggests that "bad" choices are not a human error, but part of its "sinful" nature that must be overcome.
LuckyR
Tzeentch
He doesn't get them hooked on meth. He is supplying a product that there is a demand for.This could be easily seen as an amoral act. There is an awful lot of nuance between your statement and mine. (I don't necessarily endorse the statement I made.) — Malcolm Parry
Outlander
A man voluntarily chooses to spend his final days on earth destroying the lives of as many people as possible by getting them hooked on meth - what room for nuance is there in our judgement of such a person? — Tzeentch
Tzeentch
You're literally the spawn of immorality, in a way, we all are. — Outlander
Outlander
I bear responsibility for my own actions, and not for those of others. — Tzeentch
Malcolm Parry
Oh, one might very well apply nuance, but at that point I would start doubting their capacity for sound judgement. — Tzeentch
Tzeentch
That's not the point. There would be no "you", period, were it not for immorality. — Outlander
People end up doing things that others would consider reprehensible but when put in less comfortable position in life would consider doing bad stuff to survive or even prosper. — Malcolm Parry
Astorre
If a government allows a subject to have a child without ensuring they are aware of all the reasonable dangers in this world, that government is at fault. But. They'll be called "tyrannical" or "authoritarian" just for trying to protect the well-being of human life by making the tough decision of who can reproduce and who should not right at the moment. If we say "oh freedom" and let people do whatever they want (as it is currently) we blame the parent for not educating the child as to how to avoid things that are dangerous. Some people have addictive tendencies. This is an indisputably and universally intrinsically negative and disfavored quality over those who can consume an otherwise addictive product that may lead to permanent harm if not used in moderation. — Outlander
SophistiCat
Astorre
Malcolm Parry
Stealing a loaf of bread is something I would consider "doing something bad in order to survive".
The narcotics scene on the other hand runs purely on ego and greed, as do the majority of criminal circuits. Just like a rapist or a murderer, they know what they're doing is wrong but do it anyway, and I would rank drug dealers and traffickers among rapists and murderers in terms of how inexcusable their actions are — Tzeentch
Tzeentch
ChatteringMonkey
The current conversation isn't about morally black (bad) people, but about morally gray people. That is, those who live entirely outside the good/bad paradigm. The phenomenon I'm talking about has a somewhat different nature. These heroes seem bad, but they are a reflection of us—they're just like us, with everyday problems. And we no longer know whether they're bad or not, or whether we can justify them (because we're all a bit like Walter White). — Astorre
Won't this usher in a "moral decline" we can't even imagine? — Astorre
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