ToothyMaw
Outlander
ToothyMaw
I feel it worth mentioning that people generally consider "intent" to be a prerequisite for an act to be "evil." — Outlander
Reason I mention such, is it seems your flagship example of religion hinges on not only the idea that a god exists or does not exist, but whether or not the people who perform actions or inaction under the ideological mindset of such genuinely believe a god exists or not. Theoretically speaking, if they were right, and we were all wrong, they would be preventing us from eternal damnation (or whatever) and therefore, despite acts of violence that would normally be considered evil, are actually the greatest good one could ever perform. Theoretically speaking, of course. — Outlander
In short, imagine an isolated, ultra-religious family believing their 6-year-old child is the devil incarnate and so they drown him to "save the world" or what have you. They'll sleep soundly at night, and never perform any other act of violence again. Take real actual examples of history. Botched exorcisms for example. Giving people the benefit of the doubt (things were much, much different back then, superstition wasn't the exclusive domain of fools and the mentally unwell as it is often considered today) that they actually believed they were doing the right thing and preventing evil, one should clearly be able to draw a line between unfortunate, misguided deeds and intentional misdeeds. — Outlander
Say your child really wanted to go to summer camp by the lake, and you know he or she cannot swim, yet didn't have that item of knowledge in your mind at the time, and you permit him or her to go, and they drown, resulting in your entire family disliking you, calling for your arrest, and basically putting you on par with the likes of a murderer. Or more simply, falling asleep while your kid is swimming in your backyard pool and the same fate befalls him or her. Are you evil? Did you perform an evil act? Well, did you? — Outlander
ToothyMaw
your flagship example of religion — Outlander
ToothyMaw
ProtagoranSocratist
L'éléphant
Astorre
ProtagoranSocratist
Some time ago, while browsing job postings, I stumbled upon one from a well-known local blogger who teaches business skills and “personal development.” The blogger needed a philosopher. Among the requirements were things like “ability to create meaning” and “ability to construct a methodology.”
It struck me because about ten years ago I watched this person, listened to him, and genuinely believed what he was saying. Only later did I realize how deliberately those messages were crafted and how strongly they shaped people’s thinking. — Astorre
Astorre
Do Islamic extremist leaders really think they are putting forth the will of God, or is it just a way to produce a short-sighted adrenaline rush? — ProtagoranSocratist
AmadeusD
Theoretically speaking, if they were right, and we were all wrong, they would be preventing us from eternal damnation (or whatever) and therefore, despite acts of violence that would normally be considered evil, are actually the greatest good one could ever perform. Theoretically speaking, of course. — Outlander
So by this set of assumptions I'm laying out, you can be a Nazi or Jihadist, but both are just ideas until groups of people start putting plans together to achieve the ends of Nazism or Jihadism — ProtagoranSocratist
(1) clearly affects (2), and perhaps vice versa, but it is a little harder to pull these two things apart and see the exact relationship than to just consider (2) to be a function of (1), which is how I'm going to treat it. — ToothyMaw
ProtagoranSocratist
I do agree its 'just an idea'. But ideas are where actions come from, so it's not like they vary independently in this context. — AmadeusD
Leontiskos
Other people's motivations are, for hte overwhelmingly large part, good but misguided.
...
If you're a Nazi or committed Jihadist, your thoughts are Evil. Its almost a side-effect whether something harmful plays out in the 'real world' but that's where everyone else finds out, and has something to discuss. But that intention (say, to ethnically cleanse Germany of Jews and Romanis) can, itself, be considered Evil under some framework. — AmadeusD
No one wants to give people their flowers in this sense, because no one wants to see their own beliefs as contingent. — AmadeusD
To truly confront anti-semitism and other forms of bigotry, one needs to start from the point of view that having bad or prejudicial thoughts is not evil, and the beliefs/tenants are not to be feared lest we want to fuck up our thought process. — ProtagoranSocratist
Yeah, but what i was getting at was that it's important to investigate where "true evil" begins and ends. I don't think it can possibly come from the thoughts and ideas themselves, as a philosophically minded person can use them to learn and make rational decisions. — ProtagoranSocratist
Tom Storm
Outlander
Which reminds me that the most dangerous people in the world are probably those who think they have reason and destiny on their side. — Tom Storm
Tom Storm
Is it really that simple, though? The partially-disrobed homeless dude on the corner believes he has reason and destiny on his side. So, respectfully, it's far more complex and substantial than that one requirement of self-confidence or self-delusion. — Outlander
Why are libraries full of lifetimes of wisdom and virtue empty yet arenas of combat and near-death cheap entertainment full at any given moment? Ask yourself that. And you'll find out something about yourself you did not wish to know. — Outlander
Outlander
No. I am not arguing that delusion is an issue. I said reason and destiny. Not madness and destiny. — Tom Storm
It's best not to presume what others here know or don't know about themselves on a forum. — Tom Storm
That said, I'm not sure what your point is. — Tom Storm
Tom Storm
Sir2u
ProtagoranSocratist
There are two unconnecting arguments here. — Leontiskos
AmadeusD
So would you say that some things are not merely misguided but truly evil — Leontiskos
On that view true philosophical arguments for moral positions are impossible, and when the philosophical intelligentsia hold to such a view unthinking prejudice and taboo is inevitable, especially among the common people. — Leontiskos
many people nevertheless wish for their moral position to "win out," and this leads to all sorts of behavior that is different from rational argument. It leads to the question, "How do I get what I want without relying upon rational argumentation?" — Leontiskos
ProtagoranSocratist
It seems you're saying there is nothing that can be called evil. Given that actions are guided by motivations, it seems wrong in law and in concept to call an act evil which does not carry a malicious intention. I can't really see how we could reject that the ideas/thoughts/motivations are evil but maintain that the acts are. Partially because of some of hte other stuff i said, that it looks like I'll be going on for Leon just now.. — AmadeusD
Leontiskos
For me, personally, I find "evil" pretty empty. In terms of how personally arrange my moral judgments, yes. But I don't think this means much at all. It's just hte convenient semantic way I work out how I feel about things (or more properly, whether I should feel that/some way or not). An action which is aesthetically/prima facie disgustingly malicious and inhumane, let's say, whicih accurate reflects the actor's intention and ..i don't know.. world view? Could be considered evil to me. That's a practical notion, though, so I think I may not be saying what you're asking for unfortunately lol. — AmadeusD
Yes, definitely. I think this is one of the unsolvable problems of modern, pluralistic society. I, at least, remain humble in my moral positions and don't pretend that they need apply to anyone else. — AmadeusD
I will try to enforce mine where i am not obviously violating rights (which are a legal institution) — AmadeusD
ProtagoranSocratist
It's been awhile since I read it, but C. S. Lewis' argument against moral relativism in Mere Christianity is quite good. — Leontiskos
Leontiskos
There very well may be evil -- there are certainly things that are horrible or very bad. It doesn't take much effort to find these things, especially in human activity and behavior. Ideas themselves hardly fit the bill for being the absolute worst, because clearly people say and think a lot of things just as an emotional reaction, and emotional reactions are too pure for such heavy-handed blame and moralization implied when calling something "evil" in my opinion. — ProtagoranSocratist
ProtagoranSocratist
So would you say that "evil" means "the absolute worst," and one must be careful about calling something "the absolute worst" given the way that emotion often misleads us? — Leontiskos
(and 'bad' has a curiously recent etymology). Still, the common English meaning does differentiate bad and evil in something like the way you indicate. — Leontiskos
Sir2u
So how do you understand an ideology that says a certain race or group of people must be wiped out for the good of the world? — Tom Storm
Is this merely a point of view? — Tom Storm
Does it only become evil when the ideology is put into practice? — Tom Storm
AmadeusD
close, but what i'm trying to say is not quite as dogmatic. There very well may be evil -- there are certainly things that are horrible or very bad. It doesn't take much effort to find these things, especially in human activity and behavior. Ideas themselves hardly fit the bill for being the absolute worst, because clearly people say and think a lot of things just as an emotional reaction, and emotional reactions are too pure for such heavy-handed blame and moralization implied when calling something "evil" in my opinion. — ProtagoranSocratist
I personally choose not to describe things as evil, because it's very emotive, and it's a common concept used by very dishonest (or maybe just stupid/delusional) people. — ProtagoranSocratist
i prefer "extremely dishonest" and "xenophobic" because these are more descriptive. Some people call Caligula (one of the early Roman emperors) and John Wane Gacy evil, but I prefer "sadistic" and "psychopathic" because those are also more descriptive of these individuals. — ProtagoranSocratist
Okay, and is there a particular ethical system you hold to in this? Am I correct in recalling that you are an Emotivist? — Leontiskos
So you will try to enforce your moral positions, as long as you are not violating civil rights? Wouldn't enforcing your moral positions involve applying your moral positions to other people? — Leontiskos
It's been awhile since I read it, but C. S. Lewis' argument against moral relativism in Mere Christianity is quite good. He points up the way that people who claim not to impose any morality on others are very often doing just that. — Leontiskos
huh, that's really quite interesting and i bookmarked the website...who knew that "bad" was derived exclusively from a work used to insult homosexuals and less-masculine men?! It's not surprising, but to me the word is more abstract and less loaded than that... — ProtagoranSocratist
ProtagoranSocratist
Old English baedan = "to defile" roughly
Proto-Germanic bada = "difficulty, trouble/damage" roughly. — AmadeusD
Leontiskos
I personally find the "if but for" type of reasoning helpful here. "If but for the belief that negroes are inferior to whites, the defendant would not have carried out X, resulting in the wrongful death of a" — AmadeusD
The wrong-maker appears to be the thoughts. — AmadeusD
More-or-less correct, yes. I imagine there's edges to it, as there are with almost all claims to a moral system, that don't quite fit into a description of same, but yeah overall. — AmadeusD
No, not at all. If people resist my attempts to 'enforce' my moral take *on that specific thing that I have deemed action is required in response to* then that's fine, and I can't say they're 'wrong'. Just that they are counter to what I think is best. I don't think my wanting to take the action I feel is 'right' goes against accepting that it is subjective and i can't justify getting anyone else to agree with me (although, when they do, it's good. That might be harder to explain). My reasoning is what I am trying to get other people to assent to in those situations. — AmadeusD
That i personally would want to see X happen or not happen, and carry on my life under those beliefs doesn't seem to me to run into any obstacles insofar as claiming I don't impose on others.
Maybe there just needs to be a concession/caveat that carrying on ones life will implicitly, "accidentally" impose ones morals on those around them. I can accept that. But i active attempt not to do this, where ever there is no clear legal rights violation. Even some situations where there is, I don't feel that simply believing A or B is a better response gives me any truck in trying to get other people to do so. — AmadeusD
Mostly, but i don't equate evil and "absolute worst" in how i understand the terms. "evil" almost 100% of the time in modern english indicates some extreme moral wrong. For example, rarely does anyone say something like "that couger attacked the man on the hiking trail, that couger is evil!" because we all seem to assume that a couger cannot make moral decisions of right and wrong, but people use "evil" all the time to describe serial killers, politicians, and business men. While I don't like the term evil, I would have absolutely no problem with saying "Hitler, John Wayne Gacy, and Caligula acted in some of the absolute worst ways imaginable", but the thing i don't like about calling them evil is that we assume they could have acted in a different way with better morals, which is something I disagree with. — ProtagoranSocratist
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