Why do you say the number of truth statements is limited? — matt
So, it's more likely that someone will tell you a lie than the truth. Evil wins. Good loses. — TheMadFool
The Mad Fool, You forgot to allow for the flipsidedness of evil. If it is good for one, it is bad for the other; if it is bad for one, it is good for the other; it can be good for both. You did not address this reasoning.Moral relativism doesn't save the situation. In fact, it supports my case. If morality is relative, then it implies there will be confusion - a particular act, x, will be good in one culture and bad in another. So, not only do the possibilities of bad multiply, it also stymies all attempts to come to a consensus on what is good and what is bad; thereby perpetuating evil. — TheMadFool
It is the moral theory that can't put its thumb on innate, human ethics. — szemi
1. There are more ways of being evil than good. The surest proof of the above statement, in agreement to your theory that something can be both good and bad, is the old adage ''you can't make everyone happy''. — TheMadFool
2. Current moral theory is imperfect. God-based morality, Consequentialism, Deontic theory, are all flawed. — TheMadFool
it must be that Evil will, inevitably, win and Good lose. — TheMadFool
What then, is the moral, virtuous young man to do? — Frank Barroso
Or live under a moral bending of one's ethics simply doing the least harm as is available, due to what? Cowardice? And, if not cowardice, I'd love to hear what. — Frank Barroso
Ultimately or personally? — MountainDwarf
1. There are more ways of being evil than good. The surest proof of the above statement, in agreement to your theory that something can be both good and bad, is the old adage ''you can't make everyone happy''.
2. Current moral theory is imperfect. God-based morality, Consequentialism, Deontic theory, are all flawed.
Given 1 and 2 are true, it is necessary that suffering will multiply and happiness will diminish. It's like a ship, with food in short supply and only a broken compass to aid you in the voyage. The ship and the people on it are doomed. — TheMadFool
every action we take in our lives is an inherently evil enterprise — Frank Barroso
A virtuous man, to me, should hold morality as the highest goal. So, predictably, such a man will continue along the path of goodness, however ill defined it may be, to the end. — TheMadFool
Entropy, disorder, is always increasing. Order is necessary for any moral system. — TheMadFool
So, if science is true, disorder is the ultimate end of all things, including moral systems. — TheMadFool
There are more ways of being evil than good. The surest proof of the above statement, in agreement to your theory that something can be both good and bad, is the old adage ''you can't make everyone happy''. — TheMadFool
Agreed; (might be irrelevant) following this assumption, we then must be confronted by the fact that every action we take in our lives is an inherently evil enterprise. What then, is the moral, virtuous young man to do? Do the world and the people around him Good by ending his butterfly effect. Or live under a moral bending of one's ethics simply doing the least harm as is available, due to what? Cowardice? And, if not cowardice, I'd love to hear what. — Frank Barroso
I have to correct myself: It is not I who took the liberty to equate "bad" with "evil". The structure of the argument and latter definitions, both by Mad Fool, the creator of this thread, begged for taking this equivalency as given.So, it's more likely that someone will tell you a lie than the truth. Evil wins. Good loses. — TheMadFool
I think its incorrect to assume there is a unanimous "current moral theory". Or idk, what is it? — Frank Barroso
Entropy is increasing in the physical world, but that doesn't mean it's increasing in a moral sphere (or system). — Noble Dust
Yes, you can make everyone happy with a lie.
In other words, your adage proves against your favour, as evil can make everyone happy. (As per your definition of evil.) — szemi
That is not part of the thread. If you like, open a new thread with that theme. But this question of yours is not a retort of merit in this thread.So, evil wins and good loses.
Yes, you can make everyone happy with a lie.
In other words, your adage proves against your favour, as evil can make everyone happy. (As per your definition of evil.)
— szemi
Yes, but is that real happiness? — TheMadFool
Happiness is a feeling, and not a relationship to reality or to truth. Whether happiness is induced artificially or substantially, the happy person has no different experience in one way or the other. — szemi
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