any fight usually has an implicitly agreed terminal condition, such that the fight is understood to be over when the condition is reached, although this only indirectly bears on the fight boundary question. — tim wood
To be sure, an evaluative aspect. But is the beginning of any fight well-defined? As to WWII, we could all wish that someone had shot Hitler in 1928. I suspect the reality of the answers to those question of when to act and how lay more in what was immediately possible than in long term calculation (a kind of local field theory v. action-at-a-distance interpretation). But it raises the question of fighting as business, which brings with it all the ethical questions - including whether there are ethical considerations.What is at stake.... The conflict may or may not be worthwhile. One has to measure what's at stake, what is to be gained or lost, and for whom in this kind of fighting too. — Bitter Crank
"Never" as preliminary or given is for most contingent and yields to necessity - but then it's not "never" (What? Never?! Well, hardly ever). Your points about dominance and the police is such un-common common sense (the best kind) that I could wish that more police knew it!My answer is "never".
The end point of a fight is its boundary.... Which means that a fight is a struggle for dominance. Not dominance itself, but the struggle to obtain it.
So when the police are called to a pub brawl, they do not join the fight on one side or the other.... Their business is to be dominant and to restrain the combatants, not to fight them. — unenlightened
↪Bitter Crank ↪unenlightenedIt seems clear that "fight" is a very broad term, especially if it includes war as a species of fighting. Is there anything in common that might link them in a genus that's more than just a word? — tim wood
I'd like to sharpen this: assuming a physical fight - a fistfight, say - at what point, exactly, is your participation "commenced"? It sounds like your starting point is when you launch your first punch. I'd argue you start when you decide to start. The two moments may be as close as seconds. If it's, "let's step outside," then it could be minutes. Or, if it's, "We'll settle this next Wednesday," then maybe a week.One way to define "fight" is: commence an aggressive physical attack. — Bitter Crank
Do these work for you? Modify or add to them?1) understanding of the situation 2) acceptance of the risks, and 3) commitment to the goal. — tim wood
Do you think war and fighting are the same, or different? — tim wood
1) understanding of the situation 2) acceptance of the risks, and 3) commitment to the goal. — tim wood
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