I don't know what you mean by absolute purity, or by the distinction between ideal and actual pleasure and pain, but so far as I can tell nothing hinges on it or makes reference to it. — The Great Whatever
I don't see why that 'compounds the evil.' If someone's getting hurt, then the bad thing about that is that they're getting hurt. — The Great Whatever
I don't see why that 'compounds the evil.' If someone's getting hurt, then the bad thing about that is that they're getting hurt. — The Great Whatever
Are you saying that if someone beat you, it would make you feel better to know they feel guilty about it, or something? You're getting beaten either way. — The Great Whatever
I don't think that I'm suggesting anything controversial at all, but quite universal, and ubiquitous. Causing someone harm and deriving pleasure from it is what villains do (it's what psychopaths do, which is the evilest psychological profile you can give someone) , feeling remorse and reforming their ways is what anti-heroes do, and heroes don't even derive pleasure from the suffering of their enemies when they deserve it (though anti-heroes may, because they're still a little bad, but it's forgivable, because we want the villain to suffer too, because even we aren't as pure hearted and good as the hero, even though we recognize their not deriving pleasure from the suffering of the villain as a higher good)..
I don't feel the need to speculate why this is the case, I think that it is sufficient to point out that it is the case. — Wosret
Anyway, I think I'm done with the tangent. Thanks for producing that, I asked you because I didn't think that you could, but I stand corrected. — Wosret
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