Please make the case. I'd like to see it. — tim wood
I reason, you rationalise, they are very naughty. If you wind back a way, you will see that I advocate action and honesty, on the basis that you actually care. What I'm arguing against is acting with the protection of anonymity and not taking responsibility for the consequences. — unenlightened
"I feel..," "I am,.." "I feel,..." "I think,.." "I suppose,.." and again, "I feel." Do you see a pattern here?1) I feel a fairly strong sense that someone ought to inform the cheated 2) I am somebody 3) I feel strongly that I would like to be told if I were cheated on 4) I think the truth is almost always preferable to a lie, even when in the short term the lie looks more appealing. I suppose a fifth reason could be my feeling of astonishment that nobody else in this chain of information seems to feel this way. — ProbablyTrue
No! 180 degrees wrong. The categorical imperative is an exercise in reason, and not an easy exercise. And you appear to be completely confused about any distinction between public and private concerns.The categorical imperative still relies on someone's intuition about the world they'd like to live in, — ProbablyTrue
This speaks for itself.At present, I am suffering.... — ProbablyTrue
I can say that I would be appreciative of an anonymous note if I were being cheated on and understanding of the anonymous nature of it, considering the messenger is an innocent party who just happens to have bad news to deliver. — Hanover
The guilty always appreciate going undetected. Do you suggest that the harm to the cheater ought be considered before revealing the truth?Now what would you appreciate if you were cheating? — unenlightened
Moral Obligation: Finding out your friend has a partner who is cheating on them. Although you have not committed the cheating yourself, you are enabling this behavior by not addressing it and having the person take responsibility for their actions. You are also allowing the cheater to continue their behavior while being dishonest and hurting his spouse for a longer period of time. This also comes at very little risk to you. And it also doesn't require much effort at all. If you're scared about the cheater going insane and trying to kill you for releasing this information, you can tell that person (the victim) anonymously (if you fear for your safety). — chatterbears
Be good enough to let us know just what, exactly, you think a marriage is? And if there are criteria such that third persons can decide if an existing marriage is a marriage or not? — tim wood
I still don't get how this is grounded. What is your entitlement and what is your warrant and what is your duty, to speak at all? The arguments so far here presuppose the answer. Maybe you can do better.my duty to inform the cheatee of the cheater. — Hanover
Thank you for a fair reply! I can see you have persuaded yourself that the business of others is your business. — tim wood
Also implicit is that you get to cherry-pick your obligations. In the case of crimes being committed, then I'm with you, except call a cop. But no crime is here alleged. — tim wood
It's you who are making a value judgment, and it's not about yourself. You're deciding what's right and wrong for other people. Possibly it's the sex you object to - after all, someone's cheating! But what is it, exactly, that constitutes the cheating? That answer matters, and I'm pretty sure you haven't got it. And it's odd you measure the strength of the obligation against convenience. — tim wood
Bottom line: collective wisdom in western civilization is that when it comes to marriage, MYOB. — tim wood
Notice I did not say the excited opinions of friends. If you speak, you own and are responsible for what happens because you spoke. Some good is conceivable; you don't get credit for that. For pain and damage, that's all yours. And it might be a risk worth taking, except that it is an unnecessary risk. You put others at risk, without their input, to serve your agenda. Not ethical at all. — tim wood
"I feel..," "I am,.." "I feel,..." "I think,.." "I suppose,.." and again, "I feel." Do you see a pattern here? — tim wood
No! 180 degrees wrong. The categorical imperative is an exercise in reason, and not an easy exercise. And you appear to be completely confused about any distinction between public and private concerns. — tim wood
This speaks for itself. — tim wood
I see it in exactly the opposite light. Any pain or damage would be the responsibility of the cheater. It was their actions that crossed the line and it is their actions that would determine whether the relationship ends or mends. At no point could the cheater say, "Well, all of this is the informer's fault! If only you'd stayed oblivious life would be peachy!" I am only allowing the wronged party a chance to make decisions based upon reality.Some good is conceivable; you don't get credit for that. For pain and damage, that's all yours. — tim wood
I'm concerned about you. I think I should come over and inspect that all is as it should be. (You don't get a say in the matter.) That seem right to you? What's the difference between yours and my shoulds. — tim wood
And, I'm guessing the informers are mainly young and never-married men — tim wood
Your position seems to be that marriages and monogamy are largely bullshit mirages — Hanover
Some good is conceivable; you don't get credit for that. For pain and damage, that's all yours. — tim wood
You have completely missed the point. Your interference is at the level of an involuntary short-arm inspection whether you like it or not, whether it is convenient for you or not, whether it is good or beneficial for you or not, and, in the case of your interference, whether it does harm and no good, or not. In fact, it's all my say-so - you don't get a say. If you don't like that, then think about what you're contemplating doing.It's entirely up to me what I do with that information. — ProbablyTrue
I am relegated to informing anonymously if I choose to do so in this case. — ProbablyTrue
people who cheat have a reason, — Blue Lux
Life sometimes has no solution. And why should it have a solution? — Blue Lux
The cheated person in this scenario doesn't even have an opportunity to be the aggrieved party by your standard. All I would be offering is the cheated person a chance to decide for themselves if they are aggrieved or not. Implicit in your point is that there is a chance the cheated person might not be aggrieved if they found out. So I intend on letting them make that decision on their own.What is the important point, here? For you it's the cheating. But you're the one who calls it that. Until the aggrieved party speaks, there is no aggrieved party - unless it's you! No cheating has occurred until the "cheatee" calls it. And when that happens, you're out of the picture. — tim wood
You apparently are concerned with the behaviour, but unless you know all the details of the why of it, then you don't actually know what it is. And I have twice excepted crime; and no, slavery is not an issue, nor assault and battery. Try this. Find a wise neutral party, and solicit an opinion there. Clearly you/re only interest here is to promote your own point of view. — tim wood
You have completely missed the point. Your interference is at the level of an involuntary short-arm inspection — tim wood
But it is good to hear you're so ethically minded. No doubt there are many initiatives in your community and beyond where you apply your energy for the good of all. What are some of those? — tim wood
Indeed they do. Perhaps I want to spare my partner the sad and humiliating truth that I have come to find her unexciting, if not repulsive. Perhaps she finds me so, and we have had no physical relations for years. Perhaps apart from this, we get on well and are happy together. Perhaps both of us are cheaters sparing each other's feelings as best we can. — unenlightened
How strongly do you believe in this prospective act if you are not willing to claim it personally, by name? — Bitter Crank
how I found out would become immediately clear and would damage other relationships — ProbablyTrue
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