I don't think humans have a natural or innate tendency towards evil.
In the words of Plato; All men desire the Good.
Every person desires what they think is best for them.
The problem is that people's perceptions are hopelessly deluded, for which I think the biggest culprits are upbringing and societal factors — Tzeentch
Just for the sake of argument, suppose that evil isn't our default moral stance. That would imply that the law and the police are redundant but they're not. Ergo, as I said, evil is a natural tendency. — TheMadFool
Modern laws may be more humane in terms of the absence of torture and very strict regulations on the death penalty, but laws exist and are quite severe in terms of years of freedom deprived. Why the need for laws if it wasn't for our immoral tendencies.
Just for the sake of argument, suppose that evil isn't our default moral stance. That would imply that the law and the police are redundant but they're not. Ergo, as I said, evil is a natural tendency. — TheMadFool
Nonsense. Engines don't naturally kill people. Put one in a lifeboat and it contributes to saving thousands of lives. Put one in a tank and it contributes to death and destruction. It's not about the engine, it's about where you put it.
Just because humans in a modern agri-industrial mass society need policing, doesn't mean humans in every society ever need the same treatment. — Isaac
For one, laws often account for the outliers and not the mean, because it has to account for a great deal of insecurity. For example, because maybe 0.1% of the population are potential murderers, 100% of the population needs to be subjected to laws against murder, since we don't know who the potential murderers are.
Secondly, I don't see how your argument proves evil is an innate or natural tendency. At most it proves it is a tendency under specific circumstances. — Tzeentch
Secondly, I don't see how your argument proves evil is an innate or natural tendency. At most it proves it is a tendency under specific circumstances. — Tzeentch
The deterrent factor is what concerns me because it's universal in scope. Yes, it has or is supposed to have its greatest use against murderers but I'm quite sure, if the law didn't exist, murder rates would sky-rocket; after all, even with the death penalty still in use, murder exists. Imagine what would happen without it? — TheMadFool
Can you give us some examples of these other societies? — Brett
Either good or bad is natural tendency. If good is a natural tendency then there's no need for free will. On the other hand, if evil is a natural tendency we'd need free will to be good, not bad. So, either there's no need for free will or we need free will to be good, not bad. — TheMadFool
Ok, lets suppose there would be an increase. How would that make evil a natural tendency? — Tzeentch
I find it difficult to imagine any society that would not have some form of policing, even if it came in the form of myths and stories passed on down about behaviour and consequences and instilled in members as they grew up. — Brett
Similarly, if there's a surge of immoral behavior when restrictions are removed, it's evidence that we are so inclined. — TheMadFool
In the words of Plato; All men desire the Good.
Free-will, used in this sense, is a completely incoherent concept, so there's no traction with it here. If the desire to act in a 'good' way somehow drives our actions, then that is part of (not opposed to) free-will because it is us acting according to our desires, not according to someone else's. Thus we are free, in any meaningful sense of the term. — Isaac
we actually need free will to resist our natural tendencies rather than give them free reign over us. — TheMadFool
But the limits to your imagination aren't evidence of anything, are they? — Isaac
it cannot simultaneously be the case that we are all motivated by evil as our default moral stance, — Isaac
Natural tendencies will predominate our behavioral repertoire - what comes natural to us will feature prominently in our conduct but only if there are no restrictions. For instance, it's natural for us to desire happiness and the majority behave in ways that show that is the case. Similarly, if there's a surge of immoral behavior when restrictions are removed, it's evidence that we are so inclined. — TheMadFool
The problem is that people's perceptions are hopelessly deluded, ....
So what motivates that choice? Why do we choose sometimes to act according to morals and other times not? — Isaac
Did the fellow not have some desire to do all those things, thinking it must make him wealthier/happier, etc? Was he not ignorant of the fact that none of his actions contributed to his happiness?
And from where did anyone learn which of our tendencies are 'natural ones' and which aren't? I've studied fMRI scans and EEG. I didn't notice any labels. — Isaac
Who is "us"? Does this "us" include all the people who would not act immorally if left to their own devices? These 'natural tendencies' seem little more than broad generalizations. Those may be sometimes useful as a practical tool, but often fail to describe accurately. — Tzeentch
Is it your position that God exists and gave us free will, or that it’s part of our evolutionary development? — Brett
I don't know if we have free will or not. — TheMadFool
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