Basically, Do you believe some people require a larger effort in self reflection, meditation and self-directed positive cognitive training to maintain the same good traits/values as someone who just does it in the first place without thinking? — Benj96
People are in general naturally bad. — turkeyMan
By the way, wouldn’t you agree that the education of a perverse nature must be punitive in character — Todd Martin
Basically, Do you believe some people require a larger effort in self reflection, meditation and self-directed positive cognitive training to maintain the same good traits/values as someone who just does it in the first place without thinking? — Benj96
What would you call a child whose parents didn't want him, but had him anyway, and have always sent him subtle or overt messages that it would be better if he didn't exist?a child with a bad nature — Todd Martin
Of course.Basically, Do you believe some people require a larger effort in self reflection, meditation and self-directed positive cognitive training to maintain the same good traits/values as someone who just does it in the first place without thinking? — Benj96
Who is trying to uphold moral values more; someone naturally bad that forces themselves to be good or someone who is naturally good but doesn’t have to try to be. — Benj96
For example a comparison between someone who is kind and amiable but naive to the darker human side as they simply have never experienced it and don’t exhibit it in themselves - someone who sees the best in people and assumes that people are good verses someone who has the opposite feelings but hides and suppresses it for the desire to be like the aforementioned individual - kind and amiable. — Benj96
Basically, Do you believe some people require a larger effort in self reflection, meditation and self-directed positive cognitive training to maintain the same good traits/values as someone who just does it in the first place without thinking? — Benj96
When a child with a bad nature who has been educated in this way grows up, when he feels the desire to harm, will remember, subconsciously, the pain or threat of pain (which, btw, is worse than the pain itself) that accompanies such thoughts and will desist from acting on them. — Todd Martin
And you have some reason to believe that early punishment works well on children whose parents didn't want them, but had them anyway, and have always sent them subtle or overt messages that it would be better if they didn't exist?Yeah I suppose you’re right. It’s for their own good at the end of the day better to be punished by a parent early than the law later — Benj96
Many children are unwanted by their parents, yet their parents keep them anyway. Such children can end up with various psychological problems.I would call such a child one in need of foster parents who would receive him or her as a blessing instead of a curse. — Todd Martin
How do you know whether a particular child has a bad/perverse nature due to genetics, or whether it is due to poor parenting?My assumption was that nature is a fixed thing for the individual, something determined by his or her genetics. — Todd Martin
...then one day a crisis occurs; maybe a dear sister of the convent tragically dies (I don’t remember), and the mischievous girl secretly witnesses the painful but pious manner the chief sister prays for her perished comrade, and invokes god...
At any rate, having witnessed this, she experiences a conversion to the church, and dedicates herself as a nun, her rebellious character replaced by a serene and pious countenance. — Todd Martin
And you have some reason to believe that early punishment works well on children whose parents didn't want them, but had them anyway, and have always sent them subtle or overt messages that it would be better if they didn't exist? — baker
baker I don’t say unwanted children have a bad nature. I would certainly say they have a bad nurture — Todd Martin
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