What holds together a society is the enforcement of morality through the use of force (the law). You get enough dissent and nonconformity to your society's morals, you kill your society. That's why a society has a right to defend itself from such nonconformity, according to the majority of the population. If you don't agree with this, continue reading below. — L'éléphant
And yet, the list of illegal activities is long.And society does not have a right to defend itself from nonconformity, especially when society has a Bill of Rights protecting minorities from the tyranny of a majority. — James Riley
And yet, the list of illegal activities is long. — L'éléphant
And by integrity, I mean the unwritten format that a human population adopts by creating regulations, institutions, establishing economic interests, religious beliefs, etc. — L'éléphant
What holds together a society is the enforcement of morality through the use of force (the law). — L'éléphant
the list of illegal activities is long. — L'éléphant
According to the penal code, which is designed to protect society.According to whom? — tim wood
Abortion may be a crime against *some* societies, but not all. In the U.S., for instance, it is not a crime against society. — James Riley
3. It's Not Always a Wonderful Life : Narrated by Melvin Van Peebles and directed by Eugene Jarecki, this segment explores the question of what led to a decline in the urban crime rate in the US during the mid- to late 1990s. The authors of Freakonomics suggest that a substantial factor was the 1973 US Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade, which permitted women to have legal abortions, leading to more wanted children with better upbringings. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freakonomics_(film)#Segments
The question is, Did the Nazis have a society or something else?Nazis were law-abiding citizens within their own society, but their society's laws were often criminal … and violations of these criminal laws moral. — javra
No society had written a format, like a software program, where it mapped everything according to its needs and wants.you forget that "unwritten format" must be written. Otherwise, it's not worth the paper it's not written on. — James Riley
It was a military arrangement, not by the majority of the people, but by the Nazis. So, no it wasn't a society.A society. — javra
I'd like to take a moment to say that, I did cover my ass when I said in my OP that there's an unwritten format adopted by the population. Did the German society die, or the Nazi party died?That military arrangement or whatnot was democratically voted into power (this by the majority of the people). So your argument doesn't hold. — javra
It means the whole world. Look what happened to Detroit, Michigan.it means nothing. Laws change, cultures change, societies change. — James Riley
Although the Nazis won the greatest share of the popular vote in the two Reichstag general elections of 1932, they did not have a majority. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_Germany#Nazi_seizure_of_power
Did the German society die, or the Nazi party died? — L'éléphant
Loosely, a population or a group of people with structured or ordered existence bound by morality (whether religious or secular or both). Structured in the sense that they perform economic, educational, and social activities.How do you define society, exactly? I'm myself thinking of the typical dictionary senses when I use the term. — javra
Loosely, a population or a group of people with structured or ordered existence bound by morality (whether religious or secular or both). Structured in the sense that they perform economic, educational, and social activities. — L'éléphant
What holds together a society is the enforcement of morality through the use of force (the law). You get enough dissent and nonconformity to your society's morals, you kill your society. That's why a society has a right to defend itself from such nonconformity, according to the majority of the population. — L'éléphant
Morality (reinforceable eusocial habits) and Law (enforceable contracts / regulations) are independent of one another because they are divergent as often as they are convergent depending upon the regime which makes the laws. There are countless historical examples of 'immoral laws' (e.g. slavery) and 'illegal morality' (e.g. abolition). On the contrary, L'éléphant, bottom-up morality usually holds a society together in spite of the top-down regime of laws (and law-enforcement).What holds together a society is the enforcement of morality through the use of force (the law). — L'éléphant
What holds together a society is the enforcement of morality through the use of force (the law). You get enough dissent and nonconformity to your society's morals, you kill your society. That's why a society has a right to defend itself from such nonconformity, according to the majority of the population. — L'éléphant
On the contrary, L'éléphant, from the bottom-up morality usually holds a society together in spite of the top-down regime of laws (and law-enforcement). — 180 Proof
What holds together a society is the enforcement of morality through the use of force (the law). You get enough dissent and nonconformity to your society's morals, you kill your society. — L'éléphant
According to whom?
— tim wood
According to the penal code, which is designed to protect society. — L'éléphant
It is also irrelevant whether you use logic ... or rational argument in whatever you want to say here. As I will explain below, it is about society, the majority, and the individual (the private individual) components of morality. — L'éléphant
It means the whole world. Look what happened to Detroit, Michigan. — L'éléphant
No society had written a format, like a software program, where it mapped everything according to its needs and wants. — L'éléphant
A crime within some societies, yea, OK; but a crime against society? How so? — javra
Some examples of crimes against society — L'éléphant
In any even, I think it is subjective to determine that eliminating crime (through abortion or otherwise) is entirely a pro-societal marker, and that increasing crime is de facto anti-societal. There are grey areas and we (individually) don't get to choose what is pro or anti-society. Society does that. — James Riley
As a counter, if crime is injurious, and if the individuals that make up a society don't like getting injured, then reducing crime can only be pro-societal - i.e. pro the cohesion of individuals that make up the given society. Also, societies are nothing else but groups of individuals that voluntarily interrelate; so individuals, to me, do have their say; its in part how societies change over time. — javra
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.