He argues that they’re either both morally permissible despite society finding sexual assault far more distasteful and violative than murder or they’re both impermissible. — Captain Homicide
The gamer’s dilemma was created in 2009 by the philosopher Morgan Luck and boils down to the basic argument that if in and of itself virtual murder in video games like the kind in GTA is morally permissible because no one is actually being harmed then in and of itself virtual pedophilia and rape in video games must be morally permissible also for the same reason. He argues that they’re either both morally permissible despite society finding sexual assault far more distasteful and violative than murder or they’re both impermissible. In his article he then goes on to respond to five different counter arguments that attempt to find a relevant moral difference between virtual murder and virtual sexual assault. — Captain Homicide
What is your opinion on the argument? — Captain Homicide
In essence, is someone who rapes a virtual character knowing there's no consequences, as moral as one that doesn't rape a virtual character knowing there are no consequences. I would say no. — Benj96
Doesn't an immoral act require a victim? I.e., someone who is harmed by the immoral act? — RogueAI
The gamer’s dilemma was created in 2009 by the philosopher Morgan Luck and boils down to the basic argument that if in and of itself virtual murder in video games like the kind in GTA is morally permissible because no one is actually being harmed then in and of itself virtual pedophilia and rape in video games must be morally permissible also for the same reason. — Captain Homicide
Immoral acts can be crimes again the self, against others, against animals, or against the environment (ecological destruction). As all of these things cause harm to living systems either directly or indirectly. — Benj96
But all those things you listed are in a different category than virtual characters. — RogueAI
Virtual characters are essentially mindless collections of electronic switches. Can you harm a light-switch? — RogueAI
It could also lead to less violence, since people have a harmless outlet for their rage. — RogueAI
In their spare time their mind is preoccupied with mentally living out rape, murder, torture and paedophilia. How would that sit with you, if it meant that this is done in privacy with no "real" victim. — Benj96
Again, authors do the exact same thing in their fictional worlds, do they not? Is Stephen King a monster? — RogueAI
I highly doubt creators like King, Tarantino, Barker, Zombie etc actually desire to terrorize, torture, rape or kill people like what happens in their stories. — Captain Homicide
But suppose we did have an author that got off on torturing/raping his fictional characters. — RogueAI
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