As a slight interlude: The ethical dictum of "an eye for an eye" strictly upholds a 1:1 ratio of retribution as moral. So both a 100:1 or a 10:1 ratio would be misaligned to it, and thereby immoral.
Just wanted to say it. — javra
Your literalist, four corners reading isn't consistent with how those who actually use that document for moral guidance interpret that passage of Leviticus. — Hanover
So how ought it to be properly interpreted? You take out one of my eyes and I take out both of yours, kind of thing? Or something else? — javra
Game theory
Tit-for-tat has been very successfully used as a strategy for the iterated prisoner's dilemma. The strategy was first introduced by Anatol Rapoport in Robert Axelrod's two tournaments,[2] held around 1980. Notably, it was (on both occasions) both the simplest strategy and the most successful in direct competition.
An agent using this strategy will first cooperate, then subsequently replicate an opponent's previous action. If the opponent previously was cooperative, the agent is cooperative. If not, the agent is not. This is similar to reciprocal altruism in biology. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tit_for_tat
They killed their own people in which they came from the Canaanites, to gain Israel the first time. And have held plenty of wars in their time.
And Jews had been killing Palestinians under Orde Wingate for over a decade by the time of the Nakba.
Palestinians already knew their fate prior to the Nakba, prior to the 1930s even. — Vaskane
I've perused the link offered. Why should I take this interpretation of monetary compensation as authoritative? — javra
My point was that an eye for an eye response to life is inconsistent with Jewish thought regardless of ratio — Hanover
as if to implyan[the current] Israeli response is inconsistent with Jewish morality — Hanover
They are used as weapons of war. If you don't use them, then my original point stands, that the virtuous put themselves at a disadvantage by renouncing immorality. Once we have agreed that far, we can argue about what acts in particular we might find it seemly to renounce in all circumstances, and what killings and maimings of innocents we can tolerate while still enjoying our moral superiority in difficult situations. — unenlightened
The world is usually more complicated than trolley-like thought experiments make it out to be Start with doing what's right and then you might see that there are alternative courses of action that weren't obvious at first. — frank
You may also see that you wanted to simplify things because what you really wanted was revenge, not defense. — frank
I'd say the opposite and argue that usually the world is more complicated than black and white, particularly in situations involving war where there are many competing interests. We typically try to find our best and brightest to resolve our ethical and legal issues due to their complexity and nuance. — Hanover
To be able to sustain your argument that the decision was based not upon ethical reasons but upon personal vendetta, you would have to show that the ethical basis provided for the decision was not reasonable, — Hanover
Or because Jews are not murderous people. They are used to be being minorities in countries and having to keep their heads down
— BitconnectCarlos
They killed their own people in which they came from the Canaanites, to gain Israel the first time. And have held plenty of wars in their time. — Vaskane
You were earlier indicating that you reserve the right to work out the moral solution to a thought experiment, but now you say it's beyond you and we need to outsource these judgments to the special few? How do you choose these best and brightest if you don't know right from wrong yourself? — frank
I would encourage you to rethink the link between morality and reasonableness. Look at this: — frank
I'm not interested in these meta-meta discussions that lead us to the place that none of us have a view from no where, so we all are biased and there is not such thing as objectivity. We function very well with all our baggage and are able to make decisions daily is the best I can say. — Hanover
There are (1) ethical reasons and (2) pragmatic reasons. If I want to steal your belongings that you are not watching over and I can do this without any possibility of being caught, there are a variety of ethical reasons not to do that. For those reasons, I will not do that. — Hanover
In the scenario posed, the question is whether we can shoot a child who is being used as a human shield in order to save our city (or, in the alternative, whether we can invade a hospital in order to remove an enemy military base underneath). — Hanover
The rape of a Jewish woman has nothing to do with the defense of Israel. — frank
The point was that reason is not the anchor of morality. It can support either moral or immoral behavior. Therefore, assuring yourself that you're reasonable is not the way to make sure you aren't about to become a Nazi. — frank
Strange that tough minded Israel doesn't follow such a policy. All a matter, I have to suppose, of whose child it is whether it is or isn't moral to sacrifice them. — unenlightened
I don't see the moral equivalence you're trying to draw. — Hanover
[1]Dude said they're a peaceful people, I pointed out not really.
[2]Do you know the why word for the average majority that makes up a set is mean? And why Mean also equates to a nasty hateful individual? Why is it that the word Villain means to come from the Villa where the masses come from? — Vaskane
The rape of a Jewish woman has nothing to do with the defense of Israel.
— frank
Of course it does. Israel doesn't want its citizens raped again, so they are dismantling their enemy's ability to do that. — Hanover
I get that Jeffrey Dahmer had his reasons for his vile acts and that he wasn't entirely irrational else he could not have carried them out. I do not think, however, that he had any valid ethical reasons for why he acted as he did. — Hanover
You know, I really believe you don't. That is the tragedy.
But "Hamas made me do it" is pathetic. — unenlightened
That's just ridiculous. — frank
Sure. Hitler's Mein Kampf, on the other hand, is very well thought through and supremely reasonable. He was just trying to defend Germany. For real. Read it.
I still think you know what you saying is wrong, you just can't keep your from saying it. — frank
You made me stop talking to you. — unenlightened
That's just ridiculous.
— frank
That's not an argument. That's just a wrong evaluation. The invasion of Gaza absolutely had to do with the invasion by Hamas, which was, as I recall, the murder of children, raping of women, and the kidnapping of the elderly and the young. Had that not happened, today would be a normal Monday and not one with Gaza under heavy attack (although they are paused momentarily). — Hanover
I didn't think I needed an argument. Hamas fired 5000 missiles at Israel. That is why Israel retaliated. That is why the west, with Joe Biden in the lead, is supporting Israel's offensive. If it just been a few cases of rape, infanticide, and kidnapping, today would be a normal Monday. — frank
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