IHL is based in law, ergo, a set of rules that have agreed upon should be followed.
It is underpinned by, among other things, morality, but pointing at IHL is not a moral argument. It's a legal argument. — Tzeentch
That would be a matter for criminal law, not IHL. — Tzeentch
In the case of an armed conflict not of an international character, serious violations of article 3 common to the four Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, namely, any of the following acts committed against persons taking no active part in the hostilities, including members of armed forces who have laid down their arms and those placed hors de combat by sickness, wounds, detention or any other cause:
Violence to life and person, in particular murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture;
Committing outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment;
Taking of hostages;
The passing of sentences and the carrying out of executions without previous judgement pronounced by a regularly constituted court, affording all judicial guarantees which are generally recognized as indispensable. — Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court
A moral justification is (or should be) based on an exhaustive argument, preferably all the way down to first principles, as to why a certain action is good.
A "plain ordinary justification" is a fancy word for an opinion. — Tzeentch
Killing animals, not a moral choice. :brow:
Ok then... — Tzeentch
Can you expound on the difference you're thinking about between "morally justified" and "justification"? — Benkei
Poison gas only becomes a war crime in the 1920s due to international agreement, so presumably before that it was acceptable. — BitconnectCarlos
You're confusing law with morality. — Benkei
And this is what you would term "justice"? :chin: — Tzeentch
Is that based on MORALITY or convenience? If morality, which version of it, whose morality? Also many gangs around the world should therefore be tried under these rules, do you think they will ever do that.The term "war crime" refers to international humanitarian law. — Tzeentch
If you're asking me whether war of any kind can be morally justified, my answer would be no. — Tzeentch
If this isn't a moral question to you, then I'm afraid there might not be enough common ground to have a constructive discussion. — Tzeentch
As for the question of reasonableness: there are many things some people at some point thought to be reasonable. Considering how unreasonable mankind tends to be (especially when it comes to conflict) such a label bears little substance to me. — Tzeentch
First of, the question of justification is a moral one, and therefore should be understood on the appropriate level; that of the moral agent - the individual. — Tzeentch
So lets take the individual Winston Churchill.
Winston had many options open to him besides authorizing the killing of thousands.
For example, he could have foregone a career in politics and lived out his life in contemplative seclusion.
An infinitely more preferable and just option than having the blood of thousands on one's hands. — Tzeentch
Possibly? But who would be so foolish to become a prime minister if what they aspired to was living a moral life? — Tzeentch
I asked you in my first reply to you: "How would you calculate who has worse luck?" I think you must not have noticed this question as you haven't answered it yet. — Truth Seeker
All-loving, all-knowing, and all-powerful beings don't actually exist and will never actually exist. I am merely imagining such beings for fun. You are taking it far too seriously. This is a fictional scenario. — Truth Seeker
Do you accept my ideal reality which consists of an infinite number of all-loving, all-knowing, and all-powerful beings who each own an omniverse containing an infinite number of universes? — Truth Seeker
It's supposed to be a fun thread where everyone can imagine whatever they want! — Truth Seeker
I am so sorry for all your suffering and loss. Two of my friends with Bipolar Disorder took their own lives as the illness is so hard to live with. Many of my relatives have died from illnesses and accidents. This is not a competition on who has suffered more. — Truth Seeker
You didn't answer the questions I asked you in the previous post. Is that because you don't know the answers or don't want to answer my questions? — Truth Seeker
What does your ideal world look like? How would you prevent all suffering, inequality, injustice, and deaths? — Truth Seeker
All-loving, all-knowing and all-powerful beings would be able to keep themselves from being bored using their abilities. For example, I draw pictures, write stories and poems and play musical instruments, etc. I could do so much more if I were all-knowing and all-powerful. I would be able to draw an infinite number of pictures, write an infinite number of stories and poems and play an infinite number of musical instruments, etc. — Truth Seeker
I would not be destroying anything. I would be preventing. For something to be destroyed, it must first exist. You can't destroy something nonexistent. — Truth Seeker
Again, I am preventing the existence of those who suffer and die — Truth Seeker
instead creating those who are all-loving, all-knowing and all-powerful so that they will never suffer and die. — Truth Seeker
I have been suffering from CPTSD since 17 December 1982, Bipolar Disorder since 29 September 1997 and chronic nerve pain since 21 August 2008. I am on various medications but they are not very effective. I was kidnapped when I was 4 years and 5 months old. I almost died by drowning when I was 4 years and 9 months old. I was raped when I was 5 years and 9 months old. I watched people murder each other when I was 8 years old. I was beaten regularly by my Mum from my earliest memories (age 4) to 15 years old. I was beaten regularly at school by my teachers. Six of my relatives were murdered. My best friend was also murdered. When I was 9 years and 7 months old my younger brother died at the age of only 8 days due to doctor's errors. When I was 13 years and 8 months old my favourite uncle died due to an anaesthetist's error. My uncle was only 28 years old and had just gotten married. When I was 12 years and 10 months old, I experienced a cyclone that killed 138,866 people. — Truth Seeker
I don't know. I didn't claim to be all-knowing. I am going by what I have observed on Earth. — Truth Seeker
I am merely exercising my imagination, nothing more. — Truth Seeker
You would not say that if you had my genes, my environments from conception to the present, my nutrients from conception to the present, and my experiences from the womb to the present. I hate life the way it has been and is. The world has been and continues to be full of suffering, inequality, injustice, and deaths. — Truth Seeker
I would prevent the existence of the universe (or universes if there is more than one) as that would prevent all suffering, inequality, injustice, and deaths. — Truth Seeker
I would bring into existence an infinite number of all-loving, all-knowing, and all-powerful beings who always make perfect choices instead of fallible organisms such as ourselves who make mistakes, suffer and die. — Truth Seeker
But that doesn't mean what they teach is useless. It would be a logical fallacy to argue that someone who is flawed can't also be a conduit for wisdom. — Tom Storm
There is no way you are not a bot made in 2015 by a now-bankrupt company. — Lionino
There isn’t a certain question at hand. It’s an invitation to think about certain points which I post. I throw my thoughts out there and hope to create a place for people to just let there thoughts roam. — Elnathan
Somehow you've managed to attribute nearly all the quotes in your reply to a poster who's not even participating in this thread. — Wayfarer
Civilians should be limited to revolvers, shotguns or bolt-action rifles, with lengthy prison time for any violators. — RogueAI
Actually, it is. Yes, it’s also a rant post, but there are reasons given: — Mikie
I see a pattern among members who aren’t that bright but who want to sound bright: claim everything is a “fallacy,” and use the phrase “That isn’t an argument” — like a magic wand, just wave it over anything you don’t like, can’t understand, or can’t engage with. — Mikie
It sounds very authoritative, doesn’t it? — Mikie
“That’s not an argument.” It strikes me as a person imitating someone who uses it appropriately, but who really doesn’t understand the implications. Like doing an impression. — Mikie
“That’s a fallacy of xyz”
“That’s not an argument!” — Mikie
“As if they’re the final arbiters because they just took freshman logic.
What a waste of time— I’d like to see this stupid shit go away. — Mikie
Could you, just for conveniences sake, point out exactly what your argument is here. I might be wrong but I think you skipped directly to the conclusion which means, wait for it...........
“That’s not an argument!” — Sir2u
Every statement? Every POV? Every belief? — Vera Mont
How be, we just provide links to authoritative sources for statements of fact, acknowledge our personal opinion, belief or perspective, and provide arguments only for philosophical positions? — Vera Mont
↪Sir2u
:scream: — Mikie
An argument is the presenting of reasons/evidence for a claim or conclusion. Really that simple. — Mikie
Why is everybody expected to argue about everything all the time anyway? — Vera Mont
I see a pattern among members who aren’t that bright but who want to sound bright: claim everything is a “fallacy,” and use the phrase “That isn’t an argument” — like a magic wand, just wave it over anything you don’t like, can’t understand, or can’t engage with.
It sounds very authoritative, doesn’t it? “That’s not an argument.” It strikes me as a person imitating someone who uses it appropriately, but who really doesn’t understand the implications. Like doing an impression.
“That’s a fallacy of xyz”
“That’s not an argument!”
As if they’re the final arbiters because they just took freshman logic.
What a waste of time— I’d like to see this stupid shit go away.
a day ago
Oh, and to clarify:
An argument is the presenting of reasons/evidence for a claim or conclusion. Really that simple. — Mikie
True, I remember reading that eating also damages DNA. — Lionino
Another down-side: employers would cut lunch hour to 2 minutes a day. — Vera Mont
The benefits being pleasure. — Lionino
Or you could take a pill and avoid every downside of eating (bloating, toxins, phytic acid, heavy metals etc). — Lionino
When I said "You can still eat stuff, but it would not give you any needed nourishment and would come with all the negatives of eating", — Lionino
I wanted to imply that you get all the negatives without getting the positives. — Lionino
Wouldn't eating then be like smoking or at least like drinking beer? — Lionino
Some folks said they wouldn't take the pill. I wonder why :chin: — Lionino