The ends could justify the means but only if the means are just. If the means are just so are the ends. — NOS4A2
If we were actually in the thick of it we (most people) would be too emotional to do anything close to an objective analysis. — ZhouBoTong
But they also got to be presidents — Noah Te Stroete
But do you think I’m disgusting for having opinions? — Noah Te Stroete
World leaders worldwide don’t care about you. Why do you care about them? They are mainly concerned about themselves and what will give them a good name. — Noah Te Stroete
Fear is extremely important to my point because hell/jail/the gallows serve as threats to prevent people from doing what they want — TheMadFool
That which we want to do but shouldn't do needs disincentives and being evil assures eternal torment in hell. The way the reward-punishment system in religion is structured suggests in no uncertain terms that we prefer not to do good (why promise heaven?) and, not surprisingly to me, that we prefer to do evil (why threaten hell?). — TheMadFool
How would you describe the world in terms of good and evil? Balanced? More evil? More good? — TheMadFool
That said, at critical events in US history like the Civil War or the Depression/WWII these "power figures" (in a more modified American sense) or "centralizers" did step up and expand the state and we generally look upon Lincoln and FDR favorably even though they were undoubtedly centralizers who took considerable executive privilege. — BitconnectCarlos
Interesting, that could be something which naturally tends to happen when there is a major war. — IvoryBlackBishop
... as a means of distinguishing anger (as an example of a 'natural tendency') from civility (which I introduced as a convenient catch-all term for what you were describing as choosing sometimes not to assert anger). — Isaac
Since all intelligent animals have a culture, then all intelligent animals have the possibility that the behaviour they exhibit is 'learnt behaviour', yes? — Isaac
So what I'm asking is - if any exhibited behaviour could be learned behaviour (including the behaviour of other animals), then how do you know that anger-associated behaviour is not learned (but rather is a 'natural tendency'), but civility is learned? — Isaac
But all creatures like us are embedded in a culture, s — Isaac
I believe humans are motivated primarily by a desire to be happy. When a person's actions do not contribute to or even undermine their happiness, I consider those actions ignorant. — Tzeentch
A well-known "solution" to the problem of evil is that god allows evil because he desired to bestow free will upon us. Thus, we, possessed of free-will, have the liberty to do anything and "sometimes" we do evil and hence there is evil in the world. — TheMadFool
in fact if free will has any role, it would be to allow the robot to be good, not bad. — TheMadFool
Ambiguous. What's a "real war"? That's definition got subject to revision after 9/11/2001, right? — Wallows
We can't really forget nuclear, because it is the (deterrent) from full-blown conflict... nowadays — Wallows
What prevents conflict, isn't the whim of some general or politician; but, the threat of the conflict itself and the losses incurred or instilled through deterrents. — Wallows
Good, and it's the job of generals to keep the generals of your adversary occupied with not going to war. — Wallows
I am. It's the delicate balance of the military (and even police) to maintain peace through adherence to some policy or line of reasoning, at least in the majority of the West. — Wallows
No... the premise of WWII was that if Hitler invaded Poland, then England and France would retaliate. Nobody really thought Hitler would actually invade Poland; but, nevertheless, it happened. — Wallows
cities.
That’s not the same at all.
— Brett
Are you sure? — Wallows