I lean towards people being either naturally neutral or good. — Tzeentch
Their misery clouds their perception, to the point that they believe hurting their children will improve their situation. — Tzeentch
morality is something that only concerns humans. — Tzeentch
Man is somewhere in between the gods and the beasts" - Plotinus — IvoryBlackBishop
You think it isn't bad??? — ssu
Perhaps our natural tendencies are balanced between good and evil and we're morally ambiguous creatures. In such a world free will would certainly assure responsibility for both our good deeds and bad deeds. Such a world would have good and evil. — TheMadFool
There's a third option, which is that you give out of a feeling of obligation because it's your duty. I'd submit that is the highest option and the one you summarily reject. — Hanover
Perhaps. Like I said before, I don't consider animals to be capable of evil or good. — Tzeentch
I would generally say that "power" involves going outside of codified institutional norms and this can still be accomplished in a democracy because those rules can either be hacked or worked around or interpreted strangely so we always need to be on guard for this. — BitconnectCarlos
The hate is somewhat excessive, don't you guys think? — Wallows
Which I why I do not agree with the notion that humans are naturally evil. — Tzeentch
But lets say, for the sake of argument, that they do commit evil acts. — Tzeentch
I just don't consider evil to be a natural tendency, but a tendency born out of ignorance. — Tzeentch
Couldn't I theoretically move to some desolate place where no government has a say over me, without bothering anyone else? — Tzeentch
I'm agnostic, almost atheistic. — TheMadFool
Imposing one's will upon another is, in my opinion, illegitimate, whether one does it on behalf of other people or not.
My point is that governments have no right to rule over people who do not want to be ruled by it. — Tzeentch
What else could it be, unless you reject representative democracy, and then you’re imposing your view on others. And I assume you’d feel justified.
— Brett
Rejecting something does not equal imposing it on others. — Tzeentch
But there is always an enormous risk inherent in that. What happens after the threat is gone? — BitconnectCarlos
A very clear example of this would be when Hitler declared a state of emergency upon being elected and suspended the Constitution because there was some supposed existential threat facing the state — BitconnectCarlos
Where exactly is modern society's morality documented?
— alcontali
Why would it be documented?
One reason why such society does not want to document it, is because they want to keep changing it as it suits them. The lack of of documentation points to its fundamentally deceptive and manipulative nature.
— alcontali — Brett
another boring right-wing moan. You guys are always trying to dress up your basic unexamined conservatism in some higher sounding philosophical rhetoric - — Isaac
What evidence do you have to support that conclusion? Could you cite some enthongraphies which detail the extent to which chiefs in nomadic hunter-gatherer communities ignored consensus to dictate what would happen. Or is 'evidence' just another one of those things which gets in the way of 'progress'? — Isaac