"Is it better to suffer evil or to do it?"
- henry quirk
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one man's evil is another's warm, fizzy, goodness
Rephrased: Better to be predator or prey?
Predator, of course.
Predator, of course.
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bobevenson
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Re: "Is it better to suffer evil or to do it?"
He just cast another vote for evil, my friends.
- henry quirk
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Re: "Is it better to suffer evil or to do it?"
Damned straight.
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bobevenson
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Re: "Is it better to suffer evil or to do it?"
Well, I've got to admit you have most of the world on your side.henry quirk wrote:Damned straight.
- henry quirk
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- Arising_uk
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Re: "Is it better to suffer evil or to do it?"
Predators and prey have nothing to do with evil. This view is just the self-justification of the psychopath.
- henry quirk
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- Arising_uk
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Re:
Actually it couldn't but I was not naming you just pointing out that predator and prey are not evil this is a human construct misapplied to nature and such an application is a self-justification of the psychopath. If you want to know if you may be one then this may help http://personality-testing.info/tests/LSRP.php or just goggle "self test psychopathy" there's loads.henry quirk wrote:'Evil' is in the eye of the beholder (just like 'good').
There is no absolute arbiter in this.
But: if 'psychopath' is how you assess me, then 'psychopath' I am.
Could be worse...
- henry quirk
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If I read you right, A_uk, you say the predator-prey transaction is a human construct, yes?
And I'm guessin', then, you believe the good-evil transaction is 'real' (not a construct), yes?
How do you arrive at such an (forgive me) ass-backward position?
Demonstrably: there are predators in the world and there is prey in the world.
Cheetah chases gazelle is archetypical of this fact.
The transaction between the two is independent of what you or I think, or, how we might assess.
Evil and good, however, is circumstance-defined and utterly subjective.
Cutting a man's throat to save a child might be considered 'good'; cutting a man's throat for the five bucks in his pocket might be considered 'evil'.
*Seems to me: good and evil are the constructs, each defined by the, for example, bringer of violence and the receiver of violence.
The violent man may have -- he believes -- good reasons for cutting the other guy's throat. The other guy (probably) will disagree with the violent man's reasonings and judge the violent man as 'wrong'.
Anyway, if the choice is between doing evil, or, suffering evil, who in his or her right mind chooses to be the victim?
Kind of a silly question anyway...living isn't such a black and white exercise.
*feeding the poor is usually considered a 'good'...an argument can be made that feeding the poor in perpetuity leads to a dependence of (otherwise capable) folks on the generosity of others...this learned or enforced dependence could be considered 'evil' (though certainly the dependent folks wouldn't see it that way)...again: circumstance and perspective define 'good' and 'evil'
And I'm guessin', then, you believe the good-evil transaction is 'real' (not a construct), yes?
How do you arrive at such an (forgive me) ass-backward position?
Demonstrably: there are predators in the world and there is prey in the world.
Cheetah chases gazelle is archetypical of this fact.
The transaction between the two is independent of what you or I think, or, how we might assess.
Evil and good, however, is circumstance-defined and utterly subjective.
Cutting a man's throat to save a child might be considered 'good'; cutting a man's throat for the five bucks in his pocket might be considered 'evil'.
*Seems to me: good and evil are the constructs, each defined by the, for example, bringer of violence and the receiver of violence.
The violent man may have -- he believes -- good reasons for cutting the other guy's throat. The other guy (probably) will disagree with the violent man's reasonings and judge the violent man as 'wrong'.
Anyway, if the choice is between doing evil, or, suffering evil, who in his or her right mind chooses to be the victim?
Kind of a silly question anyway...living isn't such a black and white exercise.
*feeding the poor is usually considered a 'good'...an argument can be made that feeding the poor in perpetuity leads to a dependence of (otherwise capable) folks on the generosity of others...this learned or enforced dependence could be considered 'evil' (though certainly the dependent folks wouldn't see it that way)...again: circumstance and perspective define 'good' and 'evil'
Re: "Is it better to suffer evil or to do it?"
henry it depends on how you view the field of existance.evil can be difined as acting selfish.good can be difined as acting unselfishly.so the field of existance relates its self to the individual to how selfish you are as an existance.selfish existance is evil existance.national selfishness is group evil.which is why the rich that are not helpful are although law abiding in this existance might fall foul in terms of eternal existance.like jesus said its hard to please two opposing forces.ya either selfish or not.hitler identified himself as german in terms of existance and was willing to gibe his life for that cause which was national selfishness.so was seen as nationaly good by the germans on a purely selfish basis.but was in world or planitary terms evil.relative to this the usa and its allies where less evil in world terms and therefor won ww2.
Last edited by jackles on Sun Feb 02, 2014 7:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- The Voice of Time
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Re: "Is it better to suffer evil or to do it?"
Entirely completely depend on what there is talk about...
It's kinda evil to steal a 1000 euros from the pockets of your grandfather, but if the alternative is to be beaten up to near-death by your local loan shark then I'd steal the 1000 euros. A lot of variables would of course have to be enforced first, such as my grandfather's very certain "no" on some principle (anything from "you have to deal with your own problems" to "I don't like your face") in the case I should ask.
1000 euros seems like a small price to pay in your karma as to nearly dying. Also in the case of choosing yourself or somebody else to die, the mere choice is so unfathomable that one may die simply from not answering, and in that case... have you gotten both answers or none? Have you chosen evil onto yourself or the other or both or none? It seems to be simultaneously both and none. So sometimes the third option of simply not choosing can be the better choice, and that is a choice yes because depending on circumstances it might lead to anything happening.
It's kinda evil to steal a 1000 euros from the pockets of your grandfather, but if the alternative is to be beaten up to near-death by your local loan shark then I'd steal the 1000 euros. A lot of variables would of course have to be enforced first, such as my grandfather's very certain "no" on some principle (anything from "you have to deal with your own problems" to "I don't like your face") in the case I should ask.
1000 euros seems like a small price to pay in your karma as to nearly dying. Also in the case of choosing yourself or somebody else to die, the mere choice is so unfathomable that one may die simply from not answering, and in that case... have you gotten both answers or none? Have you chosen evil onto yourself or the other or both or none? It seems to be simultaneously both and none. So sometimes the third option of simply not choosing can be the better choice, and that is a choice yes because depending on circumstances it might lead to anything happening.
Re: "Is it better to suffer evil or to do it?"
evil still then can be difined in terms of selfish action.examples rape murder theft conceite the list is obvious.its comes under vice.virtue being good and its also common scence to see the difference.on a group level by politics the line can be made more indistict.its local selfishness v nonlocal unselfishness .the nonlocal has its reward in the nonlocal..and the local has it punishment in the nonlocal.
- Arising_uk
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Re:
Nope, I consider its application to human relations a construct of the psychopath to justify their behaviour. I consider it a correct description of the behaviour between certain species.henry quirk wrote:If I read you right, A_uk, you say the predator-prey transaction is a human construct, yes?
Nope, I think it a human construct to describe behaviour thats considered immoral by whichever society.And I'm guessin', then, you believe the good-evil transaction is 'real' (not a construct), yes?
I don't.How do you arrive at such an (forgive me) ass-backward position?
I agree but its between species and based-upon sustenance requirements. It's why I think it incorrect, in the main, to apply it intra-species and especially between humans.Demonstrably: there are predators in the world and there is prey in the world.
Cheetah chases gazelle is archetypical of this fact.
The transaction between the two is independent of what you or I think, or, how we might assess.
Which is why we have ethics.Evil and good, however, is circumstance-defined and utterly subjective.
Personally I think Ethics a mix of all the positions and the judgement is by society.Cutting a man's throat to save a child might be considered 'good'; cutting a man's throat for the five bucks in his pocket might be considered 'evil'.
*Seems to me: good and evil are the constructs, each defined by the, for example, bringer of violence and the receiver of violence.
The violent man may have -- he believes -- good reasons for cutting the other guy's throat. The other guy (probably) will disagree with the violent man's reasonings and judge the violent man as 'wrong'.
Who in their right mind chooses either? Do good.Anyway, if the choice is between doing evil, or, suffering evil, who in his or her right mind chooses to be the victim?
Agreed. Look for the positive intention behind any behaviour if you wish to change that behaviour.Kind of a silly question anyway...living isn't such a black and white exercise.
- henry quirk
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- Arising_uk
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Re:
Maybe but if you are going to claim no objective standards and only subjective ones then you are at the others judgement.henry quirk wrote: #
"judgement is by society"
Screw that noise.
#
A beholder who appears to be able to recognise 'evil'?"Do good"
Again: eye of the beholder.