Okay. But that still leaves the key question: WHY do you think you are a better person for following your conscience in that rather than ignoring or overcoming it?Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Mar 23, 2024 8:27 pmI suppose that's true. And hunger itself will sometimes override a person's conscience and make them do horrible things. I don't know if a person can go their entire life without ever meeting up with their conscience if they do wrong, but then again, I'm not everyone. I can only attest for myself. I generally feel rotten when I think of things I did wrong. And so I don't do them again.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 23, 2024 7:53 pmDifficult? Not really, apparently.
Conscience is nowhere near so urgent as hunger, because eventually, you just can't ignore hunger -- and if you do, you'll die. But people can ignore their consciences, or even get used to ignoring them, so that the conscience never bothers them again on a particular point.
And are you objectively a better person, or are you only subjectively more pleased with yourself, but objectively not any better a person at all?