Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
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Gary Childress
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Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
There's an old dark saying I've been fascinated by since I first heard it. "It's better to do evil than nothing at all." Is that true?
I've always thought doing nothing would be better than doing evil. So I mostly try to do nothing. But it still seems to turn out evil.
I temped at some sort of medical equipment corporation once not long after I was first hospitalized with mental illness. I had a manic episode at their copier and pretty much wrecked the only original copy of a medical manual that they possessed for their product. I never went back. I probably put them out of business. It would have been better for everyone's sake had I just slept in that day and not shown up for work. But, I did evil that day instead of nothing at all. It was a mistake. What lousy advice!
I've always thought doing nothing would be better than doing evil. So I mostly try to do nothing. But it still seems to turn out evil.
I temped at some sort of medical equipment corporation once not long after I was first hospitalized with mental illness. I had a manic episode at their copier and pretty much wrecked the only original copy of a medical manual that they possessed for their product. I never went back. I probably put them out of business. It would have been better for everyone's sake had I just slept in that day and not shown up for work. But, I did evil that day instead of nothing at all. It was a mistake. What lousy advice!
- attofishpi
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Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
None of that was 'evil' - wrong maybe but that is all. And I really don't understand why you would find "It's better to do evil than nothing at all." fascinating, its a bloody ridiculous statement.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Tue Dec 05, 2023 1:39 am There's an old dark saying I've been fascinated by since I first heard it. "It's better to do evil than nothing at all." Is that true?
I've always thought doing nothing would be better than doing evil. So I mostly try to do nothing. But it still seems to turn out evil.
I temped at some sort of medical equipment corporation once not long after I was first hospitalized with mental illness. I had a manic episode at their copier and pretty much wrecked the only original copy of a medical manual that they possessed for their product. I never went back. I probably put them out of business. It would have been better for everyone's sake had I just slept in that day and not shown up for work. But, I did evil that day instead of nothing at all. It was a mistake. What lousy advice!
Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
The OP seems akin to asking is - 1 greater or less than zero?
I do believe in a semi-related anecdote, though. Namely: it is better to try a plan that is not guaranteed to succeed than to do nothing.
The difference is that the OP's scenario knows that evil is evil, whereas in mine a plan may or may not success but we guess it has a <50% chance.
I do believe in a semi-related anecdote, though. Namely: it is better to try a plan that is not guaranteed to succeed than to do nothing.
The difference is that the OP's scenario knows that evil is evil, whereas in mine a plan may or may not success but we guess it has a <50% chance.
Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
You are a prime candidate for "Opposite George Practice." What do you have to lose, other than what you want to lose?Gary Childress wrote: ↑Tue Dec 05, 2023 1:39 am
I've always thought doing nothing would be better than doing evil. So I mostly try to do nothing. But it still seems to turn out evil.
- Angelo Cannata
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Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
You cannot understand that saying from a cold, traditional, rational, point of view. That saying comes from a human perspective. “Human” means that it gives importance to human existence, emotions, relatioships, growth, while abstract philosophy is, sadly, very disconnected from the human experience of life.
Once we have clarified the perspective, the meaning of the saying can be understood:
- if somebody does evil, you can correct them, you can help them to grow, to aknowledge their mistakes, there is space for progress; on the contrary, if somebody doesn’t do anything, there is nothing to correct, nothing to improve, there is no hope;
- doing evil is not necessarily intentional; we might even say that it is never intentional; this means that, frequently, those who do evil, despite what we can see at first sight, expose themselves to other’s judgement, reactions; those who don’t do anything are like sealed in an impenetrable sphere, where nothing and nobody can interfere, they are completely closed to any dialogue, they do not compromise themselves, they do not expose themselves to any risk of vulnerabiltiy, any effort to interact with them finds a wall.
Now the question is: shall we think that the Holocaust made by Hitler was better than being completely inactive?
This thought is, obviously, unacceptable. Moreover, if we generalize the idea, the question becomes impossible to answer because, at the end, it involves the reason why this world exists. The evil that we know in this world is not just the Holocaust made by Hitler; there are so many other evil things, that we might even conclude that this world as such is evil itself, so it would have been better if it never existed. This idea contains the mistake of pretending to judge the world from the inside of it: as parts of this world, we have no way for a final, definitive understanding of it, so we have no way for any final judgement on it. Whatever we say is just a perspective that can be easily criticized and demolished by another opposite perspective.
These notes can remind us that any saying, any thought, is acceptable only in a specific context, a specific perspective. There are no sayings or ideas that are true, acceptable, good, in all contexts and all perspectives; in other words, there aren’t universal, absolute truths.
Once we have clarified the perspective, the meaning of the saying can be understood:
- if somebody does evil, you can correct them, you can help them to grow, to aknowledge their mistakes, there is space for progress; on the contrary, if somebody doesn’t do anything, there is nothing to correct, nothing to improve, there is no hope;
- doing evil is not necessarily intentional; we might even say that it is never intentional; this means that, frequently, those who do evil, despite what we can see at first sight, expose themselves to other’s judgement, reactions; those who don’t do anything are like sealed in an impenetrable sphere, where nothing and nobody can interfere, they are completely closed to any dialogue, they do not compromise themselves, they do not expose themselves to any risk of vulnerabiltiy, any effort to interact with them finds a wall.
Now the question is: shall we think that the Holocaust made by Hitler was better than being completely inactive?
This thought is, obviously, unacceptable. Moreover, if we generalize the idea, the question becomes impossible to answer because, at the end, it involves the reason why this world exists. The evil that we know in this world is not just the Holocaust made by Hitler; there are so many other evil things, that we might even conclude that this world as such is evil itself, so it would have been better if it never existed. This idea contains the mistake of pretending to judge the world from the inside of it: as parts of this world, we have no way for a final, definitive understanding of it, so we have no way for any final judgement on it. Whatever we say is just a perspective that can be easily criticized and demolished by another opposite perspective.
These notes can remind us that any saying, any thought, is acceptable only in a specific context, a specific perspective. There are no sayings or ideas that are true, acceptable, good, in all contexts and all perspectives; in other words, there aren’t universal, absolute truths.
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Ansiktsburk
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Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
Thats like the story of my class journey. Doing nothing seems pretty hard, but what I grew up with, grown up life is to get a job job, manintain a family and pretty much do what salary worker does is more or less considered doing nothing in the more prosperous community, especially socially and culturally where I now live. And well the thing they “do”, individually and even more collectively, no matter going right or left wing could well be described as evil. And I doubt that it is in many ways better.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Tue Dec 05, 2023 1:39 am There's an old dark saying I've been fascinated by since I first heard it. "It's better to do evil than nothing at all." Is that true?
Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
OBVIOUSLY 'that' ALL DEPENDS.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Tue Dec 05, 2023 1:39 am There's an old dark saying I've been fascinated by since I first heard it. "It's better to do evil than nothing at all." Is that true?
'These people, BACK THEN, seemed to CONTINUALLY FORGET that; Absolutely EVERY 'thing' IS relative TO 'the observer'.
What could, 'mostly try to do nothing', EVEN MEAN or REFER TO, EXACTLY?Gary Childress wrote: ↑Tue Dec 05, 2023 1:39 am I've always thought doing nothing would be better than doing evil. So I mostly try to do nothing.
WILL 'you' PROVIDE ABSOLUTELY ANY examples?
If no, then WHY NOT?
Are these PRESUPPOSITIONS here True.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Tue Dec 05, 2023 1:39 am I temped at some sort of medical equipment corporation once not long after I was first hospitalized with mental illness. I had a manic episode at their copier and pretty much wrecked the only original copy of a medical manual that they possessed for their product. I never went back. I probably put them out of business.
Did 'you' REALLY so-call 'wreck' the REALLY 'only' 'original' copy?
Did 'you' REALLY PUT 'them' OUT OF BUSINESS?
Or, ARE 'you' here just ONCE AGAIN LOOKING AT the WORST, ONLY, "gary childress"?
Also, what CAUSED 'your' so-called 'manic episode' a some copier machine?
And, HOW, EXACTLY, could have 'you' 'pretty much wreck' just some papers at a copier machine?
HOW do 'you' KNOW that that ONE and ONLY ORIGINAL COPY of some product was NOT of 'some product', which could of done untold harm and damage TO humanity, itself, or was of absolutely NOT benefit TO humanity, itself, and was just ANOTHER 'money GRABBING product' for some VERY EVIL and/or GREEDY business people?Gary Childress wrote: ↑Tue Dec 05, 2023 1:39 am It would have been better for everyone's sake had I just slept in that day and not shown up for work.
Could 'you' have ACTUALLY CREATED A HUGE or SOME BENEFIT FOR humanity, itself, 'that day'?
Or, did what 'you did' HAVE TO BE ON the 'negative' and/or 'bad' "side" OF 'things', ONLY?
Well 'this' ANSWERS MY LAST QUESTION here.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Tue Dec 05, 2023 1:39 am But, I did evil that day instead of nothing at all. It was a mistake. What lousy advice!
Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
You raise a thoughtful philosophical question - when faced with uncertainty, is it better to risk action that may unintentionally cause harm, or refrain from acting at all?It is an issue I have grappled with myself frequently. In some ways, doing nothing does avoid responsibility for negative outcomes. Yet inaction has consequences too, even if just lost opportunities.I would argue the saying you referenced takes too extreme of a view though. True "evil" requires malicious intent in my opinion. Situations are rarely so black and white. Oftentimes we simply lack enough information to perfectly predict the impacts of each choice.In those cases, having a system of ethical principles can guide our behavior - things like honesty, caring, fairness. If we act according to our best judgement of what upholds ethical ideals, then even if unforeseen harm still results, we behaved nobly. Intentions matter alongside outcomes.In that sense, abstaining from those principles out of fear of imperfection feels more damaging than earnestly striving for ethical action while acknowledging our human limitations. We cannot control everything, but we can control our own character.Just some thoughts! Curious to hear yours and others' perspectives on this thought-provoking topic. How do we balance action vs inaction when confronted with ethical ambiguity?
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Martin Peter Clarke
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Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
Choose your suffering. Including the choice of inaction. If you think action will cause more suffering, don't act. Freddy Forsythe, as usual, explored it very well in The Devil's Alternative. The Trolley Car Dilemma writ large.
Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
It's better to abstain from doing good than to do harm.
Why, you may ask?
Because you know what they say about the road to hell.
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Impenitent
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Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
better for who?
you are a soldier- ordered to go fight the battle
do you disobey your commander and refuse to go? (abstaining)
the other people in your squad go, fight and die
they might have lived had you gone to fight with them as ordered...
abstaining can be harmful
evil is a funny thing
-Imp
you are a soldier- ordered to go fight the battle
do you disobey your commander and refuse to go? (abstaining)
the other people in your squad go, fight and die
they might have lived had you gone to fight with them as ordered...
abstaining can be harmful
evil is a funny thing
-Imp
- accelafine
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Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
What a horrible story. Do you care about anyone but yourself? Did you lose any sleep over that business you probably ruined, the one that was kind (stupid) enough to give a job to a lunatic? Did you put 'lunatic' on your CV, or let them know before they gave you the job?Gary Childress wrote: ↑Tue Dec 05, 2023 1:39 am There's an old dark saying I've been fascinated by since I first heard it. "It's better to do evil than nothing at all." Is that true?
I've always thought doing nothing would be better than doing evil. So I mostly try to do nothing. But it still seems to turn out evil.
I temped at some sort of medical equipment corporation once not long after I was first hospitalized with mental illness. I had a manic episode at their copier and pretty much wrecked the only original copy of a medical manual that they possessed for their product. I never went back. I probably put them out of business. It would have been better for everyone's sake had I just slept in that day and not shown up for work. But, I did evil that day instead of nothing at all. It was a mistake. What lousy advice!
Btw, 'It's better to do evil than nothing at all'' is not even a saying. It makes no sense whatsoever. It's nothing like the 'saying' in your thread title.
They both sound like something you've dreamed up in one of your psychotic episodes.
Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
Soldiers, cops, abortionists and executioners have license to kill, so society defines their good deeds.
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Gary Childress
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Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
What a stupid question. Obviously, my mistake bothers me. When I was first diagnosed, it was illegal to ask people about their health situation in job interviews because it wasn't deemed fair to discriminate against people based on health except on special jobs where one's health situation would clearly be an impediment. Since you're on the topic, do you ever think of anyone but yourself?accelafine wrote: ↑Fri May 30, 2025 9:18 pmWhat a horrible story. Do you care about anyone but yourself? Did you lose any sleep over that business you probably ruined, the one that was kind (stupid) enough to give a job to a lunatic? Did you put 'lunatic' on your CV, or let them know before they gave you the job?Gary Childress wrote: ↑Tue Dec 05, 2023 1:39 am There's an old dark saying I've been fascinated by since I first heard it. "It's better to do evil than nothing at all." Is that true?
I've always thought doing nothing would be better than doing evil. So I mostly try to do nothing. But it still seems to turn out evil.
I temped at some sort of medical equipment corporation once not long after I was first hospitalized with mental illness. I had a manic episode at their copier and pretty much wrecked the only original copy of a medical manual that they possessed for their product. I never went back. I probably put them out of business. It would have been better for everyone's sake had I just slept in that day and not shown up for work. But, I did evil that day instead of nothing at all. It was a mistake. What lousy advice!
Btw, 'It's better to do evil than nothing at all'' is not even a saying. It makes no sense whatsoever. It's nothing like the 'saying' in your thread title.
They both sound like something you've dreamed up in one of your psychotic episodes.
- accelafine
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Re: Is it better to abstain from doing than to do harm?
Stupid question. In case you hadn't noticed I hardly ever talk about myself--and only when it's relevant.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Fri May 30, 2025 10:59 pmWhat a stupid question. Obviously, my mistake bothers me. When I was first diagnosed, it was illegal to ask people about their health situation in job interviews because it wasn't deemed fair to discriminate against people based on health except on special jobs where one's health situation would clearly be an impediment. Since you're on the topic, do you ever think of anyone but yourself?accelafine wrote: ↑Fri May 30, 2025 9:18 pmWhat a horrible story. Do you care about anyone but yourself? Did you lose any sleep over that business you probably ruined, the one that was kind (stupid) enough to give a job to a lunatic? Did you put 'lunatic' on your CV, or let them know before they gave you the job?Gary Childress wrote: ↑Tue Dec 05, 2023 1:39 am There's an old dark saying I've been fascinated by since I first heard it. "It's better to do evil than nothing at all." Is that true?
I've always thought doing nothing would be better than doing evil. So I mostly try to do nothing. But it still seems to turn out evil.
I temped at some sort of medical equipment corporation once not long after I was first hospitalized with mental illness. I had a manic episode at their copier and pretty much wrecked the only original copy of a medical manual that they possessed for their product. I never went back. I probably put them out of business. It would have been better for everyone's sake had I just slept in that day and not shown up for work. But, I did evil that day instead of nothing at all. It was a mistake. What lousy advice!
Btw, 'It's better to do evil than nothing at all'' is not even a saying. It makes no sense whatsoever. It's nothing like the 'saying' in your thread title.
They both sound like something you've dreamed up in one of your psychotic episodes.
Clearly your 'health situation' WAS an impediment. It destroyed someone's whole business and took away the jobs of multiple innocent people.
Just the fact that you call it a 'mistake' shows how little you care. Sounds like a bit more than just 'a mistake'.