You owe them money and you owe them a civil and respectful interaction ... and that's all.When I go to the store and buy food, I get something from people who worked hard to give me something I need to keep me alive, keep my body healthy and well fed.
I OWE them something in return.
What I owe them has to be equally nourishing to them, equally beneficial to them, to their children, to others.
Your OWN personal morality
Re: Your OWN personal morality
Re: Your OWN personal morality
So where are the philosophers who are supposed to examine an issue from all possible angles? 
Re: Your OWN personal morality
They are still analyzing the morality of getting out of bed. 
Re: Your OWN personal morality
I must be in the wrong thread.
I thought this was "Applied Ethics"?
Sounds like applied immorality and irresponsibility.
I thought this was "Applied Ethics"?
Sounds like applied immorality and irresponsibility.
- henry quirk
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philosophers: pffftt!
Since when I am beholden to any one to examine any issue 'from all possible angles' (being mindful of other perspectives)?
'I' have a perspective (myself) that's defendable and valid.
#
"immorality and irresponsibility"
Eye of the beholder.
Your (picayune) mistake: assuming 'your' ethic is the 'right' ethic and therefore applicable to everyone.
'I' have a perspective (myself) that's defendable and valid.
#
"immorality and irresponsibility"
Eye of the beholder.
Your (picayune) mistake: assuming 'your' ethic is the 'right' ethic and therefore applicable to everyone.
Re: Your OWN personal morality
Ned, just so you know that I'm not completely unaware of other people's problems.
Many years ago I owned a hobby shop and one of the lines was model rockets. One day a young boy came it and bought a rocket kit and paid with coins. After he left I looked at them and many were quite old, so I picked them out and set them aside. The next day he was back with his mother, and it turned out that he had taken the coins from her boyfriend's coin collection. I returned them saying I wasn't sure that I had gotten all of the old ones but she said it was OK and paid with current currency. I could have played dumb and claimed I hadn't noticed anything, as the coins were certainly worth more than 'face value', but I returned them because it was the right thing to do, not because they were stolen, even though that was a part of it.
Many years ago I owned a hobby shop and one of the lines was model rockets. One day a young boy came it and bought a rocket kit and paid with coins. After he left I looked at them and many were quite old, so I picked them out and set them aside. The next day he was back with his mother, and it turned out that he had taken the coins from her boyfriend's coin collection. I returned them saying I wasn't sure that I had gotten all of the old ones but she said it was OK and paid with current currency. I could have played dumb and claimed I hadn't noticed anything, as the coins were certainly worth more than 'face value', but I returned them because it was the right thing to do, not because they were stolen, even though that was a part of it.
Re: Your OWN personal morality
Now you are speaking my language.thedoc wrote: I returned them because it was the right thing to do, not because they were stolen, even though that was a part of it.
Thank you.
Re: philosophers: pffftt!
The last man on Earthhenry quirk wrote:'I' have a perspective (myself) that's defendable and valid.
The last man on Earth
sat alone in his room,
aware of his isolation,
knowing He would come for him soon
with his well-deserved salvation.
There was a knock on the door
and he eagerly rushed to answer,
wondering why He was late…
…
but he saw only hooves, tail and horn,
sealing his misanthropic fate.
Re: Your OWN personal morality
And where does responsibility end?
Should you not investigate every customer, of the hobby store, to determine whether he is paying with money acquired by theft, dealing in illegal drugs, manufacture of munitions, etc?
Should you not investigate every customer, of the hobby store, to determine whether he is paying with money acquired by theft, dealing in illegal drugs, manufacture of munitions, etc?
Re: Your OWN personal morality
Ned wrote:Now you are speaking my language.thedoc wrote: I returned them because it was the right thing to do, not because they were stolen, even though that was a part of it.
Thank you.
And that leaves us with a very big problem, how to determine what is the 'right thing' in every unique situation, for every individual person. That is a lot of different situations every day times almost 7 billion individual people in this world, can you solve that in an afternoon? including coffee breaks?
Re: Your OWN personal morality
As long as you have a personal morality that goes beyond blind and unscrupulous self interest, then you are fine, you are not a potential parasite on humanity's body.phyllo wrote:And where does responsibility end?
Should you not investigate every customer, of the hobby store, to determine whether he is paying with money acquired by theft, dealing in illegal drugs, manufacture of munitions, etc?
If you want to go beyond that, it is up to you.
Re: philosophers: pffftt!
Ned wrote:The last man on Earthhenry quirk wrote:'I' have a perspective (myself) that's defendable and valid.
The last man on Earth
sat alone in his room,
aware of his isolation,
knowing He would come for him soon
with his well-deserved salvation.
There was a knock on the door
and he eagerly rushed to answer,
wondering why He was late…
…
but he saw only hooves, tail and horn,
sealing his misanthropic fate.
Or like this?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UAxARJyaTEA
- henry quirk
- Posts: 16379
- Joined: Fri May 09, 2008 8:07 pm
- Location: 🔥AMERICA🔥
- Contact:
The last man on Earth = crappy story
Explain how my position outlined in this thread could make me "a potential parasite on humanity's body"?
Re: Your OWN personal morality
You have to look in the mirror every day and ask yourself: what is it I am giving back?thedoc wrote:And that leaves us with a very big problem, how to determine what is the 'right thing' in every unique situation, for every individual person. That is a lot of different situations every day times almost 7 billion individual people in this world, can you solve that in an afternoon? including coffee breaks?
If you are only interested in taking, then you are a thief.
If you make harmful things (land-mines, poisons, oil-spills, etc., ) then you are worse than a thief -- you are being destructive.
If you make useless things that nobody needs, then you are a drain on society.
If you make useful things that are demonstrably good for other people (don't need any fancy justification) then you are an honourable, useful member of your species.
These are your choices as I see them.
Re: Your OWN personal morality
That suggests a simple honest exchange of goods for money. But before you wrote about 'nourishing'.As long as you have a personal morality that goes beyond blind and unscrupulous self interest, then you are fine, you are not a potential parasite on humanity's body.
If you want to go beyond that, it is up to you.
So what's the difference between what you are saying about a personal morality and what others have been saying?