S
Spock
Guest
You are most welcome.I thank you for your thorough response, Spock. The clarity in your words was much appreciated.
Yes, very correct.All right. Perhaps you may need to flush this definition out a bit more for me … but, if I’m not mistaken, when you mean a “positive” emotion, you mean an emotion that inclines one to be helpful to others rather than harmful. Right?
Agreed. We can create many little “boxes” with labels on them, and dissect “love” into small parts, and stash them away.Now, as a side note, which you don’t have to accept, Christians as well as many pagan philosophers claimed that there existed at least two different kinds of love. Namely, rational love and sensual love. Rational love pertains to the will, while sensual love pertains to emotions/passions. We are bifurcated in that sense. Sometimes, the will and the emotions can be at odds, in which case we either work to reorient our emotions (somehow) to go along with what our will wants, or we can have our will give into the emotions. In other words, emotion is not the only kind of love … there’s the will … but you might not agree with that … and that’s fine … for now. We don’t have to get into it at the moment … possibly.
Both and possibly even more. I mentioned the parable of the boy-scout in one of my previous posts to illutrate it. It all depends on the persons involved.Now, the real key to our disagreement, I think, is something you mentioned in the definition of “good” … you said good has to be “helpful” to somehow. I ask, what do you mean by this? It could mean various things … for example, it could mean assisting one to become a better person, or it could mean assisting them to do something that they want.
A minor correction. In the definition of “evil” I explicitly stipulated that “causing harm to others” is what constitutes evil. What you do to yourself is your own business.According to what you said earlier, however, smoking isn’t evil (even though it may be harmful). On the contrary (according to you), because if a person consents to smoking, then it is good, because as long as you consent to something, it is by definition good (according to you).
I am a mathematician, and it shows. Between the positive and the negative there is zero. The “tertium non datur” only applies to “positive” and “non-positive”. Between good and bad there is indifferent. Between moral and immoral there is amoral. Between black and white there are millions of shades of grey.Good question. It took me awhile to figure out this one in my life. First of all, on a somewhat related but possibly needlessly distracting point, your use of the terms “positive” and “negative” are a bit ambiguous in your previously mentioned definition of good and evil (unless you mean simply that negative mean “doing harm” and positive mean “not doing harm” or something like that). Originally, until the 20th century, I think, the “negative” of something mean “the absence of” something, and “positive” meant the presence or reality of something.
I hope this clarifies my position.