T
tonyrey
Guest
You are evading the question! I have asked you what you think it is…Define “evil.” There are no simple questions where vague terms are involved.
You are evading the question! I have asked you what you think it is…Define “evil.” There are no simple questions where vague terms are involved.
Define “evil.” There are no simple questions where vague terms are involved.
You are evading the question! I have asked you what you think it is… and you have failed to reply:Define “evil.” There are no simple questions where vague terms are involved.
At this point, I need further clarification. Are you asking for my opinion of evil in actions, or in people?You are evading the question! I have asked you what you think it is… and you have failed to reply:
I have a more pressing question: Do you think I am unable to construct an ethical code that can prevent “horrific crimes” without assigning blame to individuals? Don’t you think it would be more useful to assign moral values to actions rather than personalities?Do you believe all the horrific crimes committed by the Nazis - separating mothers from their childen, for example - can be explained scientifically as a mental aberration or conditioned response for which they were not responsible?
You are evading the question! I have asked you what you think it is… and you have failed to reply:
Code:At this point, I need further clarification. Are you asking for my opinion of evil in actions, or in people?
Both!
I have a more pressing question: Do you think I am unable to construct an ethical code that can prevent “horrific crimes” without assigning blame to individuals? Don’t you think it would be more useful to assign moral values to actions rather than personalities?Do you believe all the horrific crimes committed by the Nazis - separating mothers from their childen, for example - can be explained scientifically as a mental aberration or conditioned response for which they were not responsible?
It’s important to remember that, in every ethical system, what is evil is “what ought not exist” or “what shouldn’t exist.” That is the only characteristic every conception of evil will have in common. What is held to be evil is a matter of opinion, however.Both!
No reluctance is involved, I just feel that accusing others of being evil is irrelevant. If the goal of ethics in general is to make the world a more peaceful, productive place for sentient beings to inhabit–that is, to improve consequences–then character plays only an indirect role in ethics. The only reason we are concerned about one’s character, ethically speaking, is because it may incline them to act in a certain way. So if we consider a hypothetical world where every person is evil, but people only perform good actions, having an “evil character” is irrelevant.I wonder why you’re so reluctant to commit yourself… I think I know…It’s either a simple “yes” or “no” or “I don’t know”! I shall answer your questions in the light of your answer.
It’s important to remember that, in every ethical system, what is evil is “what ought not exist” or “what shouldn’t exist.” That is the only characteristic every conception of evil will have in common. What is held to be evil is a matter of opinion, however.
Yes, in the sense that it ought not be. For yourself, you might ask, “If sinning is inevitable, is it evil?”If extreme suffering is inevitable is it evil?
This is the usual rushed argument I hear, but it fails to take into account at least two major factors: 1) All the happiness that could have been caused in the victim’s life has been prevented by their premature death (this is tantamount to dissatisfaction) and 2) the disappearance of individuals causes public distress and the loss of a potential worker. Your argument is futile when all of the factors come into play, and pretending that those factors don’t exist for the sake of quickly dismissing my position is a dishonest tactic.In that case to kill some one painlessly, and unnecessarily, is not evil!
Yes, in the sense that the disorder ought not be for the sake of maximizing happiness and minimizing suffering. Again, responsibility need not come into play.Is indifference or cruelty evil if it is a result of a mental disorder?
It’s hardly that easy. One of the first principles of maximizing production is to have plentiful workers. Many companies are learning that at this very moment. You can’t expect to save money by laying off half of your workers, for example.That is one goal but is it the only goal? We could even achieve that goal by killing “undesirables”!
Let’s put it this way: The relevance of other considerations is dependent on how what is being considered will affect consequences.Are consequences the only consideration?
I dunno. They could be hateful people that are too lazy to act on their malice for others.If people only perform good actions how can they be evil?!
Define “responsible.”Are we responsible for our character?
You’re essentially asking two questions here:Which brings me back to the familiar question - which is relevant to the OP:
Do you believe all the horrific crimes committed by the Nazis - separating mothers from their children, for example - can be explained scientifically as a mental aberration or conditioned response for which they were not responsible?
Does it make sense to use “ought” with regard to suffering if it is a natural phenomenon that cannot be avoided? If suffering is necessary for survival surely it is good… assuming of course that life is not evil…If extreme suffering is inevitable is it evil?
For myself? I’m a great sinner!For yourself, you might ask, “If sinning is inevitable, is it evil?”But seriously, if we cannot avoid causing evil we are not to blame and therefore not sinning.
In that case to kill some one painlessly, and unnecessarily, is not evil!
- All the happiness that could have been caused in the victim’s life has been prevented by their premature death (this is tantamount to dissatisfaction)
Suppose the misery outweighed the happiness!
If no one noticed the disappearance and the worker was more trouble than he was worth… ?
- the disappearance of individuals causes public distress and the loss of a potential worker.
Yes, in the sense that the disorder ought not be for the sake of maximizing happiness and minimizing suffering. Again, responsibility need not come into play.Is indifference or cruelty evil if it is a result of a mental disorder?
This again raises the question of natural (or physical) evil. Do you believe there is no essential difference between natural and moral evil?
It’s hardly that easy. One of the first principles of maximizing production is to have plentiful workers. Many companies are learning that at this very moment. You can’t expect to save money by laying off half of your workers, for example. You can if those workers are “undesirables”, i.e. lazy, obstructing others and agitating for strike action! The real issue is not economic but moral - unless you equate the two!That is one goal but is it the only goal? We could even achieve that goal by killing “undesirables”!
Let’s put it this way: The relevance of other considerations is dependent on how what is being considered will affect consequences.Are consequences the only consideration?
Do you include the effects on a person’s mind as consequences even when there are no physical consequences? Don’t you think motives should be taken into account? Even if there are no consequences an attempt to murder a person is still evil…
They could be hateful people that are too lazy to act on their malice for others.If people only perform good actions how can they be evil?!
In that case we have to decide whether their laziness is culpable or not. Malice alone is evil even when it does not lead to action.
I would wager that they can.Do you believe all the horrific crimes committed by the Nazis - separating mothers from their children, for example - can be explained scientifically as a mental aberration or conditioned response for which they were not responsible? 1. Can the psychological states needed to commit atrocities like these be explained by science, i.e., psychology?
In that case the Nazis were not to blame and should not have been punished…
- If free will isn’t involved, are people responsible for committing atrocities?
Define “responsible” and “free will.”
If you are responsible the buck stops with you. You alone are the cause of your decision and action. You exercise your willpower freely and without coercion… and your character is formed to a large extent by the choices and decisions you make.
BTW
You are sadly mistaken - and getting away from the point. In my replies I generally ignore and delete such comments. They merely disrupt the discussion. I haven’t the slightest interest in “winning” an argument. I write what I believe to be true. If my reasoning is defective I am prepared to acknowledge the fact. I don’t believe in imputing motives to others…Your argument is futile when all of the factors come into play, and pretending that those factors don’t exist for the sake of quickly dismissing my position is a dishonest tactic.
Does it make sense to use “ought” with regard to suffering if it is a natural phenomenon that cannot be avoided? If suffering is necessary for survival surely it is good… assuming that life is not evil!If extreme suffering is inevitable is it evil?
For myself? I’m a great sinner!For yourself, you might ask, “If sinning is inevitable, is it evil?”But seriously, if we cannot avoid causing evil we are not to blame and therefore not sinning.
In that case to kill some one painlessly, and unnecessarily, is not evil!
- All the happiness that could have been caused in the victim’s life has been prevented by their premature death (this is tantamount to dissatisfaction)
- the disappearance of individuals causes public distress and the loss of a potential worker. If no one noticed the disappearance and the worker was more trouble than he was worth… ?
Yes, in the sense that the disorder ought not be for the sake of maximizing happiness and minimizing suffering. Again, responsibility need not come into play.Is indifference or cruelty evil if it is a result of a mental disorder?
This again raises the question of natural (or physical) evil. Do you believe there is no essential difference between natural and moral evil?That is one goal but is it the only goal? We could even achieve that goal by killing “undesirables”!
It’s hardly that easy. One of the first principles of maximizing production is to have plentiful workers. Many companies are learning that at this very moment. You can’t expect to save money by laying off half of your workers, for example. You can if those workers are “undesirables”, i.e. lazy, obstructing others and agitating for strike action! The real issue is not economic but moral - unless you equate the two!
Are consequences the only consideration?
Let’s put it this way: The relevance of other considerations is dependent on how what is being considered will affect consequences. Do you include the effects on a person’s mind as consequences even when there are no physical consequences? Don’t you think motives should be taken into account? Even if there are no consequences an attempt to murder a person is still evil…
If people only perform good actions how can they be evil?!
They could be hateful people that are too lazy to act on their malice for others.In that case we have to decide whether their laziness is culpable or not. Malice alone is evil even when it does not lead to action.
Do you believe all the horrific crimes committed by the Nazis - separating mothers from their children, for example - can be explained scientifically as a mental aberration or conditioned response for which they were not responsible? 1. Can the psychological states needed to commit atrocities like these be explained by science, i.e., psychology?
I would wager that they can. In that case the Nazis were not to blame and should not have been punished…
- If free will isn’t involved, are people responsible for committing atrocities?
Define “responsible” and “free will.”
If you are responsible the buck stops with you. You alone are the cause of your decision and action. You exercise your willpower freely and without coercion… and your character is formed to a large extent by the choices and decisions you make.
BTW
Your argument is futile when all of the factors come into play, and pretending that those factors don’t exist for the sake of quickly dismissing my position is a dishonest tactic.Code:You are sadly mistaken - and getting away from the point. In my replies I generally ignore and delete such comments. They merely disrupt the discussion. I haven't the slightest interest in "winning" an argument. I write what I believe to be true. If my reasoning is defective I am prepared to acknowledge the fact. I don't believe in imputing motives to others...
Does it make sense to use “ought” with regard to suffering if it is a natural phenomenon that cannot be avoided? If suffering is necessary for survival surely it is good… assuming that life is not evil!If extreme suffering is inevitable is it evil?
For myself? I’m a great sinner!For yourself, you might ask, “If sinning is inevitable, is it evil?”But seriously, if we cannot avoid causing evil we are not to blame and therefore not sinning.
In that case to kill some one painlessly, and unnecessarily, is not evil!If no one noticed the disappearance and the worker was more trouble than he was worth… ?
- All the happiness that could have been caused in the victim’s life has been prevented by their premature death (this is tantamount to dissatisfaction) 2) the disappearance of individuals causes public distress and the loss of a potential worker.
Yes, in the sense that the disorder ought not be for the sake of maximizing happiness and minimizing suffering. Again, responsibility need not come into play.Is indifference or cruelty evil if it is a result of a mental disorder?
This again raises the question of natural (or physical) evil. Do you believe there is no essential difference between natural and moral evil?That is one goal but is it the only goal? We could even achieve that goal by killing “undesirables”!
It’s hardly that easy. One of the first principles of maximizing production is to have plentiful workers. Many companies are learning that at this very moment. You can’t expect to save money by laying off half of your workers, for example. You can if those workers are “undesirables”, i.e. lazy, obstructing others and agitating for strike action! The real issue is not economic but moral…
Are consequences the only consideration?
Let’s put it this way: The relevance of other considerations is dependent on how what is being considered will affect consequences. Do you include the effects on a person’s mind as consequences even when there are no physical consequences? Don’t you think motives should be taken into account? Even if there are no consequences an attempt to murder a person is still evil…
If people only perform good actions how can they be evil?!
They could be hateful people that are too lazy to act on their malice for others.In that case we have to decide whether their laziness is culpable or not. Malice alone is evil even when it does not lead to action.
Do you believe all the horrific crimes committed by the Nazis - separating mothers from their children, for example - can be explained scientifically as a mental aberration or conditioned response for which they were not responsible? 1. Can the psychological states needed to commit atrocities like these be explained by science, i.e., psychology?
I would wager that they can. In that case the Nazis were not to blame and should not have been punished…
- If free will isn’t involved, are people responsible for committing atrocities?
Define “responsible” and “free will.”
If you are responsible the buck stops with you. You alone are the cause of your decision and action. You exercise your willpower freely and without coercion… and your character is formed to a large extent by the choices and decisions you make.
BTW
You are sadly mistaken - and getting away from the point. In my replies I generally ignore and delete such comments. They merely disrupt the discussion. I haven’t the slightest interest in “winning” an argument. I write what I believe to be true. If my reasoning is defective I am prepared to acknowledge the fact. I don’t believe in imputing motives to others…Your argument is futile when all of the factors come into play, and pretending that those factors don’t exist for the sake of quickly dismissing my position is a dishonest tactic.
Then it is a question of whether there are responsible for their laziness. In a court of law one can be guilty of culpable negligence if some one suffers as a result of laziness - even when malice does not entail any physical action.They could be hateful people that are too lazy to act on their malice for others.
Then it is a question of whether they are responsible for their laziness. In a court of law one can be guilty of culpable negligence if some one suffers as a result of laziness - even when malice does not entail any physical action.They could be hateful people that are too lazy to act on their malice for others.
Most suffering isn’t necessary for survival at all, and for humans, almost no suffering is necessary with our technology and reasoning abilities. In fact, could you imagine how much better things would be if God would have, say, designed us with better reflexes instead of the sensation of pain? When people put their hands on stoves that are turned on, the common belief is that pain is needed to warn the person that their flesh is burning. But if the designer theists propose is real, then couldn’t he have simply built in a reflex that would cause a person to withdraw their hand just as effectively as pain would? The nerves sense the heat, the brain becomes aware of this, and then the brain sends a signal to the nerves to withdraw. No pain needed.Does it make sense to use “ought” with regard to suffering if it is a natural phenomenon that cannot be avoided? If suffering is necessary for survival surely it is good… assuming that life is not evil!
I think you’re missing my meaning here. While a Christian would agree that each individual instance of sinning could be prevented, no Christian would say that one could live a (full) life without sin, save for Jesus himself. Sinning, to some extent, is inevitable. At the very least, living without it would be infinitely improbable.For myself? I’m a great sinner!But seriously, if we cannot avoid causing evil we are not to blame and therefore not sinning.
A person who is willing to kill someone merely because he is a troublemaker is not going to make sure that his actions maximize utility. He’ll kill everyone in sight before he even considers that. You’re trying to create precautions for events that will never occur. Even if you’re right, an ethical system disagreeing with you could still be useful on the grounds that your objections will never be actualized.If no one noticed the disappearance and the worker was more trouble than he was worth… ?
An attempt to murder someone is still a physical consequence, is it not? But if someone merely hates another person and never acts on it, the hate is irrelevant. We could call him “evil” for feeling that way, but what’s the use in that? The only case where the hate would be relevant is if it was also making him unhappy. Removing it then would be a positive thing. Otherwise, it’s totally irrelevant. And please, don’t try to rattle off a platitude about how people who hate are always less happy than people who don’t. We both know that isn’t true.Do you include the effects on a person’s mind as consequences even when there are no physical consequences? Don’t you think motives should be taken into account? Even if there are no consequences an attempt to murder a person is still evil…
That’s like saying a gun is evil regardless of whether it’s used.Malice alone is evil even when it does not lead to action.
Frankly, you must have a childish view of morality then. To you, the courtrooms and prisons must be another part of a convention whose aim is to deal evil to the evil-doers, torment to the torturers, and death to the murderers. If ever there was a self-defeating effort! Do you honestly think that people use punishment only as a mechanism to fulfill the biblical “eye for an eye” principle?In that case the Nazis were not to blame and should not have been punished…
So your definition of “free will” is “the ability to exercise your willpower freely and without coercion?” The only useful bit in there is the part about coercion; the rest is circular.You exercise your willpower freely and without coercion
I don’t believe you. There’s no way that you would have overlooked those obvious factors if you had honestly considered it.BTW You are sadly mistaken - and getting away from the point. In my replies I generally ignore and delete such comments. They merely disrupt the discussion. I haven’t the slightest interest in “winning” an argument. I write what I believe to be true. If my reasoning is defective I am prepared to acknowledge the fact. I don’t believe in imputing motives to others…
Please produce a blueprint of a world without suffering.Most suffering isn’t necessary for survival at all, and for humans, almost no suffering is necessary with our technology and reasoning abilities.
It is the easiest thing in the world to suggest improvements to an existing system… rather than design one…In fact, could you imagine how much better things would be if God would have, say, designed us with better reflexes instead of the sensation of pain? No pain needed.
While a Christian would agree that each individual instance of sinning could be prevented, no Christian would say that one could live a (full) life without sin, save for Jesus himself. Sinning, to some extent, is inevitable. At the very least, living without it would be infinitely improbable.Does it make sense to use “ought” with regard to suffering if it is a natural phenomenon that cannot be avoided? If suffering is necessary for survival surely it is good… assuming that life is not evil!
I asked you whether the only goal of morality is to make the world a more peaceful, productive place for sentient beings to inhabit–that is, to improve consequences…Even if you’re right, an ethical system disagreeing with you could still be useful on the grounds that your objections will never be actualized.
I am referring to malice that is not acted upon…An attempt to murder someone is still a physical consequence, is it not?
Evil is evil whether it has physical consequences or not because our state of mind is very important.But if someone merely hates another person and never acts on it, the hate is irrelevant.
So physical consequences are not the only things that matter…We could call him “evil” for feeling that way, but what’s the use in that? The only case where the hate would be relevant is if it was also making him unhappy. Removing it then would be a positive thing.
Speak for yourself! How do you know what I know?..…people who hate are always less happy than people who don’t. We both know that isn’t true.
That’s like saying a gun is evil regardless of whether it’s used.Malice alone is evil even when it does not lead to action.
Malice is not a harmless feeling…I can’t honestly convince myself that a harmless feeling is evil.
.In that case the Nazis were not to blame and should not have been punished…
Do you honestly think that people use punishment only as a mechanism to fulfill the biblical “eye for an eye” principle?
If you don’t use your willpower you cease to be free…So your definition of “free will” is “the ability to exercise your willpower freely and without coercion?” The only useful bit in there is the part about coercion; the rest is circular.
Your ethical system may well endure but that does not mean it is true… If **all **your ideas are determined they are far more likely to be false because there are countless ways of being mistaken.The truth is elusive… and the more specific the subject the more elusive it becomes… as any specialist is well aware…Personally, I see freedom mostly as an illusion. My ethical system endures no changes whether or not determinism is true.
If someone scolded you for not remembering something, would you ask them to produce a blueprint of a world where humans have perfect memories?Please produce a blueprint of a world without suffering.
A design with new additions added to it is a new design overall. And if it isn’t, how many changes must be added for it to be a new design? How many parts of a car need to be replaced before the car is no longer the same model? Or, if you prefer, at what point during the baking process does the glob of dough become a cookie?It is the easiest thing in the world to suggest improvements to an existing system… rather than design one…
I don’t see the distinction between natural evils and moral evils. Ethics/morality is about good and evil; it makes no sense to speak of evil outside of ethics or morality. All evil is “moral evil.”I was referring to a natural phenomenon, not moral evil.
It isn’t the only goal that has been proposed by mankind throughout history, no. People obviously have differing opinions.I asked you whether the only goal of morality is to make the world a more peaceful, productive place for sentient beings to inhabit–that is, to improve consequences…
There is a difference between an attempt to murder and a desire to murder. “I attempted” means “I tried it.” A person who has not tried to murder someone but only wishes to has not attempted murder.I am referring to malice that is not acted upon…
I detect an incomplete thought. Important…for what? If a single thought has no effect on one’s other thoughts and feelings, has no effect on the physical world, and doesn’t affect other people, how can it be evil? A thing that has no effect must be harmless, unless you contend that harm can be produced without effect? That would be an interesting theory, to say the least. It’s kind of like saying you can fry eggs without heat.Evil is evil whether it has physical consequences or not because our state of mind is very important.
Do you watch television? If so, then you must have heard at least one upsetting story on the news. For example, I remember hearing about a teenager throwing his dog off a bridge. I was pretty agitated by the news, and I wanted to hit the guy with a sledge hammer where it hurts. As impressive as that sounds, the feeling pretty much glanced off of me, since I didn’t actually know the guy enough to concentrate my anger at him. There was malice involved, though the feeling was very general and not as concentrated as genuine hate. Anyway, I wasn’t any less happy after hearing the news, despite my malice. And I’m not even going to mention the people who are actually happier and more successful because of their malice. Believe it or not, that is the case for some people, and they never “pay for it” in the long run.Speak for yourself! How do you know what I know?..![]()
Worrying about someone’s opinion even if it is irrelevant is something humans do often. Perhaps the most obvious instance of this lies in romantic relationships–does one lover not care about how the other feels for them? While we find peoples’ thoughts sometimes aesthetically pleasing or disturbing in this way and others, I don’t see them as having any ethical value outside of their effects on overall happiness. And besides, isn’t your opinion of how someone feels at least partially based on their actions, if not mostly?There is a vast difference between a gun and a person… Do you think of people solely in terms of what they do?
It can be, as I’ve demonstrated with my example of the teenager who threw his dog off a bridge. Malice was involved, yet no harm was done.Malice is not a harmless feeling…
Okay, then stop asking me if the Nazis deserved punishment.Irrelevant. Punishment is another topic.
My qualm with your definition was that it was circular, the circularity being that you used the concepts of “free” and “will” to define “free will.” That’s not a definition, it’s a tautology.If you don’t use your willpower you cease to be free…
No ethical system is “true.” A prescription cannot be true; only descriptions can be true. And before you ask, yes, I do realize that this makes ethics a matter of opinion and I do realize that it makes our situation a difficult one, so don’t ask.Your ethical system may well endure but that does not mean it is true…
Disliking the implications of a theory is no reason to reject it.If **all **your ideas are determined they are far more likely to be false because there are countless ways of being mistaken.The truth is elusive… and the more specific the subject the more elusive it becomes… as any specialist is well aware…
Please produce a blueprint of a world without suffering.
Small changes in a vast world - many of which have led to pollution and the diseases of civilisation… Not a very convincing argument if we are to go by resultsI don’t have to make a perfect design to make a better design. Suffering could be reduced by adding those small changes.
You obviously don’t understand what being omnipotent entails… Every advantage incurs a corresponding disadvantage. “It is better to be a human being dissatisfied than a pig satisfied…” -J.S.MillAnd besides, with god-like powers, anyone would be able to make a world without suffering; if not, they certainly wouldn’t be omnipotent!
It is the easiest thing in the world to suggest improvements to an existing system… rather than design one…
Not in the case of an immensely complex system which has evolved…A design with new additions added to it is a new design overall.
In that case you are out of touch with reality. Refer to any textbook on the Problem of Evil. Why do you think atheists use evil to try to disprove the existence of God? If there were no God the only moral evil would be that for which human or other rational beings are responsible. Natural evil would still exist: there would still be suffering and the other causes of unhappiness…I don’t see the distinction between natural evils and moral evils. Ethics/morality is about good and evil; it makes no sense to speak of evil outside of ethics or morality. All evil is “moral evil.”
goal of morality is to make the world a more peaceful, productive place for sentient beings to inhabit–that is, to improve consequences…It isn’t the only goal that has been proposed by mankind throughout history, no. People obviously have differing opinions.I asked you whether the only
…I am referring to malice that is not acted upon.
There is a difference between an attempt to murder and a desire to murder. “I attempted” means “I tried it.” A person who has not tried to murder someone but only wishes to has not attempted murder.
If a single thought has no effect on one’s other thoughts and feelings, has no effect on the physical world, and doesn’t affect other people, how can it be evil?Evil is evil whether it has physical consequences or not because our state of mind is very important.
do you know what I know?..Speak for yourself! HowDo you watch television? If so, then you must have heard at least one upsetting story on the news… Believe it or not, that is the case for some people, and they never “pay for it” in the long run.
?While we find peoples’ thoughts sometimes aesthetically pleasing or disturbing in this way and others, I don’t see them as having any ethical value outside of their effects on overall happiness.There is a vast difference between a gun and a person… Do you think of people solely in terms of what they do
That is beside the point. “partially” and “mostly” indicate that you don’t think of people solely in terms of what they do…And besides, isn’t your opinion of how someone feels at least partially based on their actions, if not mostly?
Quote:
a harmless feeling…It can be, as I’ve demonstrated with my example of the teenager who threw his dog off a bridge. Malice was involved, yet no harm was done.Malice is not
.Irrelevant. Punishment is another topic
Okay, then stop asking me if the Nazis deserved punishment.
My qualm with your definition was that it was circular, the circularity being that you used the concepts of “free” and “will” to define “free will.”If you don’t use your willpower you cease to be free…
Have you forgotten it?Please produce a blueprint of a world without suffering.
If someone scolded you for not remembering something, would you ask them to produce a blueprint of a world where humans have perfect memories?
Small changes in a vast world - many of which have led to pollution and the diseases of civilisation… Not a very convincing argument if we are to go by resultsI don’t have to make a perfect design to make a better design. Suffering could be reduced by adding those small changes.
You obviously don’t understand what being omnipotent entails… Every advantage incurs a corresponding disadvantage. “It is better to be a human being dissatisfied than a pig satisfied…” -J.S.MillAnd besides, with god-like powers, anyone would be able to make a world without suffering; if not, they certainly wouldn’t be omnipotent!
Not in the case of an immensely complex system which has evolved over billions of years…It is the easiest thing in the world to suggest improvements to an existing system… rather than design one… A design with new additions added to it is a new design overall.
In that case you are out of touch with reality. Refer to any textbook on the Problem of Evil. Why do you think atheists use evil to try to disprove the existence of God? If there were no God the only moral evil would be that for which human or other rational beings are responsible. Natural evil would still exist: there would still be suffering and the other causes of unhappiness…I don’t see the distinction between natural evils and moral evils. Ethics/morality is about good and evil; it makes no sense to speak of evil outside of ethics or morality. All evil is “moral evil.”
goal of morality is to make the world a more peaceful, productive place for sentient beings to inhabit–that is, to improve consequences…It isn’t the only goal that has been proposed by mankind throughout history, no. People obviously have differing opinions.I asked you whether the only
…I am referring to malice that is not acted upon.
There is a difference between an attempt to murder and a desire to murder. “I attempted” means “I tried it.” A person who has not tried to murder someone but only wishes to has not attempted murder.
If a single thought has no effect on one’s other thoughts and feelings, has no effect on the physical world, and doesn’t affect other people, how can it be evil?Evil is evil whether it has physical consequences or not because our state of mind is very important.
do you know what I know?..Speak for yourself! HowDo you watch television? If so, then you must have heard at least one upsetting story on the news… Believe it or not, that is the case for some people, and they never “pay for it” in the long run.
?While we find peoples’ thoughts sometimes aesthetically pleasing or disturbing in this way and others, I don’t see them as having any ethical value outside of their effects on overall happiness.There is a vast difference between a gun and a person… Do you think of people solely in terms of what they do
That is beside the point. “partially” and “mostly” indicate that you don’t think of people solely in terms of what they do…And besides, isn’t your opinion of how someone feels at least partially based on their actions, if not mostly?
a harmless feeling…It can be, as I’ve demonstrated with my example of the teenager who threw his dog off a bridge. Malice was involved, yet no harm was done.Malice is not
.Irrelevant. Punishment is another topic
Okay, then stop asking me if the Nazis deserved punishment.
My qualm with your definition was that it was circular, the circularity being that you used the concepts of “free” and “will” to define “free will.”If you don’t use your willpower you cease to be free…
.Irrelevant. Punishment is another topic
Okay, then stop asking me if the Nazis deserved punishment.
The primary question was whether the Nazis were to blame - which you have evaded.
…:
If you don’t use your willpower you cease to be free…
My qualm with your definition was that it was circular, the circularity being that you used the concepts of “free” and “will” to define “free will.” There is no circularity. You are confusing free will with willpower and freedom. If you do not use your willpower you are not free. A power is useless and hypothetical unless it is used.
Your ethical system may well endure but that does not mean it is true…
No ethical system is “true.” A prescription cannot be true; only descriptions can be true. A medical prescription can be true! It can correspond to the reality of a person’s disease or disorder. Similarly a moral prescription corresponds to a person’s psychological makeup. You believe it is linked to happiness…
If all your ideas are determined they are far more likely to be false because there are countless ways of being mistaken.The truth is elusive… and the more specific the subject the more elusive it becomes… as any specialist is well aware…
Disliking the implications of a theory is no reason to reject it.
It is not a question of disliking but of recognising its implications. The truth is not always pleasant but that is completely beside the point - which you have not addressed: if all our ideas are determined they are far more likely to be false than true because there are countless ways of being mistaken…
This article is pertinent to this discussion.Assuming that the betrayal was destined to happen, was the betrayal itself unforgiveable? I don’t think so. The despair and suicide that followed it probably was unforgiveable. Otherwise, why would Jesus have said it would have been better if Judas had not been born? But it didn’t necessarily have to play out like that. Remorse might also have lead to repentence.
This quote from the article you mentioned sums up my belief.This article is pertinent to this discussion.
catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?id=3344&CFID=24718571&CFTOKEN=72353122