- Joined
- Apr 19, 2016
We use concepts like property and discourage theft because without rules, society would fall into chaos. It's also worth noting that some groups do away with the concept of property altogether and share everything with each other. Likewise, promises are just social contracts. There's nothing wrong with breaking them, it's just frowned upon in societies where the concept of promises exists.Why presume that because people can think it, that there is merit to the idea?
I don't think this is quite true. The best example is a promise. The concept of a promise has no meaning unless it's good to keep it and bad (as a small margin of evil) to break it. Same thing with property and stealing. There may be some people that think stealing is good, but as a concept it loses all meaning. After all if stealing is good, then taking someone's property becomes a moral good. Then the word property ceases to mean anything as you can just take it.
When you have to eliminate complete other concepts to try an argue that stealing is good or breaking promises is good it becomes obvious that there are at the very least area's of morality that are not relative, not subjective, but objectively definable and more useful to do so for every purpose.
And thus people that claim "rules are meant to be broken" are simply engaging in creating excuses for what they know is bad behaviour. There may be instances where due to other factors it may become overall a moral good and in that sense things always get complicated and are never the easy cookie-cutter questions. But the fact that in practice things are complicated does not mean that the theoretical concept is useless or inherently flawed. After all, nobody can draw a perfect circle, but when two people draw a circle, one will be better than the other. If the difference in quality is huge, then it can be objectively decided that one is a better circle. There may be artistic or chaotic types who say they like the other circle better, but that doesn't mean it's more like a circle, just as people proclaiming a prefference for rulebreaking and claiming that it's better, can be demonstrated to be objectively wrong, even if they hold that opinion.
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Though on a more personal and less theoritical note, I tend to reserve the word evil for either very deliberate bad behaviour (say, infecting people who didn't sign up for it, with a disease to study its effects), for the most heinous whether evil was intended to be inflicted but could not possibly not be the result (child raping/murder), but also a middleroad combination of the two, which might be done with the best of intentions (tranny indoctrination of kids).
There are no scenarios where the result isn't a middleroad combination. Killing a child for shits and giggles might seem horrible at first glance, but there's no way to know how doing so will affect the future. One could argue that while the dead kid will devastate the parents and horrify the media, the hundreds of maggots that will feast on its body will be thrilled to have a good meal. After all, why should human feelings be considered more important than those of other animals? We haven't been around for long compared to other species.