Shimei said:So fool believes that abortion and rape and kidnapping are absolutely wrong?
I could envision very specific scenarios where each of those would not be absolutely wrong. :think:
Kidnapping's an easy one in this thread.
Shimei said:So fool believes that abortion and rape and kidnapping are absolutely wrong?
allsmiles said:i understand Knight, my point is that it doesn't have to be.
yeah, i've been payin' attention to this thread a little bit :chuckle:
i don't believe morals exist at all Knight.
some things are absolutely wrong, to me, but i can't speak for anyone else, and you can't either.
i seem to remember us talking about this before...
i seem to remember getting banned...:think:
oh yes, my wounds require more licking.
Originally Posted by Knight
Yes... or No...
Was the USA guilty of murdering children when they dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
Balder said:Yes.
Unfortunate casualties of war. And if anything their blood was on the Japanese Government's hands.koban said:Yeah, I gotta go with Balder here - what else would you call the deliberate and intentional killing of innocents?
Dread Helm said:Unfortunate casualties of war.
And if anything their blood was on the Japanese Government's hands.
A study done for Secretary of War Henry Stimson's staff by William Shockley estimated that conquering Japan would cost 1.7–4 million American casualties, including 400,000–800,000 fatalities, and five to ten million Japanese fatalities. The key assumption was large-scale participation by civilians in the defense of Japan.
:readthis:allsmiles said:i left a lengthy post for our friend genuineoriginal in which i cited the Art of War.
Sun Tzu, a master strategist taught that a general should never allow or introduce superstitions into warfare. he also taught that attacking cities was the last resort of both strategy and morals. he taught that a general must first master his own humanity and sense of justice before going into battle. he also taught that victory should be accomplished with the least amount of blood shed possible, he taught that it was the pinnacle of skill. he also taught innovative ways to weaken the enemy without resorting to blood shed so when it did come down to the wire, the blood letting would be kept to a minimum.
any involvement on the part of the civilian population of the enemy state would go no further than plundering their stores and winning their hearts.
that Sun Tzu, a follower of the Tao, could be a greater stategist than the deity Joshua received his commands from was a point genuineoriginal could never wrap his mind around.
The Art of War said:http://www.mailsbroadcast.com/the.artofwar.preview.htm
Sun Tzu :
Execute those who disobey.
The troops panic and were hysterical at this stage and the "Emperor" intervene to prevent losing his favorite concubines.
Sun Tzu :
Since I have been given the command. I am disciplining my troops, there must be no interference.
Sun Tzu :
Executed the troops leaders in public.
And appoint two new replacement leaders. This time, when the orders were given, the troops marched to the beat of the drums and none dare to ignore any orders.
"Growth" as defined by what criteria?Balder said:The problem with postmodern relativism, in my view, is not relativism itself, but the idea that such relativism is only horizontal. I think absolutist camps and postmodern relativist camps are in roughly the same boat: both arguing for a rather flat view of morality, not acknowledging the spectrum of moral growth that is not only possible, but inevitable (at least to a degree) for everyone.
"Murder" is defined by some one's moral criteria, while "killing" is defined by universal biological criteria. "Murder" is a subjective assessment, while "killing" is an objective fact.Knight said:What's the difference between murder and killing?
Excellent assessment! ... A moment of clarity and articulation in a sea of confusion and deliberate obfuscation. Thank you.Balder said:This discussion is really classic. Knight apparently has a limited understanding of moral relativism and doesn't realize he and Bob are espousing a form of it.
The idea that it is "okay" to purposefully cut down civilians (infants, children, women, elders) in their homes and villages "because it's wartime" is reprehensible to me. I can't believe it's seriously being defended. But of course, it has to be defended, because it is recorded with approval in the Bible and therefore -- according to the narrow interpretive lens some people unfortunately believe is necessary -- it must be okay and morally justifiable.
If these Christians believe it's a crime to kill children, except when it's war time (and then it's okay to cut them up with swords), then they seriously undermine their own moral standing when they condemn those who support another conditional argument that it is sometimes okay to kill children -- in the form of abortion. The chants of "baby killers" are coming back to haunt this lot!
I'm thinking specifically of the stages of moral and cognitive development as mapped by Kohlberg, Loevinger, Gilligan, and many others. They've developed independent maps based on clinical research, and these maps have held up cross-culturally after numerous tests in different countries and cultures. Religious traditions also record stages of growth (Buddhism does so clearly and explicitly) and interestingly, these stages also generally overlap.PureX said:"Growth" as defined by what criteria?
Balder said:I'm thinking specifically of the stages of moral and cognitive development as mapped by Kohlberg, Loevinger, Gilligan, and many others. They've developed independent maps based on clinical research, and these maps have held up cross-culturally after numerous tests in different countries and cultures. Religious traditions also record stages of growth (Buddhism does so clearly and explicitly) and interestingly, these stages also generally overlap.
But you didn't answer the question. What criteria (goal) are these folks using to determine positive growth, or negative regression? And ultimately, my point would be that they ARE using a chosen criteria. In fact, both the "absolutists" and the "relativists" are choosing their own criteria for defining and evaluating "morality". The only difference is that the relativist recognizes this, while the absolutist is denying it.Balder said:I'm thinking specifically of the stages of moral and cognitive development as mapped by Kohlberg, Loevinger, Gilligan, and many others. They've developed independent maps based on clinical research, and these maps have held up cross-culturally after numerous tests in different countries and cultures. Religious traditions also record stages of growth (Buddhism does so clearly and explicitly) and interestingly, these stages also generally overlap.
Knight said:Relative to some... barbarism is good, can you argue against that?
genuineoriginal said::readthis:
You must have missed my answer.
http://www.mailsbroadcast.com/the.artofwar.preview.htm
Sun Tzu :
Execute those who disobey.
The troops panic and were hysterical at this stage and the "Emperor" intervene to prevent losing his favorite concubines.
Sun Tzu :
Since I have been given the command. I am disciplining my troops, there must be no interference.
Sun Tzu :
Executed the troops leaders in public.
And appoint two new replacement leaders. This time, when the orders were given, the troops marched to the beat of the drums and none dare to ignore any orders.
he probably thinks theyre relatively not the same ...allsmiles said:so you equate the execution of enemy commanders (officers in the army, not civilians) with the mass genocide of a city's civilian population?
By postmodern relativism, I'm referring mostly to the type of relativism that has developed in academic literary and cultural criticism circles, but which also informs some types of feminism and has spread out into our culture in various ways. It is strongly egalitarian and anti-hierarchy. Idealistically, it regards all cultures and values as equally valid and generally eschews ranking or jugment of other worldviews (though isn't consistent in this regard).avatar382 said:Balder, your statement about post-modernist relativism is interesting.
Could you describe post-modernist relativism a little? I've never heard the term before. Is there a difference between not being a moral absolutist and being a post-modern relativist?
Yes, they are using chosen criteria, and they acknowledge it. But the chosen criteria are based upon cognitive and clinical research findings, which show up universally. These findings point to a general trajectory of cognitive and moral growth in human beings (meaning, certain perspectives and reasoning capacities rest upon others, and that these perspectives and capacities always emerge sequentially).PureX said:But you didn't answer the question. What criteria (goal) are these folks using to determine positive growth, or negative regression? And ultimately, my point would be that they ARE using a chosen criteria. In fact, both the "absolutists" and the "relativists" are choosing their own criteria for defining and evaluating "morality". The only difference is that the relativist recognizes this, while the absolutist is denying it.
allsmiles said:like i asked you before, you should really take that up with Sun Tzu. or Jesus perhaps. i did make an example yesterday of asking if any of you would cut off a defenseless infant's head if Jesus was telling you to do it. the reason i used Jesus was to demonstrate Granite's point that throughout the bible morals evolved.
would Jesus give such a command?
as i asked before do you have anything to say about Sun Tzu?
and why was the slaughter of the defenseless necessary? was the city already taken? was victory conditional on the slaughter of the defenseless populous?
For sake of accuracy that was not how fool presented his case on Bob's show which is what this thread is in reference to.stipe said:FOOLS INSTIGATION: fool asks "You're a soldier in Joshua's army, you got order's to smote everyone in town A, you've killed all the men, and the women, and now it's time to butcher the infants. Don't be shy! Step right up and tell me what you'd do."