Fed-Kun's army
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2020
- Messages
- 57
Wait, so what happened in the end there? I dont think i understand the finger thing there. Or perhaps even the whole situation.
is that, you cannot be evil for doing x, if the society in that time and place does not deem it to be evil.You cannot be evil when your actions during your time and place were not considered evil.
The society back then accepted slaves as a commodity, not as humans. Like you wouldn't care too much about your pencil or something breaking, the people back then wouldn't have cared about a slave dying from being overworked (maybe loss of profit or manpower, but that's probably it). Now is that wrong? Yes, and it's a good thing all of us here realize this (I really hope nobody will argue this). However, was what they were doing considered wrong in their era? No."You cannot be evil when your actions during your time and place were not considered evil."
Lol what
By that logic caribbean plantation owners weren't evil, no matter how many slaves they worked to death.
Exploitation is exploitation no matter the era.
No, just with this I am seeing that some people are capable of some impressive mental gymnastics to delude themselves into thinking that something obviously bad isn't bad.Furthermore @Rgal, ignoring the obvious point that nobody here is implying what you quoted, the nazis considered themselves to be righteous, while those fighting against them considered them evil. Just with this, you're seeing that what determines evil is the society you are a part of.
The point I am trying to make that this interpretation of morality is dumb and wrong. You obviously can. You'd just be deluding yourself into thinking that you aren't.The point he's trying to make with
You cannot be evil when your actions during your time and place were not considered evil.
is that, you cannot be evil for doing x, if the society in that time and place does not deem it to be evil.
This interpretation only makes sense for people who still, right now, believe that slaves were a commodity as opposed to, you know, part of the society with their own opinions on the matter. Unless you subscribe to "personhood relativism" in addition to moral relativism? In which case, I'm sorry, but in this day and age society would be justified in calling you evil even by your own definition of "evil".The society back then accepted slaves as a commodity, not as humans. Like you wouldn't care too much about your pencil or something breaking, the people back then wouldn't have cared about a slave dying from being overworked (maybe loss of profit or manpower, but that's probably it). Now is that wrong? Yes, and it's a good thing all of us here realize this (I really hope nobody will argue this). However, was what they were doing considered wrong in their era? No.
I disagree, and the reason for that is what I stated above.The point he's trying to make with
You cannot be evil when your actions during your time and place were not considered evil.
is that, you cannot be evil for doing x, if the society in that time and place does not deem it to be evil.
The point I am trying to make that this interpretation of morality is dumb and wrong. You obviously can. You'd just be deluding yourself into thinking that you aren't.
Whoah there, that's a bit of a stretch there. Sure, you can say they were a part of society, but when that society does not listen to your wishes, forces you into doing things (the reason why you became a slave being irrelevant), and treats you as a commodity, can you really call them a part of society? The society back then actively tried to stop them from participating in it.The society back then accepted slaves as a commodity, not as humans. Like you wouldn't care too much about your pencil or something breaking, the people back then wouldn't have cared about a slave dying from being overworked (maybe loss of profit or manpower, but that's probably it). Now is that wrong? Yes, and it's a good thing all of us here realize this (I really hope nobody will argue this). However, was what they were doing considered wrong in their era? No.
This interpretation only makes sense for people who still, right now, believe that slaves were a commodity as opposed to, you know, part of the society with their own opinions on the matter.
What you're trying to say with this goes above my head, explain it again please.Unless you subscribe to "personhood relativism" in addition to moral relativism? In which case, I'm sorry, but in this day and age society would be justified in calling you evil even by your own definition of "evil".