I think because he was given free will, he has the capacity to lie.hold on. Does that mean Vincent is capable of lying? Or was Vincent just being in denial about if he wanted to help her?
Also, i think I noticed a typo.Sorry for the long wait, and hope you enjoyed. Brand new typesetter for this chapter, things shouldn't have changed much but hope you like the new style.
It's an interesting question. I'm of the thought that morals have value specifically because they are a human construct, and that it makes them inherently superior to anything natural because it can make the choice to change the world around it. Likewise I think the entirety of space has no value compared to humanity because it is empty and passive.Moral is said to be a construct of human thought... some people use that argument to say that in the end morals are arbitrary and by itself a lie... this is a lie.
It is egomania trying to discard individual consideration to take control of others.
Yes... morals are a construct, itself a form of rationalization of behavior, and can be calcified into something inflexible and opressing... that is why we always need to temper things with the true pillar that allows higher thought... empathy.
Agreed.It's an interesting question. I'm of the thought that morals have value specifically because they are a human construct, and that it makes them inherently superior to anything natural because it can make the choice to change the world around it.
Sorry, but could you elaborate on this, because I didn't understand exactly what you mean.Likewise I think the entirety of space has no value compared to humanity because it is empty and passive.
It's primarily a response to the idea of "cosmic insignificance" due to the scale of the universe. I think that since space isn't doing anything anywhere (until we discover actual proof of aliens, its all empty) it has no significance compared to life here on earth.Sorry, but could you elaborate on this, because I didn't understand exactly what you mean.