What I don't understand about this situation, is the fact that if he read the Bhagavad Vita, and caused the death of in Hiroshima, as estimates range from 90,000 to 166,000 deaths, while in Nagasaki, estimates range from 60,000 to 80,000, then did this weigh heavy on his conscience about the negative karma he earned by his statement about Shiva? Was he aware that such negative karma results in a very long life of struggle and torment by your reincarnation cycle? Whatever the case may be, I am just wondering about a guy also causing potentially rockets with atomic bombs, which were actually created also potentially assuring the death of many other people. — Shawn
May I ask, what are your views on the matter of causing death through something destructive, and how according to any ethically bounded theory, what this actually results in? — Shawn
May I ask, what are your views on the matter of causing death through something destructive, and how according to any ethically bounded theory, what this actually results in? — Shawn
Quite so. Truman's decision is not standing up well to the scrutiny of history. But he was balancing the destruction of dropping the bomb (and no-one really knew what would happen) with the destruction of fighting through to Japan the hard way. (Just as you describe.) No doubt he had a bias in favour of saving American lives. I don't say he was right. But I'm not at all sure he was wrong. It's all much easier from an arm-chair and with hindsight.He also wasn't responsible for how nukes were to be used, as demonstrated by the scene with Truman. — Christoffer
That's true. But can we ever calculate that the creation balances the destuction, morally speaking? If only there were a way of ensuring that no-one will use that thought to justify some total horror in the future. I wouldn't trust any human being with that decision. If it has to happen, let it happen without, or in spite of, human agency.So, destruction, just like Shiva's role, is both an end and a beginning. Shiva both destroys and creates. — Christoffer
The fear of atomic warfare has never prevented small wars in the years since then. But it seems that people are beginning to think that it is OK to threaten it. I suspect that complacency is a factor, but miscalculation is all too easy, so I'm not at all secure about it.And it's why people now fear that when the last of the witnesses of that event in history dies, we will see a rise in new atrocities and conflicts because people's minds again start to build up an unhealthy ecosystem of thought. — Christoffer
The fear of atomic warfare has never prevented small wars in the years since then. — Ludwig V
I don't say he was right. But I'm not at all sure he was wrong. It's all much easier from an arm-chair and with hindsight. — Ludwig V
That's true. But can we ever calculate that the creation balances the destuction, morally speaking? If only there were a way of ensuring that no-one will use that thought to justify some total horror in the future. I wouldn't trust any human being with that decision. If it has to happen, let it happen without, or in spite of, human agency. — Ludwig V
The fear of atomic warfare has never prevented small wars in the years since then. But it seems that people are beginning to think that it is OK to threaten it. I suspect that complacency is a factor, but miscalculation is all too easy, so I'm not at all secure about it. — Ludwig V
That indeed is the alternative - except that it might have been more than a year, more than two - nobody knows.What if he didn't drop the bomb and Japan surrendered after a year more of fighting? — Christoffer
I think we need more than that. I think we need everyone, everywhere, to fear the effects of climate change on themselves and/or their families. Altruism won't carry normal people through the enormous adjustments (many of them reductions) in living standards that will be necessary. At the moment, there's an illusion that life can carry on as normal with a few technical adjustments to energy policy. People will do it for themselves, but not for people who are thousands of miles away.We would essentially need a massive catastrophe due to climate change before we can build a world that is ecologically sound and rational. The world seems to not be able to do this on its own. — Christoffer
In my view, there are no results or consequences other than the deaths (and suffering) you facilitated. Of course, there is the possibility that you might receive some kind of prize. — Tom Storm
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