Judicial systems don't impose positive rules of society like they do negative rules. — TheMadFool
Yet, we see so many people engaging in criminal activities and so few involved in practicing the positive rules of society. — TheMadFool
We could say that:
1. Even in the presence of encouragement to do good and the law not barring such activities we find so few good people.
2. Even in the presence of laws preventing bad actions and the discouraging of evil we find so many bad people.
So, doesn't that mean that people are inherently bad? — TheMadFool
So, doesn't that mean that people are inherently bad? — TheMadFool
The dichotomy isn't "criminal activity vs. upholding positive values (love each other, etc)." The dichotomy is breaking the law vs. keeping it, on the one hand, and upholding positive values (love one another) vs. not upholding those values. — Noble Dust
Doing good is not attractive; it's not flashy and it doesn't grab attention, generally. To truly do good, to truly look out for the well being of those around you, is something that is done without notice, by very nature of the activity. So it's natural that we don't often notice the good that is being done around us. — Noble Dust
There is good, and bad — Austin Owens
That's a fine distinction but something tells me it all boils down to good vs evil. You uphold the law because you're good and you break it because you're bad. You do good because you're good and you don't do good because you're bad. — TheMadFool
So, doesn't that mean that people are inherently bad? — TheMadFool
Doing good is not attractive; it's not flashy and it doesn't grab attention, generally. — Noble Dust
And so, the assertion that "we are evil" only describes one half of the human dichotomy. — Noble Dust
Ahh very interesting question! Are we talking on a global scale cross-culturally? — Austin Owens
That is the general idea behind Original Sin -- man is prone to sin. — Bitter Crank
So, you agree. — TheMadFool
We could say that:
1. Even in the presence of encouragement to do good and the law not barring such activities we find so few good people.
2. Even in the presence of laws preventing bad actions and the discouraging of evil we find so many bad people. — TheMadFool
Yet, we see so many people engaging in criminal activities and so few involved in practicing the positive rules of society. — TheMadFool
We could say that, or not. Which of these we would say depends on preference, not evidence, because the evidence will always be overwhelmingly mixed, and one can pick out the pattern that one likes.
But we still haven't gotten to rock bottom yet: What determines our preference for thinking that people are either evil, good, or merely severely conflicted? Probably genes. — Bitter Crank
What I like better is to say that we are a conflicted animal. — Bitter Crank
No matter what one thinks about human behavior, we throw up conflicting evidence. We continually do good, bad, and indifferent acts. — Bitter Crank
I dislike very few people and most of those are related to my wife. — T Clark
It's a matter of taste — Bacchus
So, doesn't that mean that people are inherently bad? — TheMadFool
Or, to put it more analytically: 'evil' is a hangover from monotheistic times, let's not be glib in claiming its prevalence. — mcdoodle
So, doesn't that mean that people are inherently bad? — TheMadFool
I couldn't find a better word than ''evil''. As you say, it could be like an old coat that no longer fits and is best discarded. But how would we categorize pedophilia, rape, genocide, slavery, mass-shootings? Do you have a better word that describes the theme among such acts? Shit by any other name would smell as bad. — TheMadFool
Yet, we see so many people engaging in criminal activities and so few involved in practicing the positive rules of society. — TheMadFool
No it means that what humans do, YOU think is bad.
Good and Evil are just value judgements. — charleton
You have a point there. The ''we'' in my OP is too broad for some like you who are, may I say, good people. Yet, there is this tendency to generalize and I'm only doing what most (again generalizing) do all the time. I've heard many people say ''women are bad drivers'' or ''Spartans are brave'', etc. Generalization seems to be a valid method of making sense of our world. Am I wrong, then, in generalizing human nature as evil? — TheMadFool
so the generalization doesn't hold — mcdoodle
I guess without hard numbers it doesn't make sense to generalize. I wonder why there are no altruistic statistics when we have loads of crime statistics. Could this fact point to what I'm trying to say in my OP - that our bad behavior exceeds our good behavior? — TheMadFool
Every now and then people have a go at this, trying to come up with a happiness index or something, but the world tends to make fun of them. — mcdoodle
I am very pleased to say that for the first time ever I completely agree with something you've said. — JustSomeGuy
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