The question is: Are some people better than others? The answer is simple (isn't it?) — Purple Pond
Humans compare in many ways. For example, some people are more talented, fit, attractive, intelligent, wealthy, motivated etc. Other people have none of these traits. The question is: Are some people better than others?
Define "better". — Harry Hindu
The question is: Are some people better than others? — Purple Pond
The day one of these changes I will say yes, some people are better than others. Human beings are all equal, no matter what they look like, what their health is, how intellectual or not they are. — Sir2u
Surely, some people are better than others. Random example: severely disabled people are usually better than eugenicists and social dawinists. — Πετροκότσυφας
No, we're not, and your subsequent statement contradicts this, as worded. You're just not being clear with your meaning. — Sapientia
You mean that we are equal in some respects, and in some respects we should be treated as equals in spite of our differences. — Sapientia
If I can say it clearly, as I've just demonstrated, then why couldn't - or why didn't - you? Is it because it would ruin your comment? You had it set up so nicely (or so it might seem), but then I come along and pick holes in it. — Sapientia
According to Wikipedia, in The Social Organism, Herbert Spencer compares society to a living organism, and argues that, just as biological organisms evolve through natural selection, society evolves and increases in complexity through analogous processes. — Sapientia
There are some nasty elements throughout history in comparing humans. Eugenicists and social Darwinists thought that some people are better than others and it's the duty of society to weed out the 'junk humans' to promote a healthy human society. — Purple Pond
some people are more talented, fit, attractive, intelligent... [and] motivated. Other people have none of these traits. — Purple Pond
You and Sapientia seem to be in need of couple's therapy. — Bitter Crank
I would prefer to be more talented, fit, attractive, intelligent, and motivated, than less so, because higher levels of these features enable one to engage the human and physical world more successfully. — Bitter Crank
IF one would prefer to be more talented, fit, attractive, intelligent, and motivated, apparently one thinks it would be better. — Bitter Crank
I don't see anything inherently against disabled people in doing that. — Sapientia
you are what you are. — Sir2u
doesn't mean that the obvious next step is sending out the poison gas vans to despatch everybody who fails to be "better". — Bitter Crank
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