This is not true. If after you steal my money you buy yourself a nice car, and I see you everyday passing my house in it and enjoying yourself then I will feel jealous of you. There's no fear of losing anything there. — Agustino
It's not very strict are you out of your mind? >:O You gotta be joking. I espouse beliefs that all Muslims, Christians (authentic ones), Buddhists, Hinuds, and Jews believe. Do you think what so many people believe, and have believe through the centuries is "very strict in moral or religious matters, often excessively so" - that's impossible! Since the majority of men have believed so, it cannot be "very strict" because we set the standard of strictness based on the majority. Very strict is saying that you should never have sex. Or that you should never get married. Or that you should abstain from sex with your spouse except certain days, etc.My usage is perfectly in accordance with ordinary usage, and applicable to what you espouse; so don't complain. — John
There is no insecurity - what insecurity would there be? There's no fear that he has gained at my expense - the whole problem is that he is enjoying what is rightfully mine, without my permission.The jealousy comes on account of the insecurity of feeling that he has gained at your expense; which is certainly accurately classed as a kind of fear of losing, of being the loser.. — John
How is that possible if those beliefs - the beliefs of the majority through history - and of most major moral codes out there - form the standard by which things are judged? If I judge them using themselves as standard, then they are normal - not Puritanical.Yes, and those kinds of beliefs may be understood to be more or less puritanical in the the sense in which I was using the word. — John
No I'm not afraid of being any sort of loser - how others perceive me has nothing to do with it - I'm just angry and upset that an injustice has been committed - in this case to myself - and therefore I look to remedy this and bring about justice. Would you say for example if I see a man suffering in the street and I help him that I helped him because I'm afraid I may one day end up like him? That would be absurd!Yes, which makes you the loser; you are afraid of being the loser, of what others might say, of losing your standing, and so on. — John
Yes they are useful in developing spiritual intimacy among other things. Of course you can peddle this liberal progressive ideology, which is what you are in fact doing, even without knowing it. It's so ingrained.As far as I am concerned those beliefs may have had their social uses in their day ( for a start there was no reliable contraception or social welfare back then); but things have changed and now they are no longer useful, just puritanical. I never said that you think of those beliefs as puritanical; although of course I believe you should, if you want to be a reasonable modern person whose moral beliefs are in accord with, and therefore useful in regard to, the times. — John
Which is exactly the same thing as jealousy. What else do you think jealousy is? Jealousy is a sub-species of anger. It's with regards to self. Whereas anger is with regards to everyone else.Not convincing; if you were just angry and upset as you would be about any injustice that has been committed; then there would simply be no feeling of jealousy, but rather just of righteous anger. — John
If being in accord with the times means being a liberal progressive, no I have no such interest, sorry to tell you mate :D — Agustino
No I don't try to cast you as one - you are one. It's a simple fact. Liberal progressives are the only ones who share your beliefs. Certainly conservatives don't. And the whole conservative tradition doesn't. You complain that I don't let others live as they wish - but I have no problem with them living as they wish. On the other hand you have a problem with attacking conservatism and Orthodoxy and not recognising even the fact of its existence. You say its backwards, and not adapted to the times - nonsense!
You keep trying to cast me as a liberal progressive; this is wrong, a reflection of your own prejudice, and is just a poor substitute for your lack of good arguments. — John
Nope. In fact if it pleases you okay - I feel righteous anger when my spouse cheats on me - happy? >:OIt is also an unhealthy self-focused sub-species which is not useful precisely because when needed the more healthy emotion of anger can do all the work that is necessary or desirable. — John
Cite where.Jealousy is a kind of sub-species of anger yes; which is just what I have been saying. So, now you apparently are agreeing with me. — John
No I don't try to cast you as one - you are one. It's a simple fact. Liberal progressives are the only ones who share your beliefs. Certainly conservatives don't. — Agustino
Nope. — Agustino
Cite where. — Agustino
Syllogize your claim and you will see why it is an invalid inference. I'd do it for you, but I can't be bothered. — John
Just so this goes on record: no conservatives, of any kind, would say that adultery is ever morally acceptable - regardless of what those who commit or engage in it think about it - and that's a fact. A few liberal conservatives may support the absence of legal punishments for adultery - that much is true, but none of them would accept that there is any situation in which adultery is morally acceptable, or in which sharing partners is moral. None.Some liberal conservatives may share my beliefs or even all of them. — John
Yes - maybe if you quote the whole sentence you will find an argument. Quoting just the beginning is another one of your sophisms.Yep, scintillating argument you got going there, boy. — John
I think you understand by "jealousy" something very different than I understand. In your terminology you can replace jealousy with righteous anger if that makes you feel any better - and I've told you this before. You're ignoring the obvious point - it doesn't matter how you call that emotional reaction - what matters is that there is a negative emotional reaction which is objectively demanded if your partner cheats on you. End of story. And of course that part, you never tackle, you quibble over a word.You assert with you "nope" that it is not anger that does the work of motivation in cases of fighting against injustice, for example. Perhaps you can explain then how the emotion of jealousy could be understood to able to do some specific positive work of motivation in some circumstances that anger could not equally well accomplish without the self-focused negativity. — John
You might be more credible if you didn't embarrass yourself with performative contradictions.I can't be bothered either. — unenlightened
Do you know that he decried the slide of the modern world into debauchery, especially as was happening in his time in France, during the French Revolution? — Agustino
adultery — Agustino
punishment — Agustino
immoral — Agustino
debauchery — Agustino
punishment — Agustino
punishment — Agustino
liberal-progressive — Agustino
adultery — Agustino
adultery — Agustino
adultery — Agustino
Really... give me a break. — Agustino
Makes sense - it's not like you find many social conservatives around here :PI'd rather discuss adultery with you than with anybody else. — Bitter Crank
Agreed.Sin is its own punishment, like virtue is its own reward. People who sin significantly (I mean, real solid sinners) destroy their relationships with others, they cast themselves out of the community if they haven't already been cast out. They destroy other people. The cut themselves off from God -- a unilateral action on their part. — Bitter Crank
Agreed.In the same way that many people are very robustly virtuous, a lot of people are not robustly sinful. A lot of their sinfulness is just wandering around in the dark not really knowing what the hell they are doing. "Moral incompetence" isn't the same thing as good, solid sin. Lots of people would have a hard time even telling the Inquisitor what sin is, never mind what their sins were. Morally, they don't know shit from shinola. — Bitter Crank
Agreed.The real sinners are morally competent: they have detailed knowledge about what sin is, they know what virtue is, and they have decided to sin. There are all sorts of things a true sinner might do--everything from stealing an article that catches their fancy (knowing that there is no logical way of justifying the theft), seducing and consorting with their best friend's wife (and knowing precisely how this is harmful), killing (murder in the first degree), and so on. — Bitter Crank
Slight disagreement here, I think the morally incompetent will still suffer from their own sinful behaviour, only that they may not be able to perceive the link between the suffering and the morality (and will quite often identify the suffering as an unavoidable part), and hence may continue in their sin -> hence "the Truth shall set your free". The real sinners on the other hand will persist in their sin even if they see suffering as the effects of it.The morally incompetent are not going to suffer much from their sinful behavior. Only the morally competent are able to suffer from sin. — Bitter Crank
1:23-1:24I'd rather discuss adultery with you than with anybody else, sweetheart. — Bitter Crank
Yes - maybe if you quote the whole sentence you will find an argument. Quoting just the beginning is another one of your sophisms. — Agustino
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