• Ennui Elucidator
    494
    Rather, ALL religions have ALWAYS pronounced evil to be a choice in every human being.AlienFromEarth

    Have you studied all religions for all of time?

    What is the relationship between sinning and doing evil?
  • AJJ
    909


    It seems to me that we’re going in loops because your view isn’t coherent and you’re being obtuse about it.

    An intention really, is an organism that sets out to do something.AlienFromEarth

    If an organism is unconscious then in what sense can it “set out to do something”? Is the fact that a robot doesn’t have its own intentions not a consequence of it being unconscious?
  • T Clark
    13k
    It's a minute before midnight here, 59 minutes past midnight where you are. And he's still not banned!Bitter Crank

    @AlienFromEarth

    I'm glad. I was in a bad mood yesterday. When I saw how upset he was, I knew I'd gone too far.
  • AlienFromEarth
    43
    I can honestly say I haven't. All religions that I have read about do not agree with my views. I assume you have been exposed to basically the same information on the different religions as I have, therefore you know clear and well they do not share my sentiments on evil.

    Also the fact that the majority rules, so if everyone agreed with my sentiments the wouldn't be so passive about coming up with a solution to the all the violent crime in the world. Certainly most ppl are not evil so I don't blame them. Rather I recognize the need to educate them.
  • Alkis Piskas
    2.1k
    War cannot be used, as people fighting for war are fighting for survivalAlienFromEarth
    Maybe true for those who defend themselves. Not for the attacker, whose purpose is only to dominate, exploit, get profit, and so on.

    There is no lower level of instinctual knowledge, than to know what good and evil areAlienFromEarth
    BTW, there's no such a thing as "instinctual knowledge". An instinct is an innate behavior in response to certain stimuli. And knowledge refers to facts, information, and skills acquired through experience or education. It involves reasoning and it includes evaluation of good and evil. Instinct doesn't. It's just automatic reaction.

    1)Good cannot be evil. Evil cannot be good.AlienFromEarth
    I agree.

    2) Knowledge of good prevents one from committing acts.AlienFromEarth
    What acts? I suppose that the word "evil" or "bad" is missing, right?
    Well, does knowing what is good for you prevent me from harming you? This in fact could be called a "conscious evil act".
    Neither knowledge of evil prevents one from harming others.
    So, it's not knowledge that prevents someone from doing harm. It's "personal ethics". It one's ethical level. It goes on a scale from immoral (unethical) to amoral (lacking etches) to moral (ethical)

    3) If evil were a choice just anyone could make, the ability to commit evil would require a good person to somehow "unknow" what evil isAlienFromEarth
    This might happen but it's not usually the case. A good --I prefer "ethical"-- person can go easily astray and commit a bad action. But he will know, he will be aware that he did something bad. It is the evil ("unethical") person who usually manages to "unknow" what evil is, i.e. to hide, burry the evil nature of his acts. That's why most really unethical persons cannot distinguish between "good" and "bad". They are characterized by "no remorse". They are actually mentally ill. That's why when such a condition is established in courts, the culpable is sent usually to a mental clinic rather than in prison.

    4) Committing evil cannot be considered a "mistake", as it is deliberate as the definition of evil above states.AlienFromEarth
    Certainly!

    5) Survival cannot be a reason to commit evil, as evil directly threatens the survival and well-being of the offending evil-doer.AlienFromEarth
    Certainly!

    6) Mental Illness cannot be used as a reason to commit evil eitherAlienFromEarth
    Certainly. I'm glad you brought the "mental" case! I mentioned already myself in (3) above. However, there are various degrees or levels of mental illnesses. They start from simply irrational behavior and go up to complete madness. At the lower levels the individual can still think rationally and recognize the evil of his actions. As he goes up on the scale, he loses any sense of moderation to finally get totally disconnected from reality. He acts automatically, totally compulsively, in a way that would resemble instinct. So, since reasoning in such a case is inexistent one cannot talk anymore about reasons to commit evil.

    Conclusion: Anyone who commits an evil act, is pure evil.AlienFromEarth
    I am afraid that I have to disagree in that. (What a pity, the last thing I'm commenting on! :smile:)
    OK, we have agreed that evil cannot be committed by mistake but only on purpose (intention).
    However, in the case of mental illness one cannot talk about intention, because intention involves aiming and planning and these involve reasoning and this is missing in most cases of mental illness.
  • Ennui Elucidator
    494
    I assume you have been exposed to basically the same information on the different religions as I have, therefore you know clear and well they do not share my sentiments on evil.AlienFromEarth

    I wouldn't make such assumptions.

    You didn't answer my other question. How are sinning and evil related?

    As an aside. Egoism

    Also, you might look into the role of freewill in religion. See theological determinism.
  • BC
    13.1k
    Also in St Augustine's confessions, this prayer... "Lord, make me chaste—but not yet."
  • Joshs
    5.2k
    the problem with it being "religious" metaphysics is that no religion in history as ever attempted to truly separate good from bad in human beings. Rather, ALL religions have ALWAYS pronounced evil to be a choice in every human being. That is precisely what I am arguing against.AlienFromEarth


    All religions that I have read about do not agree with my views. I assume you have been exposed to basically the same information on the different religions as I have, therefore you know clear and well they do not share my sentiments on evil.AlienFromEarth

    I don’t have in mind religion in the way that you may be thinking about it ( the major faith groups and their doctrines of good and evil as understood in the most general and generic way). What I have in mind is a movement in philosophy dating back 400 years, commonly referred to as Rationalism. Yes, this is philosophy but it espouses a metaphysics that is theological in nature. Rationalism believes we were born with the ability to discern good from evil. We use our logical faculties to achieve this differentiation. Sounds a lot like your view. All we have to add is that in some people this innate capacity is faulty or missing ( or as you say they ‘lack consciousness’). So it sounds to me like your view is a variation on the Rationalist theme.

    I’m not saying your thinking is identical with Descartes, Spinoza or Leibnitz, but it belongs within that era.
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    Also in St Augustine's confessions, this prayer... "Lord, make me chaste—but not yet."Bitter Crank

    Where have I heard that before? :chin:
  • Ennui Elucidator
    494
    Also, I haven't the patience at this point to do any great googling for you, but I suggest you look into "evil" in other cultures and whether those cultures have anything to say about your type of evil (as a moral/theological matter). Buddhists make up around 6% of the world population. What does Buddhism say about evil?

    The Western need to re-interpret non-Western faiths (read Christian and non-Christian) into its own religious terms does great injustice to non-Christian religions. "Evil" as such may be far less of an issue for the rest of the world than it is for you.
  • Santiago
    27
    Do you mean absolute evil? Is your use of evil related to nouxio actions for the person taking the action, or it is refered to a gratuite hurt over anything? Perhaps to both actions into different situations, but yes. In case you are talking about actions only producing certain satisfaction by their gratuite commitment over anything, then yes those are actions that must be avoided. However absolute "evil," or noxious is beyond our capacity, due to our limitation as tiny animals.
  • AlienFromEarth
    43
    Well I wouldn't call it gratuitous, but that's only because I dont' believe evil people are conscious beings. So they don't do it for enjoyment, as they do not feel enjoyment.

    So basically, because they are not conscious beings, evil people may attempt to rape you if they want sex. They may attempt to steal from you if they want what you have and without any reason to do it other than sctrictly wanting it. They may attempt to murder someone because they cannot control the impulses of what WE call anger. And by the lack of control, I mean, permanent.

    Now, stupid people can do really mean things to you, the difference is they don't INTEND to do those things. They are just dumb and freak out and act like spoiled children. And they will actually feel bad about it at some point. They did it because they are mentally blind, but not mindless. So the difference between evil and stupid people is evil people are literally mindless, whereas stupid people are just retarded. But stupid people CAN LEARN to become smarter over time. Whereas evil people can never change as they lack consciousness.

    ANd so, at the end of the day, evil people do what they do because they have no conscious ability to control their chemical urges, which give rise to muscle movements, and then perhaps even the most unspeakable acts of violence.

    Yes they seem to be robotic, without actually being a robot. This is because their body is designed to still be able to evolve/adapt and re-structure itself as it sees fit at it's fundamental level, whereas a robot cannot do this as a robot requires chunks of separate materials that work together without being fundamentally dependent on the other chunks. If you make a robot fundamentally interconnected like an organism is, you in fact create an organism, and not a robot.
  • Judaka
    1.7k

    Evil doesn't exist as more than a description of things made by humans, who are free to dictate to others what their description means and what prompted or justified its use. Treatment of good and evil as objective truths is nonsense as is to attempt to dictate the rules these truths operate under. Your extensive list of assertions are all baseless, you seem intent on giving them an authority they're not entitled to. Your ideas have as much legitimacy as the rules written in a book like Harry Potter for a fictional world, mere productions of your imagination, hope you at least have some reason for bothering with it.
  • AlienFromEarth
    43
    Funny, seeing as though you believe you know better about good and evil by stating that everything I say about good vs evil is invalid and doesn't deserve the titles I give them.

    What gives you the right to title my work as baseless or wrong if, by your own beliefs, that evil is subjective? I mean my work can't be morally wrong. If you find something illogical about it, i'd be more than happy to debate you.

    But you cannot defeat my argument that evil is real by saying it is objectively morally wrong to think so. That is a logical fallacy.
  • Judaka
    1.7k

    You could call a teapot evil, I wouldn't know how to "defeat" your argument but what I'd do in that or this circumstance, would be to tell you that your assertion lacks any utility or truth value and is uninteresting. I'm comfortable with my assertions coming from me, don't feel undermined by acknowledging them as assertions either.

    Your logic can't be judged, some of your premises seem absurd, such as that humans can be consciousness, (did you mean conscienceless? that would make a lot more sense). Your logic can't be judged because "pure evil" is just some nonsense term you made up. It's like if I made a thread talking about "hyper evil" and saying certain crimes are hyper evil and some aren't, without defining what hyper evil was, totally meaningless. Meaninglessness isn't bad in some contexts, it's just pretty bad in philosophy.
  • AlienFromEarth
    43
    Planes of existence and their abilities

    FL...............PHYS.........ORG....CONSC ORG
    Follows FL.....Y...............Y................Y
    Can evolve.....N..............Y................Y
    Self Aware.....N..............N...............Y

    PHYS = physical
    Org = organism
    Consc org = conscious organism


    FL means fundamental laws. I could have put "exists" as a category but that would have been the only function for FL

    The org category is what we could consider evil as it has no consciousness. Anyway, each higher plane gains 1 ability over the preceding
  • ghostlycutter
    67
    Nothing is a Greater Evil encircled by Good, a Greater Good is a blue mirror that comes naturally when the encircling good cubes itself. Evil is any process against a greater good, in which the blue mirror would say no. A belief in Pure Evil is a intollerable process, against a greater good which can never be.
  • Joshs
    5.2k
    Nothing is a Greater Evil encircled by Good, a Greater Good is a blue mirror that comes naturally when the encircling good cubes itselfghostlycutter

    Who colored the mirror blue? Inquiring minds want to know.
  • Alkis Piskas
    2.1k

    Basic courtesy dictates that you respond to someone you has replied to your topic and in fact in length ...
    (Re:¨https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/598900, 6 days ago)
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