My apologies Janus for the very delayed response. I do appreciate your comments and our discussions, so please don't take this as disrespect towards you and your comments in any way. It's absolutely not meant in that manner. I've been meaning to respond, but unfortunately I had to deal with a situation wherein the Three Stooges tried once again to *liquidate* me since I was becoming too dangerous - but luckily I survived one more time >:OIf you accept Jesus' proscription against violent resistance to evil, then it is not justified even in the case of self-defence. There really is no hope for humanity if everyone just keeps arming themselves against their neighbours. Someone has to be courageous and take the risk of vulnerability in order to stop the rot. How much is spent on armaments and defence systems today that could be spent on schools, hospitals, feeding the poor? I would say there is always another alternative, but hardly ever anyone courageous enough to take it. Tolstoy is good on this interpretation of Christianity; see his The Kingdom of God is Within You. — Janus
I get what you are saying about violence in self-defence; and I would probably employ it to defend my loved ones and myself if needed, since I am not morally perfect. — Janus
yet* :P >:OI'm glad you were not liquidated — Janus
Thank you, those are very kind words for you to say! I have also found the discussions with you very interesting and insightful as well! :)I think this site would certainly be much the poorer without you.:) — Janus
Have you become possessed by the banned spirit of Thanatos Sand with the ".:)" ? >:).:) — Janus
But then I think I would do that as well if I was in charge of a country. I'd want my country preferably and ideally to be well armed and prepared in case of war. I mean don't you think it would be irresponsible for a leader not to prepare his country, and then have to face the possibility of someone like Kim Jong Un force his country into slavery? If you were that leader, wouldn't you feel that you have to take the measures necessary to protect your people, and in fact, that it is your responsibility to do so? I think a leader should feel bad if he places his country in peril's way, because the livelihood of many people depend on him.Nations spending obscene amounts of money arming themselves, though, is done often in unreasonable (to say the least) anticipation of threats from other nations. The churches don't speak out against this egregious and gratuitous paranoia. It is the general atmosphere of distrust that is problematic for (relative, I don't think perfect is possible of course) peace and harmony on Earth. That is why Christ told people "Love thy neighbour as thyself". I doubt he expected perfection on Earth, any more than I do. — Janus
I don't make a difference between the two of them. That's another reification right there in my opinion. It's the same underlying action, you're just using two different words to differentiate based on CONTEXT not on the action.But as I told you in the other thread, killing in self-defense is not murder. It's manslaughter. — Thorongil
He did actually open a new account under the name of John Harris, so wouldn't say it's that impossible >:O - but that one is unfortunately also banned now.What if TS were me under an alternative account? It's not impossible. I could have created another account under a different email to let my alter ego out for some exercise. ;) — Janus
>:O >:OYes sand is very unpleasant when it gets in your Janus. >:) — Janus
I don't make a difference between the two of them. That's another reification right there in my opinion. It's the same underlying action, you're just using two different words to differentiate based on CONTEXT not on the action. — Agustino
Whether someone causes their own death by being an assailant in a case where they are killed by their intended victim obviously depends on whether you assume that the victim has a choice about whether to defend themselves or not. — Janus
The action itself - murder - killing another human being - is wrong. Not based just on the intention of the agent, which in both cases is to kill a human being (for different reasons though), and not based just on the consequences. It's a combination of intention, consequences, internal state of the one who performs the action and the context. It's quite a complicated thing, one which I think is best to couch in Aristotelian terms rather than the more modern Kantian vs consequentialist kind of thinking.But how do we determine the morality of an action if not the intent of the agent who performed it? The only other way to determine it is by the consequences of the action. In that case, intent doesn't matter. But I never took you for a consequentialist. — Thorongil
Maybe you are right, if you look at it that way, it is a missed opportunity. I'm perhaps too often confrontational with such people, and in the end I suppose that's not wrong if you can control that. But if I never resist - or try to - I never see if I can or not. Wayfarer was talking about this recently in one of his posts too.it would have been better if people had simply learned not to respond. — Janus
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