ok, this totally skews my arguement. my arguement is based on perspective. remember, the nazi thinks he is good, and the jew is evil, and vice versa...
And also, remember, i conceded to you that it isnt might makes right, that is misleading, the phrase is just catchy. I meant "might makes what is" as you suggested, this is a much better wording of my arguement.
And also, remember, i conceded to you that it isnt might makes right, that is misleading, the phrase is just catchy. I meant "might makes what is" as you suggested, this is a much better wording of my arguement.
You just admitted that might does NOT make right, or at least that might doesn't necessarily make right. It simply makes what IS. Presumably, then, you agree that "what is" is not necessarily "what is right". To say that the two are the same would require that you concede that slavery is perfectly right, and you just rejected the only basis on which you could do so (might makes right).
But more than that, you're missing the point of the debate. I'm not arguing WHAT IS, I'm arguing WHAT'S RIGHT. Yes, in 1944 you could say that the Holocaust is happening, but could you also say that the Holocaust is right? Certainly not, as you rejected the only argument in favor of saying the Holocaust is right - the argument that might makes right.
I suppose you could then go on to argue that sometimes might makes right, and sometimes it doesn't, but that also doesn't make sense, because making that distinction requires an appeal to some higher sense of morality - thus, it isn't the might that is making something right, but something else. The "inherent rightness", or morality.
you cant take verything i type as literal. ask my friends, if anyone knows the paradox of saying there are no absolutes, i do . i did not mean there were absolutely no absolutes, but it just takes too long to clarify everything so well to prevent misinterpretations like this. tho all too often, most take adavantage of ambiguity like that to make arguements based on semantics...
I agree that MOST everyone deep down believe in some right abd wrong. shoot, even I, a fairly hardcore cultural relativist do, at least deep down inside. really, its more of just a bias.
I agree that MOST everyone deep down believe in some right abd wrong. shoot, even I, a fairly hardcore cultural relativist do, at least deep down inside. really, its more of just a bias.
i totally disagree. There are MANY shades of grey betwen black adn white. But again, you have the arguement of moral absolutes, and i have the arguement of cultural relativism, and that morality is based on perspective. this is a fundemental difference between us that will not allow us to agree on anyhting else on this matter.
But if EVERYONE steals from everyone, or a large precentage does anyway, then you have a big problem and society is profoundly impacted. IF im afraid of being robbed, im not gonna go to work, im gonna stay home and protect my things. in this scenario Everyone else does the same. our society would not last, that was my point. same thing with murder. one murder, no biggy. large scale murder... big problem.
Now, before you make the distinction of negative vs. positive effects, remember that I'll just bring up absolutes again, and refer you to the above arguments
by hording i infered you would be taking their weapons and equipment by force, i guess i dint make that clear. And as thus, you would be VIOLATING THEIR rights
In any case, I fail to see how hardship is any excuse to rob or kill people, and I fail to see why a lack of government justifies those actions, either.
as for not making sense, I already explained cultural relativism and POV earlier, i wont cover that ground twice, unless you think something was unclear.
if the right was 'natural' doesnt that mean the right to life should occur naturally in nature? that is what i think it means, but maybe i am misinterpreting it.
but just as easily there could be a right to SLAVERY, as enforced by man-made laws, no???
If i ignore someones rights, as by chaining them up, to you i am merely ignoring them. To me, however, that right, IN THAT SITUATION (remember, rights can be made and enforced at anytime, but they must be backed up or they are meaningless), is non-existant. Do you see that from my POV? By ignoring the right at will, it effectively does not exist, no? You should agree with this, as you see the same thing, but rather the right is there, but it just is being ignored temporarily.
I believe they only exist when they are actually WORKING, by being enforced.
However, I suspect this is simple semantic confusion, as you pointed out earlier, so I'll give you a pass, with the simple acknowledgement of the clarification.
In any case, you are making a couple of arguments. First, that rights are created by society, and second, that someone who is violating your rights is actually taking your rights away.
You are saying that rights are created by society in that if a society ceases to "enforce rights" (punish rights violations) then it is actually stripping away rights. If rights are created by society, then again, you have no argument against the Holocaust. It comes back to might makes right - but I'm not allowing that argument anymore, since you already admitted that it's an incorrect assertion.
Secondly, you are saying that even if you normally have, say, the right to property, and "society" (as some here would put it) recognizes this, your right to property can be simply taken away by someone who decides to rob you. But if you don't anymore have the right to property, then you have no ground to stand on in objecting to being robbed.
If the gov decides to shoot me, from their perspective it may be right, and from mine it may be wrong. Nothing more. My standpoint merely says that morality is relative to POV, and in the end, "MIGHT MAKES WHAT IS".
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