B-dawg
Super Member
Offline
Afterlife Knowledge Member
Posts: 596
Missoula, Montana
Gender:
|
gee, I'm not sure this deserves its own thread. but I'll answer your question.
I respect your personal experience, and I think we actually agree on this. You mention the cycle of violence, and that's easy to find in such communities. What I'm trying to take into account is the criminal tendency to pick weaker people to prey on. Weaker physically, but also weaker in the sense of naive.
My point was that morals ensure physically weak individuals are not prematurely eliminated from our midst and also make them a little naive. Children raised with morals observe the golden rule. That's great, and the direction we need to go - obviously. But if you placed a person with high morals in the same room with a person with no morals, the immoral one will take advantage of the moral one. If you carry it to the extreme, you get generations and generations of highly moral individuals who know nothing of violence, deceit, or evil, right? They take care of each other and make up for each others weaknesses. It all works great until an immoral person walks into the group and rapes, pilages and burns the whole thing down - with ease. Hence, my statement that it takes less and less physical threat to overcome highly moral (weak) individuals. I'm not sure where the balance is, if there even is one for our species this go round. Part of our nature ensures a certain percentage of nasty people will be around to take advantage of peaceful ones. Part of me wants to believe we can change the nature of humans, but another part really believes this species is what it is, and we'd have to start over with a new genetic program altogether. I look forward to your comments on this and how it may affect our afterlife pursuits and repeated return through reincarnation or other feedback means. bud ***************** Of course, the question arises: How do you define "moral"? I'd say it is moral to take a physically weaker/smaller person and instruct them in martial arts, or the use of weapons. (Or in the case of non-physical oppression such as theft, swindling and so on - how to spot a scammer, con artist, thief, ect.) On the other hand, I would say that cultivating naivete in such individuals is profoundly IMMORAL behavior, serving only to create more "rabbits" for society's "coyotes" to prey upon. (Unfortunately, cultivation of such naivete seems to be what most people consider "moral instruction" these days.) The MORAL solution then? Take "rabbits", and teach them how to be PORCUPINES. (Predators tend to avoid accosting individuals who can strike back, or are too savvy to be conned easily.) The "coyotes" will have slimmer pickings that way... and maybe fewer will decide to prey on their fellow men.
B-man
|