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  4. Murder is irrelevant. [modified]

Murder is irrelevant. [modified]

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Back Room
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  • D Dalek Dave

    Murder is irellevant. Spelling too.

    ------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave

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    Lost User
    wrote on last edited by
    #96

    yawn yawn, pedant. It used to be spelt 'murther' in the old days.

    Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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    • R ragnaroknrol

      Alright, let's get some basics down. Would you agree that stealing is wrong?

      If I have accidentally said something witty, smart, or correct, it is purely by mistake and I apologize for it.

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      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #97

      All property is theft.

      Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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      • S soap brain

        Survival instincts. As in, your life is somehow important to you...

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        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #98

        Yep, we rationalised the instinct of an amoeba and called it morality.

        Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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        • L Lost User

          harold aptroot wrote:

          (I have asked this often, just not on CP. I never got satisfying answers.)

          That's because the concept of value is a human invention to qualify the relative utility of things but there is no absolute of "value" that can be assigned to anything. Things can be more valuable than other things depending on the frame of reference. Change the frame of reference and you change the relative valuation of those things. Remove the frame of reference and you've rendered the question of value meaningless. Eg. A glass of water is more valuable than a diamond to someone dying of thirst, less valuable to someone with indoor plumbing, and not valuable at all to a pizza. Accordingly, human life is only valuable when other people agree it's valuable. A better question would be if you're really concerned that human life and by extension the human experience has no intrinsic value, of what possible value is exploring the question in the first place? Might as well just get high and wait until you don't exist anymore.

          - F

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          Lost User
          wrote on last edited by
          #99

          Hmm, outside of Global Warming you actually you actually make reasonable sense! ;P

          Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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          • L Lost User

            Ah, typical Dutch point of view! We have an assumed value system, for better or for worse, that states that life has value and we should try to preserve it (unless it is the enemy, or in our way, in which case wwe can take life with impunity (gulf war for example)). Prior to this assumed values system (which is called christianity) we had paganism. It was more important how you died than whether you died, whcih is an interesting point of view given that you will die anyway, and at least choosing to cash it in for the most outrageous, spectacular, memorable/honourable death possible at least gives you some measure of controll. As for why people get upset, its just social instinct/instilled reaction. Actually kids are very interested in death, and will kill animals quite readilly untill they are indoctrinated against doing so.

            Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #100

            Agreed, but I didn't know that it was typically Dutch :)

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            • L Lost User

              Agreed, but I didn't know that it was typically Dutch :)

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              Lost User
              wrote on last edited by
              #101

              What is typical is to disucss something so taboo so openly. Sex, drugs, death, paedophillia, the Dutch have a frankness of discussion that is refreshing and progressive.

              Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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              • L Lost User

                What is typical is to disucss something so taboo so openly. Sex, drugs, death, paedophillia, the Dutch have a frankness of discussion that is refreshing and progressive.

                Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #102

                I did put it in the back room, rather than in the lounge..

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                • L Lost User

                  What is typical is to disucss something so taboo so openly. Sex, drugs, death, paedophillia, the Dutch have a frankness of discussion that is refreshing and progressive.

                  Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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                  Lost User
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #103

                  But yea I guess you're right, I would discuss anything.

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                  • L Lost User

                    All property is theft.

                    Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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                    RichardM1
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #104

                    From who?

                    Opacity, the new Transparency.

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                    • R RichardM1

                      From who?

                      Opacity, the new Transparency.

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                      Lost User
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #105

                      Its an anarchistic principle, which while inoitially sounding stupid, is actually relevant when you look at acts such as the enclosure act. Common land was taken, enclosed, and called the property of the local lord, where upon the peasants had to resort to 'poaching' and sneaky grazing on what was to them still their land.

                      Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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                      • L Lost User

                        Its an anarchistic principle, which while inoitially sounding stupid, is actually relevant when you look at acts such as the enclosure act. Common land was taken, enclosed, and called the property of the local lord, where upon the peasants had to resort to 'poaching' and sneaky grazing on what was to them still their land.

                        Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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                        RichardM1
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #106

                        fat_boy wrote:

                        Its an anarchistic principle, which while inoitially sounding stupid, is actually relevant when you look at acts such as the enclosure act.

                        The problem with your argument is that it had to be someones property for it to be stolen to make it someones property. You go back far enough, and no one owned it, and the first owning was not theft. Even 'common land' has been owned. If you have your group's common land, and I try and graze on it, I will quickly learn I have no claim. It was already unavailable to me, prior to the enclosure act, so the act did not make it property, any more or less than defining it as common land. In Europe, feudal laws did not make property or ownership, though they did steal from those who previously owned. In the US, after the European plagues swept through, there was all kinds of property not owned by anyone, because they all died of smallpox. Of course, there was also all kinds of stolen land. But stolen from who?

                        Opacity, the new Transparency.

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                        • R RichardM1

                          fat_boy wrote:

                          Its an anarchistic principle, which while inoitially sounding stupid, is actually relevant when you look at acts such as the enclosure act.

                          The problem with your argument is that it had to be someones property for it to be stolen to make it someones property. You go back far enough, and no one owned it, and the first owning was not theft. Even 'common land' has been owned. If you have your group's common land, and I try and graze on it, I will quickly learn I have no claim. It was already unavailable to me, prior to the enclosure act, so the act did not make it property, any more or less than defining it as common land. In Europe, feudal laws did not make property or ownership, though they did steal from those who previously owned. In the US, after the European plagues swept through, there was all kinds of property not owned by anyone, because they all died of smallpox. Of course, there was also all kinds of stolen land. But stolen from who?

                          Opacity, the new Transparency.

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                          Lost User
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #107

                          RichardM1 wrote:

                          someones property

                          Well, it was common property (as is much of France in fact, where the forests and scrub land are owned by the commune, or parish if you like) and so free for all to use. As for a stranger wandering through, and camping on it, or sholoting a rabbit for dinner, I am fairly sure the locals wouldnt get too pissed off. Of course if an entire tribe moved in and started to use the land things might get a bit heated, but that is human nature. What DID happen was the worst. The rich local bigwig just fenced the land off and called it his, and then prosecuted anyone who went on it. ANd that is quite a different story.

                          Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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