Eldarion said:
But isn't that just a perspective thing? I mean if you look at it from a broader viewpoint encompassing morality as a whole then doesn't it kinda fall flat? I mean a person can do good things without needing a corresponding bad thing happening right? We don't need jerkwads even out all the nice people do we?
If we don't need jerkwads to even out the nice people, then why do we seem to think we need nice people to even out the jerkwads? But yeah, it
is all about perspective. I know I said, "objectively bad," in my previous post, but I guess that was poor word choice on my part. "Good" and "bad" are values that human beings invented in order to help categorize and rationalize irrational things. And I guess that's part of my point. If there is no "bad," then everything is "good." How, then, do you explain to someone what "good" is? "Well, it's the opposite of bad?" "What's bad? I have no frame of reference for it because it doesn't exist."
My point isn't so much that "good" or "bad" things are necessary for the world to keep spinning. The world will exist either way. It's more that, without a solid definition for one, we have nothing to compare the other to. Because of that, even if everyone were "good" in the sense that we currently understand it, we probably wouldn't realize it, simply because there are no "bad" people. No one would be "good"
or "bad" from that perspective; everyone would simply
be.
I know that probably doesn't make a lot of sense, so I'll try to use another analogy. I think it's safe to assume you can see, right? Well, you know what that's like, and you know what darkness is like (since you can close your eyes and all), but imagine if you had been born with no eyes. The concept of light would be too abstract for you to grasp, because you have nothing to compare it to. Then, take that a step further and imagine that
no one had eyes. On the planet. In that case, there wouldn't even be anyone around who could try to explain the difference between light and dark.