Mortai Gravesend said:
Scow2 said:
Nazrel said:
"Moral Cowardice" is the cry of the self-righteous self-superior who never have and likely never will be put in such a position.
You, sir, have just won the thread about a hundred times over with this line.
For ad hominem? Ah, well no surprise that if you think that wins a thread you wouldn't be able to come up with real proof.
Proof of what? Even the most fundamental understanding of brain chemistry demonstrates that people aren't actually in complete control of their thoughts and decisions.
What do you want proved? That people are always capable of making rational decisions? I guess you've never met someone on drugs or alcohol. You COULD argue that they made the decision to get themselves wasted, and I COULD then throw in alcohol/drug dependencies, but there's an even simpler answer: If people are independently capable of making rational decisions, then drugs and alcohol shouldn't be able to impair judgement. And while I'm the only one bringing drugs/alcohol up, it's because it's an obvious case of impaired decision making that shouldn't be possible if your worldview is correct - the brain also produces and manages its own 'decision-impairing' chemicals. If your beliefs on the human power of choice was correct, we could not have medically identifiable and quantifiable neurological disorders ranging from Autism to dyslexia to psychopathy to narcolepsy to Alzheimer's to kleptomania (Among a whole host of other 'manias).
If people were capable of rational thought and decision-making at all times, we wouldn't need mental conditioning - either everyone would be able to figure out and make a decision on short notice at all times, or reaction and decision-making processes would take a LOT longer than they currently do.
People can easily make moral judgement from the comfort of their own home, with all the time in the world and none of the exposure to the process leading up to the decisions made.
We've had proof on the power of "Just following orders" ever since the big event that started the argument - in which Armchair Judgement got the last word in (The Milgram experiment hadn't been conducted yet). However, for that to have been true, it again would have had to mean that a large chunk of the rank-and-file of an entire nation's armed forces were morally bankrupt, which is an absurd notion that lends credence to the whole shebang that indirectly started the argument.
Armchair moralists can decry the actions of others and make themselves feel good about their own self-righteousness while remaining completely free of the circumstances that lead to such actions, but it does nothing to actually solve the problem, and causes greater damage by obscuring it. Everyone has "Could have, would have, should have"s, and there is no proof that they actually change future behaviors.
"Judge not, lest you be judged."