May I suggest the Tao te Ching, I hear good things about it.immovablemover said:3magicmonkeybars said:How many of these books have you read ?immovablemover said:Without question. My life is worth considerably more than a book of lies, myths, bland advice and most likely a good amount of petty hatred.
The Bible, The Qur'an and the Bhagavad Gita.
Sorry if you were expecting me to go "Herp derp, I skimmed through the old testament once".
And honestly my point still stands affirmed if these books were nothing but loving grace, wisdom and truth - My life is worth more. Pity that no holy book i've ever read could be described thusly.
Let me just say that every faith has been used to justify murder and war.funguy2121 said:Funny. After the Muslim fundie lunatics murdered those people in retaliation for the Christian fundie lunatic in Florida burning a copy of the Koran, some douche talking head on a radio show asked a similar question: is a book worth more than a human life?magicmonkeybars said:I know this is already a thread but it got me to think.
Would you burn the last copy of a holy book to save your own life or die knowing that you saved a part of human culture and history from being lost forever ?
It shouldn't matter which religion you save, one religion has just as much right to endure as the next.
I would take issue with your last assertion: Shintoism, Buddhism and the Hare Krishna faith do not have a thorough history of war and civil rights violations, whereas Christianity and Islam do. Though I am aware that much of these offenses involved humankind's interpretation of these these religions, based on this more eastern religions have a greater right to be here.
I would absolutely not die for a religious book. Maybe something of greater value, such as The Republic, (my dying words would be "You have to tough it out at first...it gets better) but never a work of mysticism / epistemological nihilism.
Yes I care about my life over culture, but I am impressed that you from that would conclude that I don't value people over culture, because I do. Like I said in my second post, human culture springs from humans. Therefore it can never be right to sacrifice a human for the sake of culture. Thus, of course I would burn the book to save a stranger, I would burn that book to save someone I hate, because a human life will always be worth more than culture to me.magicmonkeybars said:That's assuming I have loved ones or people I care about.Kakujin said:I find it interesting that that side of the story, which you brought in all on your own, is now the only argument that gets a response. Then let me ask you something back, would you kill everyone you love and care about to save the Mona Lisa?magicmonkeybars said:So to be harsh, ultimately the only thing of value to you is your own life and that of your family.Kakujin said:Nothing makes me, or my children unique or special at least not by default. But the same thing is true about the stories in religious books. Who is to say that those stories are more special than any other.
I did not say it would not be tragic for some, but how many works of art have not already been lost forever and forgotten about, or never completed at all? Life would go on and new masterpieces would be created and studied for generations to come.
Not that I am sure of what this has to do with anything, but I would never hunt down and kill people for the sake of my children, but I would defend them against any attack, no matter how many I would have to kill. That which is mine will always be more important to me, than anyone else.
Fair enough, it's hard to argue with that reasoning.
No, I would happily burn the Mona Lisa.
You should know that I was the first "yes I would burn the book" vote in my poll.
I just argued with you to understand your value system better.
You don't care about people over culture, you care about your life over culture.
Would you still burn the book if it was a stranger's life you'd save ?
Well, perhaps you have some insight that I lack. Can you cite or source some examples of murder and war being justified by Buddhism?magicmonkeybars said:Let me just say that every faith has been used to justify murder and war.funguy2121 said:Funny. After the Muslim fundie lunatics murdered those people in retaliation for the Christian fundie lunatic in Florida burning a copy of the Koran, some douche talking head on a radio show asked a similar question: is a book worth more than a human life?magicmonkeybars said:I know this is already a thread but it got me to think.
Would you burn the last copy of a holy book to save your own life or die knowing that you saved a part of human culture and history from being lost forever ?
It shouldn't matter which religion you save, one religion has just as much right to endure as the next.
I would take issue with your last assertion: Shintoism, Buddhism and the Hare Krishna faith do not have a thorough history of war and civil rights violations, whereas Christianity and Islam do. Though I am aware that much of these offenses involved humankind's interpretation of these these religions, based on this more eastern religions have a greater right to be here.
I would absolutely not die for a religious book. Maybe something of greater value, such as The Republic, (my dying words would be "You have to tough it out at first...it gets better) but never a work of mysticism / epistemological nihilism.
Beliefs are not evil, people do evil things.
I'd rather fall asleep next to a Quran than I would a muslim, even is she's really hot.
If as the topic stated, it was a choice between my life and (in my opinion) a work of fiction then where is the choice?shadowslayer81 said:So you would destroy something that makes others happy simply because you don't personally believe in it?Gincairn said:As an athiest, I'd have no problem with it, you could say it would mean the loss of a religious text that has shaped mankind, but at the same point, all religious texts were written by man, give it enough time and i'm sure another one would get written.
And on that day, I'd have my lighter ready.
True but you also care about your life and those of your loved ones over the lives of others.Kakujin said:Yes I care about my life over culture, but I am impressed that you from that would conclude that I don't value people over culture, because I do. Like I said in my second post, human culture springs from humans. Therefore it can never be right to sacrifice a human for the sake of culture. Thus, of course I would burn the book to save a stranger, I would burn that book to save someone I hate, because a human life will always be worth more than culture to me.magicmonkeybars said:That's assuming I have loved ones or people I care about.Kakujin said:I find it interesting that that side of the story, which you brought in all on your own, is now the only argument that gets a response. Then let me ask you something back, would you kill everyone you love and care about to save the Mona Lisa?magicmonkeybars said:So to be harsh, ultimately the only thing of value to you is your own life and that of your family.Kakujin said:Nothing makes me, or my children unique or special at least not by default. But the same thing is true about the stories in religious books. Who is to say that those stories are more special than any other.
I did not say it would not be tragic for some, but how many works of art have not already been lost forever and forgotten about, or never completed at all? Life would go on and new masterpieces would be created and studied for generations to come.
Not that I am sure of what this has to do with anything, but I would never hunt down and kill people for the sake of my children, but I would defend them against any attack, no matter how many I would have to kill. That which is mine will always be more important to me, than anyone else.
Fair enough, it's hard to argue with that reasoning.
No, I would happily burn the Mona Lisa.
You should know that I was the first "yes I would burn the book" vote in my poll.
I just argued with you to understand your value system better.
You don't care about people over culture, you care about your life over culture.
Would you still burn the book if it was a stranger's life you'd save ?
When the benefits of the text outweighs that of the human life in question.Gincairn said:At what point should a piece of text outweigh that of a human life?
Maybe if it's some kind of proof of a huge government conspiracy, or maybe something to do with aliens. Maybe some irreplaceable legal document that would save the life of someone else, like a death row pardon for a group of innocent people? I don't know, but it would have to be something like that in my opinion. Certainly nothing about history or culture.Gincairn said:At what point should a piece of text outweigh that of a human life?
Because the book will never smother me with my pillow, the woman could.funguy2121 said:Well, perhaps you have some insight that I lack. Can you cite or source some examples of murder and war being justified by Buddhism?magicmonkeybars said:Let me just say that every faith has been used to justify murder and war.funguy2121 said:Funny. After the Muslim fundie lunatics murdered those people in retaliation for the Christian fundie lunatic in Florida burning a copy of the Koran, some douche talking head on a radio show asked a similar question: is a book worth more than a human life?magicmonkeybars said:I know this is already a thread but it got me to think.
Would you burn the last copy of a holy book to save your own life or die knowing that you saved a part of human culture and history from being lost forever ?
It shouldn't matter which religion you save, one religion has just as much right to endure as the next.
I would take issue with your last assertion: Shintoism, Buddhism and the Hare Krishna faith do not have a thorough history of war and civil rights violations, whereas Christianity and Islam do. Though I am aware that much of these offenses involved humankind's interpretation of these these religions, based on this more eastern religions have a greater right to be here.
I would absolutely not die for a religious book. Maybe something of greater value, such as The Republic, (my dying words would be "You have to tough it out at first...it gets better) but never a work of mysticism / epistemological nihilism.
Beliefs are not evil, people do evil things.
I'd rather fall asleep next to a Quran than I would a muslim, even is she's really hot.
I don't understand why you'd rather fall asleep next to the Quran than a hot Muslim woman. Is it because you're not going to get anywhere with her anyway?