Topic: Good people versus Evil people

We can probably all agree at least that there are good people that exist in the world.  But are there really evil people?

If you had asked me this not that long ago, I would have answered "yes" without a second thought.  If there are good people, there are probably evil people too, right?  Anymore I am not so sure, in fact I am leaning towards I was wrong.

First of all, ya it is questionable in the first place whether it is really helpful to think of people as either being good, evil, neutral or whatever.  I am more thinking about this for the sake of thinking about this, and maybe to see if there are any interesting conclusions one could draw.

But on to what I really wanted to say.  First of all, how does one define "evil"  and "good" then? 

If...

1) "Good" is the sense in which people sometimes do things BECAUSE they think it would be the "good" thing to do.  Surely all of us have done at least one thing in our lives that we can remember doing simply because we thought it was the "good" or "right" or "moral" thing to do.  (unless you are a psychological egoist I suppose...but that stance is pretty flawed IMO)

and

2) "Evil" in the sense you are talking about really is the exact opposite of good...


Then that would mean that if somebody is in this sense "evil" in the same way a "good" person does an action simply for the sake of it being "good" or "right" or moral, that would mean that an "Evil" person would do things simply because they thought it would be the "evil" or "immoral" or "wrong" thing to do.

I have serious doubts anybody like that actually exists.

Even thinking about certain people who are the most "evil" people we can all agree are "evil", like Hitler for example....do you really think he wanted to kill the Jews, for instance, because he thought it was the immoral or evil thing to do?  I think he probably thought he was doing the right thing for everyone, aka humanity.  Sure, his sense of morality and right and wrong are totally fucked up, but that wouldn't change the fact that in his mind, he thought he was doing the right thing.  (even if he was in fact wrong) 

So maybe the closest thing we have to "Evil" people are people who do evil things because they think they are doing the right thing.  So does that mean that the closest quality any human has to being "evil" in the sense I talked about earlier, is maybe being ignorant, misinformed, brainwashed, etc.  Or maybe the closest thing to this sense of "Evil" could be people who think the "good" or "moral" thing for them to do is to look after their own interests, and everybody else should do the same?  (aka selfishness)

Thats about the point where I am now with this brainstorm.  If anybody wants to add anything, jump in, in the name of progress.  smile

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Maybe some people get a rush or high out of doing stuff that they know others think is evil. Would that qualify as evil? Like killing other humans for sport, for example.

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

First I should note that 'good' and 'evil' are entirely subjective ideas in a given scenario. There is no consensus on what a good act is, or what an evil one is, and there never will be. To a large degree, the two terms are empty in meaning. I really take nothing from a statement such as "He/she/it is evil" or "He/she/it is good".

That said, my opinion is that to seek to divide the world into 'good' elements and 'evil' ones is an immature behavior. Don't get me wrong - I believe in "wrongness", like the holocaust was wrong. But was it evil? For it to be evil means that the people behind it were doing it, being of sound mind and body, BECAUSE they knew it was a bad thing. I can't accept that - perhaps some were doing it DESPITE knowing it was a bad thing, and undoubtedly some thought that they were doing the right thing. Perhaps some were getting a perverse, insane pleasure out of it, in which case they were diseased in the head, and unable to make a rational decision. So if you were to ask me to describe Hitler, I would use words like 'misled', 'deranged', 'confused', 'insane', but never evil.

That's why I don't believe there are evil people. Nor do I believe that there are inherently good people. I recognize that some people have made wonderful contributions to the world and society, some are selfless, brave, kind, generous, and a bag of chips, but that doesn't mean that they're inherently good, it just means that I admire them, and I believe that they have their priorities really well defined for themselves.

I guess its kinda like a Vulcan logic. There is no good and evil, only logical and illogical.

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

LMD: You're right, by the definition you wrote it's pretty impossible to believe that evil people exist. Which is, TBH, why I think it's an inadequate definition... why define an impossibility and then try to find another word to describe the horrible people who do actually exist?
If I may offer my own definition:
Bad = hurting others.
I don't define Good, because that can be just about anything, but the most important part of it is that it doesn't involve hurting others (until you bring "the greater good" into the equation, that is).
I've thought about it a lot myself, and I honestly think that this is the one objective definition everyone should be able to agree about. And in that sense, sadly, there exist plenty of evil people, who hurt others either because they don't care, or because they actually enjoy it.
Of course, it's possible that by this definition, thanks to the allowance for "the greater good", you could claim that Hitler was still not evil; the number of people he might have believed to be saving was much greater than the number of those he killed. Which disturbs me, because it clearly means my definition is a bit off... I don't want genocide to be justifiable sad

Killgore: I'm curious, what exactly do you mean by "inherently good"?

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Hehe...

If you define an evil act by doing something only for kicks and without personal gain, and the acting person knows its not morally sound;

Does it follow that a random WoW griefer might be more evil than Hitler? smile

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Originally posted by: Sir~Magis~Returns
Killgore: I'm curious, what exactly do you mean by "inherently good"?

People who are born good, who are, at their core nature, 'good' in a sense beyond subjectivity. Like someone from a DnD game who had some kind of affinity for holy magic or something. Someone who only ever did good, despite whatever trials they might have been challenged with or could have been challenged with.
I don't believe in them, because imo man is born neutral, and its our actions and choices that determine whether or not we are positive or negative contributions to the human race. That's the only way that a good act has any meaning ---- if an inherently good man does something good, its only out of their nature; nothing special. When a neutral person does something good, then the universe has enjoyed gain and avoided loss of goodness.

Well knows he who uses to consider, that our faith and knowledge thrives by exercise, as well as our limbs and complexion. Truth is compared in Scripture to a streaming fountain; if her waters flow not in a perpetual progression, they sicken into a muddy pool of conformity and tradition. A man may be a heretic in the truth; and if he believe things only because his pastor says so, or the Assembly so determines, without knowing other reason, though his belief be true, yet the very truth he holds becomes his heresy.

Re: Good people versus Evil people

There is old chinese saying:

"People at birth,
Are naturally good.
Their natures are similar,
Their habits make them different."

I don't think you can doubt 5000 years of philosophical distillation

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Originally posted by: UrQuan
There is old chinese saying:

"People at birth,
Are naturally good.
Their natures are similar,
Their habits make them different."

I don't think you can doubt 5000 years of philosophical distillation


Its kinda the same thing that I'm saying.

And if you consider that the state of being neutral is, in a way, a good thing, then its exactly what I'm saying.

Well knows he who uses to consider, that our faith and knowledge thrives by exercise, as well as our limbs and complexion. Truth is compared in Scripture to a streaming fountain; if her waters flow not in a perpetual progression, they sicken into a muddy pool of conformity and tradition. A man may be a heretic in the truth; and if he believe things only because his pastor says so, or the Assembly so determines, without knowing other reason, though his belief be true, yet the very truth he holds becomes his heresy.

9

Re: Good people versus Evil people

Originally posted by: Leymo
Hehe...

If you define an evil act by doing something only for kicks and without personal gain, and the acting person knows its not morally sound;

Does it follow that a random WoW griefer might be more evil than Hitler? smile

Unless he was insane, which I'm pretty sure he wasn't, even Hitler had to have known there was some moral problems with exteminating that many people.  A WoW griefer knows hes just antagonizing people.

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Originally posted by: Killgore9998
First I should note that 'good' and 'evil' are entirely subjective ideas in a given scenario. There is no consensus on what a good act is, or what an evil one is, and there never will be. To a large degree, the two terms are empty in meaning. I really take nothing from a statement such as "He/she/it is evil" or "He/she/it is good".

That said, my opinion is that to seek to divide the world into 'good' elements and 'evil' ones is an immature behavior. Don't get me wrong - I believe in "wrongness", like the holocaust was wrong. But was it evil? For it to be evil means that the people behind it were doing it, being of sound mind and body, BECAUSE they knew it was a bad thing. I can't accept that - perhaps some were doing it DESPITE knowing it was a bad thing, and undoubtedly some thought that they were doing the right thing. Perhaps some were getting a perverse, insane pleasure out of it, in which case they were diseased in the head, and unable to make a rational decision. So if you were to ask me to describe Hitler, I would use words like 'misled', 'deranged', 'confused', 'insane', but never evil.

That's why I don't believe there are evil people. Nor do I believe that there are inherently good people. I recognize that some people have made wonderful contributions to the world and society, some are selfless, brave, kind, generous, and a bag of chips, but that doesn't mean that they're inherently good, it just means that I admire them, and I believe that they have their priorities really well defined for themselves.

I guess its kinda like a Vulcan logic. There is no good and evil, only logical and illogical.

Well like I said, I am thinking of good people in a general sense of people who more often than not try to do what they think is the moral, right, or good thing to do.  People with certain psychological disorders wouldn't qualify because they don't really make rational decisions in the first place.  So my point was that there aren't "evil" people in the same sense as there are "good" people to be their counterparts...aka there arent people who do things solely because it would be evil, wrong, or immoral.

The point you (and maybe some others I would have to look again) kinda made though that I do like is that the ideas I put forward ARE somewhat relativist, which generally means it is not a good account of morality.  But then again, I guess I am not advancing any stance that any particular actions are immoral for any specific reason...I guess you could have a "good" person that is mislead because while trying to do the action that would do the most good, they are actually not doing good...but I guess my point is that they have good intentions and therefore I would still call that person a good person.  So I dunno.  Maybe on some level I have to make some kind of moral claim to be able to define what good or evil people are though, even if that isn't my original intention.  Fuck.

I didn't say anything about "inherently" good people though, don't know what I would say about that. 

As far as the Vulcan logic thing...to the philosopher Immanuel Kant, rationality literally IS morality.  To be rational IS to be moral.  I bet thats where the Star Trek people got that idea. 

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

It would be quite interesting to think that Hitler was insane when his tactics/politics/strategy was so sound.  He clearly wasn't insane; perhaps sociopathic or something, but not insane.

The question cant even be answered unless we agree on terms first.  What is evil?  Is evil doing something against God's commands?  or is evil hurting someone else?  ....or is evil simply selfishness?

I think the root of all evil is selfishness.  I theoretically don't believe there was ever anything done that was evil that wasn't for selfish reasons.

In that sense, If you've ever met a narcisist, then it's clear they are "evil" people (by the theoretical, philosophical definition of evil; sometimes there's no theoretical about it)...  Personally this is the definition for wrongdoing that I follow.  Or a derivative there of, such as Magis' suggestion that evil is doing harm to others.  I, however, don't think you need to intentionally do harm to others to be performing evil; so I don't know if I agree with his opinion.  For example, if I steal from someone, it's unlikely my intentions are to make sure that other person has less- my intentions are to make sure I have more.    ...The problem with this comes when I choose selfishly and It DOESNT harm others, as we all do almost every moment of every day.  Is it evil simply because it's selfish?

so anyway what I'm saying is, if you believe that all "bad" or "Evil"  or "sin" could be boiled down to selfishness, then clearly there are evil people.

...If you believe in the Christian God, than it changes the question entirely again.  A possessed person might be out of their own control, for example, but are clearly evil nonetheless, while they are possessed.  The reason I bring this up is because I took an advanced level history class about the occult, and apparently Hitler (and the top levels of the nazi party whom he worked for) were very obsessed with the occult.  Whether the occult holds any validity or not, it is clear that certain people (like the leaders of the nazi party)  BELIEVE they are following a higher being that is evil (like Satan.)  Even if Satan doesn't exist, the fact that people have devoted themselves to evil seems pretty clear to me that some people are in fact evil.

*****

I believe I understand what you're getting at, however;  no one is born evil, no one chooses to do evil because it's evil.  But people do evil things nonetheless, thus making themselves evil.  Their motivations can be good (the road to hell is paved with good intentions)  but that doesn't make their choices NOT evil.  The fact is, certain people were raised with a certain upbringing that causes them to make the evil choice.  Of course you can destroy this argument by simply stating that "they're not evil, we only perceive it as evil"  but then we're back to the basic question "is there actually evil"  and the derivative question "are there evil people" becomes moot.

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

LC: I don't think you can say that selfishness is necessarily evil. Every time you eat out at a fancy restaurant, you could have given that money to some charity instead. But then again, most people I know who do charitable stuff only do it because it makes them feel better about themselves. In fact, I'd say even a simple term like selfishness is hard to properly define.
So I agree that "the root of all evil is selfishness"... I can't imagine a person hurting another person without gaining money, power, or any kind of satisfaction out of it. But I don't think evil and selfishness are the same thing.
I also don't think your example of stealing goes against my definition, but I think it shows that your definition and mine should go hand in hand. If you steal some money from someone then you gain the exact amount that he lost, and the only logical reason to consider it evil is because you were selfish and considered your welfare more important than another's. I left this out of my definition because I think some people might not agree about it being objective. Hell, I'm a big believer in the concept of selfishness myself, but I still believe that I'm a good person, much more so than most people I know, because I do everything in my power to do good for the people I consider worthy. So I wouldn't give money to charity, ever, but I would go to the ends of the earth for my friends, or for people who aren't my friends but who I think are good people. That means you can say I act selfish towards most the world, but would you say I'm evil for it?
The ultimate selflessness would probably be communism, and that won't fit well with my lifestyle tongue

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Originally posted by: LiQuiDcHeEsE
It would be quite interesting to think that Hitler was insane when his tactics/politics/strategy was so sound.  He clearly wasn't insane; perhaps sociopathic or something, but not insane.

Not to go off topic, but FYI there are plenty of cases in which a person, while exhibiting extremely organized talent in certain areas of behavior, are clearly insane in others.

I dont really want to interrupt though because this all is pretty interesting so far.

Well knows he who uses to consider, that our faith and knowledge thrives by exercise, as well as our limbs and complexion. Truth is compared in Scripture to a streaming fountain; if her waters flow not in a perpetual progression, they sicken into a muddy pool of conformity and tradition. A man may be a heretic in the truth; and if he believe things only because his pastor says so, or the Assembly so determines, without knowing other reason, though his belief be true, yet the very truth he holds becomes his heresy.

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Ask yourself if you've ever been in such an emotional state that the illness of another was directly connected to your happiness. Temporary or not.

Then imagine that the emotional state is permanent.


There are such people who thrive only through ill intent and I classify those as "evil".

Re: Good people versus Evil people

Key words there Salle = emotional state.  In other words, to be in that kind of state is to be illogical.  You would have to be a raving maniac for that kind of emotional state to be permanent, in which case I am not sure if anything that person did as a result of their mental illness had any moral value.

Also as we have learned in previous discussions, the word "insane" is a terrible word choice because it has a different meaning and strength depending on who you were talking to.  Just sayin, because maybe you all will want to substitute some different language.

Anyway, to add to what I said earlier now that I have thought about it a bit more....

As for what value for morality to plug in to what I said earlier: I think basically any reasonable account of morality would work, except psychological egoism, which like I said is a pretty flawed stance, under the looking glass.  (the assertion that people DO in fact ONLY ever do anything for their own self interest)  Like, if you are utilitarian, you could use what I said to say that probably nobody rationally decides how to MINIMIZE utility and then does that action; or if you are a Kantian then there is probably nobody who uses the catagorical imperitive to find out what they ought to do and then does the opposite.  In other words, there is probably nobody who rationally decides to do what is immoral for the sake of it being the wrong thing to do, no matter what account of morality is supplied. 

I guess my point is that while there ARE people who do the right thing simply for the sake of it being the right thing to do, I don't think there are people who do the wrong thing simply for the sake of it being the wrong thing to do.  I think that when people do something that we see as evil (aka Hitler) and they are rational, then I think that flawed as their thinking might be, they probably aren't doing it only because they think it would cause the most harm.  Even if you are doing something selfish that doesn't necessarily hurt other people...there are a lot of people who think that you ought to only look after your self interest, and everybody else should do the same.

I guess I just find it hard to believe that people do anything because they are motivated solely by the fact that it would cause the most harm, similarly to how some people are motivated to do things simply because it would cause the most good. 

So in THAT sense, I am not sure there is an exact counterpart to the kind of good people that do things for the sake of the action being good.

....does that make more sense to you guys?

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

I get it... I disagree though, and here's why.

First of all, there's always the troubled kid/troubled person who just wants to make others hurt.  He enjoys being a bully.  Of course, if we get to his psychological underpinnings, there's probably a reason (abuse, rejection, etc), but we can't deny that he's intentionally causing hurt because he gets pleasure out of it.

Other than that, I would generally agree with the idea that people don't TRY to do bad things ("I just find it hard to believe that people do anything because they are motivated solely by the fact that it would cause the most harm"), but intentions are not the identifier of evil.  That idea (that villains are trying to destroy the world) was a concept taught to us by overly didactic plotlines that I think has hurt our idea of right and wrong.  Evil people can have good intentions and still be doing evil.

The question of how we define evil is crucial to this discussion.  If morals are relative, than it takes a pure villain (go go Shredder) to represent evil, as intentions are key.  Even a suicidal fundemantalist Jihadist could be considered basically good, as he is trying to better the world.

However, if morals are absolute (even some of them), then it changes everything-  you can produce evil by trying to do good;  thus your scenario would become flawed, as you assume that anyone trying to better the world is at their heart not evil.  Thus stories like TMNT become oversimplified- TRUE evil doesn't exist as some 2 dimensional force of destruction, but rather, probably exists in all of us to some degree.  True evil could completely misunderstand itself.

EDIT::

for further information regarding people being evil for the sake of being evil:

http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,22848376-952,00.html?from=mostpop

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Originally posted by: LiQuiDcHeEsE
I get it... I disagree though, and here's why.

First of all, there's always the troubled kid/troubled person who just wants to make others hurt.  He enjoys being a bully.  Of course, if we get to his psychological underpinnings, there's probably a reason (abuse, rejection, etc), but we can't deny that he's intentionally causing hurt because he gets pleasure out of it.


But the point is that he doesn't cause hurt because it's evil, but because he enjoys it.
Or, to rephrase, he doesn't do it because he believes it's the wrong thing to do, but because he thinks his pleasure makes it the right thing to do.
I'm having an awfully hard time choosing words here, and might have misunderstood you as well...

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Although it isn't a bad idea logic-wise, I have just never liked the idea that intentions and motives don't matter when deciding what moral value a given action has.  I think motives and intentions should be a big part of that.

The main reason I don't like that idea is this....so OK, if you had a time machine, it would be morally good to go back in time and kill Hitler before he had a chance to kill millions of people, right?  You would be saving millions of lives.  So if the results of your action are all that matters, this should be a good thing to do, and at the very least millions of jews would thank you.

BUT, lets say you were in Germany in 1900 walking down a road when you look over and see a small boy drowning in a pond....completely still water, and the water level is 2 feet less than you are tall, so there is no possible way you could drown saving the boy, and the only cost to you for saving him is some wet clothes.  Common sense tells you that yes in this situation you should save the child from drowning.

But as you may have guessed, this child is Hitler.  If the results of your actions are all that matters in determining the moral worth of your action, then in saving Hitler you just indirectly enabled him to go on and kill the millions of people.  Your INTENTION was good, but your action was bad and there was no way you could have feasibly known so.  So I personally prefer an approach to morality where intentions and motives matter, but that is just me, I don't know any way to logically show considering intentions is better.

Anyway though I didn't mean to be talking about Dr. Evil type villains...though I get your point.  I guess just overall my idea is that although evil does exist in the world....if you were rating people's moral character on a numberline where from 10 to -10 where 0 was being a morally neutral type....and 10 was doing actions just for the sake of helping others or being altruistic in general (like your mother teresas and whatnot) and -10 was Dr. Evil...nobody that actually exists is as evil as some other people are good.  In other words, there have been people that exist that are 10s, nobody that I can think of has ever been a -10.

And it also seems that most evil that we see isn't really the rational intention of people who do it, where rational intention = rationally choosing to do something with moral intent.  Like I said earlier, Hitler probably even thought he was doing good in his warped sense of it. 

The schoolyard bully is a really interesting type of person you brought up though, probably the hardest for my concept to explain.  Hmm.  You would have to interpret the bully's actions as psychological calls for help....like he is feeling insecure about himself and if somebody sat down with him and "gave him a hug" ( lol ), with the right approach I think it is most likely you would find out that that kind of person probably would change if he knew how to. 

...Hopefully you know the kind of thing I am talking about, though I am not sure if that kind of explanation would hold up under fire, or if I am even confident or believe it myself yet.  Just throwing it out there to see what happens, since this is a conversation in the name of progress after all.  smile

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Originally posted by: Legal_My_Deagle
The schoolyard bully is a really interesting type of person you brought up though, probably the hardest for my concept to explain.  Hmm.  You would have to interpret the bully's actions as psychological calls for help....like he is feeling insecure about himself and if somebody sat down with him and "gave him a hug" ( lol ), with the right approach I think it is most likely you would find out that that kind of person probably would change if he knew how to.


I have every psychological reason to call for help (you should know by now), I'm feeling insecure about myself, and I need a hug quite badly, but I don't beat people up, or hurt them intentionally in any other way, for my benefit or otherwise. And since, as you'll probably agree, I'm not some sort of holy man, and not better than anyone at anything, there's no reason in the world for anyone else to act worse than me.
So, I believe you're being extremely naive in your interpretation of this bully. I'd interpret his actions as the belief that hurting others is perfectly acceptable, that he's the centre of the world and better than everyone else, that rules which apply to the general population do not apply do him.

And I don't know about intentions VS results.
On the one hand, the guy who murdered the Israeli prime minister 13 years ago had the nation's best interests at heart.
On the other hand, it's quite possible that his actions did, in fact, save Israel a lot of grief.
Does that make him a saint?
What I think is that the actions stand for themselves. Murder hurts the victim, his family, his friends, and probably other people as well in an indirect way. Theorizing that it will serve the greater good is no excuse, especially because it's just a theory.
Killing can be completely justified, of course. Take, for example, a police sniper taking out a kidnapper who's holding a few dozen children hostage. The intention is good, the result is good, if these are your only factors then this is identical to murdering the prime minister because you believe that his political plans will, in the long term, hurt the nation.

So I think that if you want an objective judgement you must look at the action itself. Hitler might have believed that the Jews were destroying the world (not really, he just thought they were inferior), and you could claim that without the Holocaust I wouldn't have a country to live in. But this cannot possibly make it right to kill so many millions of clearly innocent people.
And yes, I fully admit that I thought of this concept right now because the thought of Hitler being good has troubled me since this thread started. But I do believe in my conclusion, and I think my above example supports it.

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Magis do you consider the fact that maybe you are just better educated/brought up than the bully you describe?  Some bullies just weren't taught to behave good, while you were.  Its a matter of being simple minded, which bullies generally are.

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

LMD:  I see what you're getting at;  I'm not saying you're wrong.  I'm simply showing why your definition of morality is crucial to this question.

Obviously, you are a believer in relative morality.  In which case the question of evil becomes a little moot, as there really IS no evil, only perceived evil;  And we perceive evil as harm to others.  Relative morality would state that killing someone is neither good nor bad.  Rather, it results in positive or negative results (which also are only perceived as good or bad by others.)

By relative morality, no one is evil;  the question becomes, in your innermost core, do you believe there is evil?  If so, what defines evil?

These are questions that have to be tackled before you address the question you're presenting.

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

I think I see what you are saying too, and I am also not saying you are wrong.  tongue  This is just me bullshitting about things I haven't decided a stance on yet, playing devil's advocate, etc.

I don't believe in relative morality too, at least if I understand your definition of it correctly.  Hopefully I am not advocating that kind of stance without meaning to.

I think there is evil in the world, I am just not convinced that there is evil in the world in the same way there is good in the world....IE people DO do things because they think it would be a good thing to do, but I am not sure that similarily people do evil things because it would be the evil thing to do.  And I think if this is really the case, then there is probably a stronger presense of good than evil in the nature of people...and if I could confidently talk about the world with the idea that people are more good than evil in general, then I think that is a pretty significant kind of revelation.  Just to make my bullshitting more clear.

Really though, I want to know more about what you call relative morality.  But I will try and go after the questions you listed...

I think there are degrees of evil and degrees of good...IE dying to save somebody else has more "good" moral worth than saving the random boy drowning in the pond.  Both are good actions, just that I think some good actions are more praiseworthy than others, agreed?

Evil doesn't seem to be quite the same way.  Ya there are evil actions people do, aka Hitler, but when you look at the intentions of evil people they don't seem to really be similar to the intentions of people who do good things.  So yes there is evil in the world, but there doesn't seem to be evil in the world that is the polar opposite of the highest degree of good in the world.  There is evil in me too at the least to the degree that everybody has evil in them, however, I don't feel compelled to do any of the evil things I think of in the same way I feel compelled to do some of the good things I think of. 

"Pure evil" would be doing something evil because it is evil...IE Dr. Evil wanting to destroy the world because it would be evil.  The kinds of evil we commonly see in reality though are things like selfishness, negligence.  IE Killing somebody else for money.

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

Originally posted by: Krall
Magis do you consider the fact that maybe you are just better educated/brought up than the bully you describe?  Some bullies just weren't taught to behave good, while you were.  Its a matter of being simple minded, which bullies generally are.


Nobody really 'educated' or 'brought me up' in this way. I don't know anyone with values and beliefs even remotely close to mine, especially not my parents or any of the friends I had while growing up. Sure, you can teach a kid that doing evil things is alright, that hurting others for your own benefit or enjoyment is completely acceptable, but some kids simply grow up that way.
And I don't care if the bully is simple minded. My bad = hurting others definition is extremely simple, don't you think?
My point - evil people exist. In large numbers, too.

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Re: Good people versus Evil people

I was working on a very long post and just deleted it all because I think I was rambling.  I'll get back to this when I'm not hungry and have more time to focus on what I want to say.

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