Isn't that basically to say, morality is great until it conflicts with your wishes2ndRateMind wrote: You could view this as progress. Take such a law: 'Thou shalt not kill,' say. It's a good start. But there may be occasions when killing can be justified. Soldiers in a defensive war. The assassination of a murderous dictator, or euthanasia at the wish of the terminally ill and suffering. Abortion after rape. In the context of this board, the defence of your family from unprepped hordes at the end of civilisation. And perhaps other situations not envisaged by whoever framed the law in the first instance. Making exemptions may be considered a sign of the growing maturity of a moral system.
People who want a simple formulation can take the original commandment, and use it quite readily until they reach a point when it no longer serves them well, and they need more complicated, and advanced, thinking.
Best wishes, 2RM.
at which point you can conveniently 'evolve to a more advanced form of thinking'
in order to justify your actions?
could it just be whoever decided the 6th commandment was to be worded as such,
set out to make it deliberately vague in order to allow room for such shenanigans?
The first recorded 'straw man argument' perhaps?
Certainly if you take the vast number of Christians in the US,
who'd consider the use of napalm, agent orange and landmines on the children of Vietnam 'regrettable',
yet the termination of a foetus the size of a jelly bean as an act of pure evil,
it would seem they were greatly successful.