billd91
Not your screen monkey (he/him) 🇺🇦🇵🇸🏳️⚧️
Sebastian Francis said:While I agree that the moral relativism of folks like Arravis is indeed a bit frightening, keep in mind that it's all just academic masturbation. It's the kind of thing they spout off in philosophy classes that have no contact with the real world. But if you put a dude like Arravis in any situation where a moral choice is involved, he will probably do the right thing, as will most folks.
So I think he's safe to hire as a babysitter.![]()
Most of us have been to university (I suspect) and most of us have gone through the "there is no good or evil" phase. it's something you outgrow as you become more fully human, more fully real.
"Without God, anything is permissable. Without moral absolutes, anything is likely."
Dostoevsky.
It's not really a question of going through a phase as much as it is a philosophical recognition that there is no such thing as an objective yardstick to determine good and evil and that the concept of good and evil is entirely based on subjective social convention and mutable from place to place and time to time. Fortunately, I think we've made great strides in most places around the globe, even compared to 100 years ago much less antiquity where mass slaughter and 'ethnic cleansing' was relatively common and acceptible.
Note that this is unlike D&D when alignment rules are in use and there IS an objective measure of whether something is good or evil within the game. Unfortunately, where the game meets the real world, we still run into differences of opinion and thus help to illustrate the fact that there really is no objective standard of good and evil in real life...
EDIT: That said, whether or not Arravis is safe to hire as a baby sitter hinges more on how well he can change a diaper and keep the baby off the stairs rather than whether or not he thinks about the philosophical nature of morality.
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