So the fact there are wolves means that empathy and kindness in stories trivializes reality?
Whoops!--the Principle of Charity just went on holiday again. Well, that's fine--I'll try and bring it back in with my response.
The fact that the world is not made principally of rainbows, sparkles, and Skittles-farting kittens means that empathy and kindness in stories are such remarkable virtues specifically
because the cosmos is not ordered around them, and taking them for granted is..........
waiiit forrrr itttt......................... naïve.
Idk what point this is even meant to make.
See above.
They do what now!? Since when? Most of the time the hero still has to fight someone.
My point and, as best I can tell, the point both
@Stefano Rinaldelli and
@beancounter were trying to make just before the dogpile drove both of them away (permanently, I fear), was that over-emphasizing these virtues to the point where they are effectively taken as a given trivializes the actual lousiness in the face of which and against which they do function as virtues.
This I vehemently disagree with. “People are basically good” does not trivialize human evil. It contrasts and highlights it. If anything, pessimistic views of people trivialize human evil by making it seem like people are just behaving naturally.
Well, then here you and I definitely disagree. I am more than persuaded it trivializes human evil: it trivializes the extent to which everything we hate about villains actually lurks inside each of
us, as if cruelty and indifference to harm to others weren't a problem each of us already has in ourselves. Because it is. The dogpile on this thread proved that to me (or rather, it would have if I hadn't already known it full well).
Everyone has it in them to be churlish.
What trivializes the reality of evil is the idea that there is good vs. evil, that they can be cleanly delineated as such. That there are "evil people" and "good people." That trivializes the reality. It's endemic to fantasy, of course.
We are so
way off topic from the thread's stated purpose now, but I will publicly say your assertion is not just false: it is provably false (but not inside of five minutes). I spent more than a decade on this exact question in graduate school and eventually became (while still an atheist at the time, mind you) convinced by several of my professors' best counterarguments that good and evil absolutely are objectively real. If you sincerely want to know why I hold this, then let's discuss it over PM so as to avoid further cluttering the thread.
So... not enough edge?
No thanks. I used to be an edgelord, thinking the world was 'right' when it was all about sadness and all light being crushed. Of trying to uncover the inherent spark of evil inside everyone to counter and kindness or good they do or feel.
I recovered.
The thing was call 'evil' is banal and petty and worthless. I don't need to highlight or glorify it.
Sure, that's what I am: a fifty-three-year-old edgelord. Yep.
Re-read what I wrote: I expressly did not say "People suck," or even "People are basically bad." I said "People are basically mixed." Mixed as in "roughly equal portions of both." Go on--show me the post-adolescent edgelord who says that.
So
now have we established that the dogpile is real and that people here have been notably uncharitable to a few members who had the temerity and social bad taste to disagree with a prevailing orthodoxy?? Mmm???
Read your own posts, folks.
How and why do you assume
@Yaarel is being disingenuous? Yaarel is one of the more genuine posters on these forums.
Here I fully agree. I dislike that so much of this thread has come to orbit around members' claims about each other's moral character, but I will say I agree with you on this quoted portion.