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Member |
I watched a movie - it was so-so. But raised an interesting philosophical question. Let's say that a place existed where one could go and wish someone to be dead. And it would happen immediately. It might be anticipated that many people would use this and many people would die. But then at some point, people would stop. And not only that, people would become inherently virtuous. An artifact of: 1) only the relatively virtuous would not have someone wishing them dead; 2) to avoid making someone wish them dead, people would inherently behave well towards others (perhaps similar in concept to mutually assured destruction?). Perhaps this is somewhat already true for the religious wanting to enter heaven and avoid hell. For the atheists, perhaps this would be a more pragmatic version? Thoughts? The premise is flawed? "Wrong does not cease to be wrong because the majority share in it." L.Tolstoy "A government is just a body of people, usually, notably, ungoverned." Shepherd Book | ||
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A Grateful American |
Nope. A virtuous person would have many evil persons who would go to the wishing place and send them to the cornfield. The virtuous person would not go to the wishing place and send anyone to the cornfield. The evil will not become virtuous by means of the cornfield wishing place simply existing and being used. The evil person will permit other evil persons to exist as a status quo, but a virtuous person will always arise, and the cornfield gets fed. Evil will wish evil and the cornfield will prosper. Might need a bigger cornfield. "the meaning of life, is to give life meaning" ✡ Ani Yehudi אני יהודי Le'olam lo shuv לעולם לא שוב! | |||
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Member |
Sounds like the Haitian culture to me. Voodoo is still practiced there. The citizenry certainly does not appear virtuous. | |||
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Member |
So, no change to humanity and we all end up dead, just faster.... "Wrong does not cease to be wrong because the majority share in it." L.Tolstoy "A government is just a body of people, usually, notably, ungoverned." Shepherd Book | |||
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Casuistic Thinker and Daoist |
These two assumptions are both flawed 1. Why would they stop? 2. What would lead you to believe that they would be virtuous as opposed to just fearful?
1. It is more likely that the best game players would not be wished dead 2. It is exactly like MAD...it wouldn't be based on virtue, but on fear...that is how tyrants rule No, Daoism isn't a religion | |||
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Peace through superior firepower |
To paraphrase Heinlein- "A charmed society is a polite society." | |||
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Don't Panic |
That point would be when they ran out of people. Lord Acton's Dictum: "Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely." Everyone would be terrified of everyone else. You would only be safe if you were the only one left. Justifiable Paranoia + Power of Life and Death = ? Not an environment that would bring out the best in humanity. | |||
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Run Silent Run Deep |
Let he that is without sin cast the first stone… _____________________________ Pledge allegiance or pack your bag! The problem with Socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money. - Margaret Thatcher Spread my work ethic, not my wealth | |||
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Slayer of Agapanthus |
Watch the movie Forbidden Planet. "It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye". The Little Prince, Antoine de Saint-Exupery, pilot and author, lost on mission, July 1944, Med Theatre. | |||
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Purveyor of Fine Avatars |
Forbidden Planet is an excellent suggestion for this particular topic. Of course, I'm also interested to know to which movie konata is referring. Why keep it a secret? "I'm yet another resource-consuming kid in an overpopulated planet raised to an alarming extent by Hollywood and Madison Avenue, poised with my cynical and alienated peers to take over the world when you're old and weak!" - Calvin, "Calvin & Hobbes" | |||
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Member |
Movie is not important. Wasn't trying to keep it a secret but it's incidental to the question / premise it posed. It's called Cursed (Korean title). The premise I believed was flawed. People are inherently self serving and self preserving. It's what makes evolution work. And yet it would be nice to think that, while mutually assured destruction wouldn't make us any less so, it would make us be polite. Get rid of all the evil and paranoid ones. If the ones remaining don't really care (ie - same mentality as "I don't want to carry a gun, if I get robbed, so be it") then perhaps that becomes stasis. What would drive someone in this case to act and/or violate mutually assured destruction? Just kind of curious what the likely outcome would be. I think the outcome would be bad. "Wrong does not cease to be wrong because the majority share in it." L.Tolstoy "A government is just a body of people, usually, notably, ungoverned." Shepherd Book | |||
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Member |
What are the rules of this death-wishing place? Must you know the person, have some sort of identifier of said person, or just a generic description and the place somehow finds and kills everybody matching that? Is this one death per customer per visit, or can the death-wishing person make as many wishes at a time as desired? Different answers to these and similar questions will dramatically alter the dynamic, but I don't see this inherently making anyone behave better. I see this pushing people who desire to harm others for whatever reason to do exactly that more aggressively. Particularly if people are allowed multiple wishes per visit. ------------- $ | |||
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