- #1
Moore1879
- 21
- 0
I war right? Please post explanation.
Well, I don't know - WWII solved the Hitler problem pretty decisively.olde drunk said:historically, war has never proved to be a legitimate, long term solution to any problem.
Winston Churchill once said the only just war is a war of deffence.
Esnas said:In most cases war is not right. On the other hand, there would have to be an entirely different kind of human consciousness to deal with the conditions that lead to wars. There would have to be a new kind of perception and sensitivity on a very subtle level (for a significant portion of humanity).
Justinius said:anyone tell me how America is being defended by his invasion/overtaking of Iraq?
marlon said:The problem is that you cannot argue with such individuals in a decent rational manner and therefore diplomacy will never work on these guys. Only war remains an option. Besides, we are better off without them...The problem with the world is that intelligent people think too much sometimes and are therefore quite uncertain. It is the dumb, extremist, individuals that are always so damn certain of themselves and their "convictions"
Moore1879 said:I war right? Please post explanation.
pikapika! said:"It is the dumb, extremist, individuals that are always so damn certain of themselves and their "convictions" "
-marlon, I have to object to your way of thinking. It puts lables on things that cannot have labels on. Its very subjective.
PerennialII said:"Another" point would be that by solely making the classification, one could see you falling within a similar group. The subjectivity of it is that the classification depends highly on who makes it, and after that, who is to decide which view is the "right" one (which likely is unattainable to begin with). When making choices you usually don't have the luxury of waiting tens of years and having historical perspective as your aid.
I completely disagree with these words. What the "idea" is is if no relevance what so ever. It is the interpretation and implementation in everyday life that matters. It is the actions that are taking that matter. Once again i repeat my point because you donnot seem to get it. Many people and certainly the ones i mentioned in my previous post will undertake actions without making any kind of justification for it. Maybe they have their own views on this but that is irrelevant. Only their way of working (taking actions with just because they need to be taken...) is what matters.
Please stop this fake "i want to be good and give everybody a chance"-attitude. You know as well as i do what these people were like and i think you got my point very well. Don't keep arguing just for the sake of arguing...
PerennialII said:Unfortunately in this case what is "fake" attitude is not up to you to decide. If we start evaluating actions then there is a criterion and we can agree, however, that has again no direct correlation to conviction, extremists etc. The point I'm making is that simply issuing subjective labels does not lead to a satisfactory resolution of pretty much anything, as we both seem to gather. And issuing labels has become pretty easy in the world this millennium, acting on the basis of them ever more difficult.
Quote:
Originally Posted by pikapika!
"It is the dumb, extremist, individuals that are always so damn certain of themselves and their "convictions" "
-marlon, I have to object to your way of thinking. It puts lables on things that cannot have labels on. Its very subjective.
PerennialII said:One can have any conviction, be as extreme, as individual etc. as one wants in no matter whose eyes, but these are subjective qualities and as such in my view don't really tell much of anything about the rightness of war.
selfAdjoint said:Modern philosophy is all about the Self and the Other. It is intersting that poster on this thread seem eager to blame war on the Other; on "extremists" or "sociopaths" or whatever.
But it seems to me that the recent election showed that more than half the voters supported the Iraq war, although rationally any real need for it has been exploded. And why was that? Because the great public disaster of 9/11 could easily be blamed on a convenient Other, Saddam Hussain, to win acceptnce for a war that had really other, less populizable, motives, be they Empire or Oil or whatever.
Esnas said:We are compelled to blame the other because it is far too difficult and painful to take an honest look at oneself (be it nation or individual).