Eireann,
***NOTE: I will adopt your preferred definition of murder as "unlawful killing", simply to save time and because it has no bearing on the veracity of my arguments. However, at the end of this post, I prove that the perception of innocence goes hand-in-hand with all societies' definitions of murder.
I said:
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How about you quit your semantical tap dance and provide even ONE example of any moral system that believes it is morally "right" for their own security and safety to be threatened. Find even one example and I'll agree with you that "if" is the keyword above.
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Originally posted by Eireann
When did I say "right?" I said "not wrong." They aren't the same thing. "Not wrong" simply implies that personal safety and security is of greater importance than any notion of right or wrong. Ethics doesn't necessarily even enter into it; it's a pure matter of survival, which is baser than ethical codes.
Then provide an example of a single human society that believed it was "not wrong" to have their security and stability threatened. By the way, we are talking about homo sapiens, not a litter of cats. Humans operate on ethical codes, not just instinct. When we are talking about
human societies, ethics DO necessarily enter into it.......unless you think there is or ever has been a human society that had no ethics, but operated *purely* on animalic instincts.....in which case I'd ask you to prove it.
I said:
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Then that would mean that he thinks a "threatening act" is wrong!
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Read it again. I didn't equate "wrong" with a "threatening act."
I know.
I am the one who equated the two. Human societies have always attached a moral/ethical condition to murder, and other "threatening acts". That is one of the things that distinguishes us from the rest of the animal kingdom. Our ethical systems. Remember, we are talking about human societies here, not a troop of lions out on the Serengeti.
I said:
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There is not a culture on the planet that believes "murder" is morally "right".
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Maybe, maybe not. But can you prove that every culture that is, that has ever been, and that ever could be does not consider there to be some circumstances where murder is not morally wrong?
I don't have to prove a negative. If you claim such a society exists, then the onus is on you to prove it.
I said:
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The moral opposition to murder is not a "western" belief. It is a worldwide belief and has existed in every society since the dawn of man. If I am wrong about that, all you'd have to do to refute me is provide even ONE example of a society that did not consider murder morally WRONG.
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There are some societies whose laws are not moral laws.
All human law has some kind of a moral/ethical system behind it. Humans are moral/ethical creatures. We do not operate without morals and ethics. That is what makes us unique in the animal kingdom. More on this below.......
For example, monarchies (especially feudal monarchies) and dictatorships, where laws are dictated, proposed, established and maintained by a single leader or a select few, despite the will of the people.
But even monarchies have laws against "unlawful killing", murder. For example, it is morally WRONG to kill the King. So even monarchistic governments have a conscious awareness of "murder" (unlawful killing), and morally oppose it.
Cuba, for example. In such times and places, while it would be against the law for a commoner to rise up and kill an overbearing soldier (murder), it would certainly not be viewed as wrong in the eyes of the majority of that society, although it would be wrong in the eyes of the power elite.
Even in Cuba they have a moral opposition to "unlawful killing". The commoners may have a different view of what is lawful or unlawful killing, but both the power elite AND commoners possess a conscious belief in unlawful killing (murder), and morally oppose it. For example, while the commoners may not think it is wrong to kill a soldier, they definitely would think it is wrong to kill other commoners. So no matter how you roll the dice, every single human society has some form of conscious opposition to "murder" (unlawful killing).
I said:
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This has nothing to do with Westerners! It's a transcultural fact that there has never been a human society that did not consider murder morally WRONG.
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I think I just showed you one.
No, all you did was show how a government and commoners can sometimes have different ideas about what "murder" is. I will show below that murder is defined by the perception of innocence. Both governments and commoners share a conscious moral opposition to murder. (unlawful killing) They simply differ on WHO they think has a lawful/moral right to live. (In other words, they have differing views on who is "innocent of deserving death".)
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You're right. I could be totally wrong! Maybe there is some society that considered murder morally "right". Now, care to tell us what society that is?? Go ahead. Don't be shy.
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Furthermore, your confession that such a society could exist is good enough for me. And as I said in another thread, I am more interested in possibilities than in probabilities, because the possibility of such a society existing negates the absolute,
All things are possible to greater or lesser degrees because everything we judge to be possible or impossible is based on human logic, which in turn is based on fallible human knowledge. If our knowledge is fallible, then so is any logic that is based on that knowledge. That fallibility means we would be naive to categorically rule something out as "impossible". However, that fallibility does not mean we can't make absolute statements. With that said, I am "absolutely" certain that there are no invisible pink martian bunnies living on the moon, just like I am "absolutely" certain there are no human societies that do not possess a conscious awareness of "unlawful killing", and morally oppose it.
I said:
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You are proving to be a very dishonest debater.
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Why is it that every time I point out a fallacy in my opponent's argumentation, I get accused of "dishonest debate." Is it just a Christian thing?
You have sophistic tendancies. This is proved by your propsenity to quibble over semantics that have no bearing on the logical merits of the argument you are opposing. This is a condition also known as "Not Seeing the Forest for the Trees" Syndrome. (NSTFFTTS)
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So which part of my "redefinition" doesn't apply to the act of murder? Are you going to claim that ... the victim is NOT "innocent"?
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I'm not going to make any claim about the innocence or lack thereof for any given murder victim. But I will claim, as I just did above, that "innocent" is not a requirement for a killing to be murder.
As I stated at the beginning of this post, I will adopt your definition of murder as (unlawful killing) in order to save time. However, the perception of innocence goes hand-in-hand with all human perceptions of murder. In nearly all cases, societies distinguish "murder" (unlawful killing) from lawful killing based on their perception of who is *innocent of deserving death*. If someone is killed who the society/government views as *innocent of deserving death*, then that killing will be defined as "murder" (unlawful/immoral killing). So my definition was not incorrect at all. I am only conceding it to save time and disengage semantical quibblings....and also because conceding that part of my definition has absolutely no bearing on the veracity of my argument.