The problem with this discussion is the mixing up of absolutes with definitions and preferences.
I.E.:
Gravity does dictate the answer. And the answer is perception. What's truely up and down is perception.
Morality does dictate the answer. And the answer is perception. What's truely wrong and right is perception.
If you believe that the sky is up and I don't, does that make you right because when you drop a coin it hit's the dirt instead of the sky? Yes, and no. In your mind, and the mind of countless others, you are right. But is that really the truth?
Same thing with morality. To say something is good or bad, you must first know the truth of what is good and bad. And in all honesty, we don't. We all have our own ideas and they are right to some and wrong to others. It's good to have something to believe in because it gives you answers to unanswerable questions.
-Zysoclaplem
The "up/down" issue you put forth here is a matter of definitions. You have to work by one set of definitions for this discussion to make any sort of sense. If we change the meanings for "good" and "bad", nothing else changes, so this whole deal is moot.
Concerning the "preferences" confusion - for example, the situation given in this thread, when the burgular who stole your TV's house burns down is "good" - that's the wrong "good".
The "good" we're talking about is a "morally right". On the other hand, "good" in that example is "pleasing", or "acceptable".
Don't get things confused - what we're talking about is moral relativism/absolutism,
not semantics, or "what comes around goes around".
Further notes:
Originally posted by: SWScorch
bad means doing something to harm someone else. everything else is good.
What about hurting yourself?
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Originally posted by: XZeroII
But what if there were some sort of wiring flaw in your TV and in one week, it's starts on fire and burns down the criminal's house. It would have happened to you, but it happened to the criminal instead. Was him stealing your stuff good or bad?
The act of stealing in and of itself is bad. And the burning down of the criminals house is bad (it still costs your tax money to get the fire department there and they might be needed elsewhere too, plus a house burning down pollutes a lot). But your house not being burnt down is good.
ZV
See my post.
Originally posted by: Zysoclaplem
There is no right nor is there a wrong, there is only perception. It's like asking which way is up, and which way is down in space. Well naturally up is whatever your eyes see when you look up. But that's not truely up, only up to you. There is a force like gravity when it comes to right and wrong. That force is morality. May'be not yours, but within the social structure, morality is gravity. And just like gravity, it is not 100% correct when deciding what's up and down, or is it?
May'be I am wrong and may'be I am right. Either which way, it's about an hour from lunchtime, and I am hungry. Or am I?
Yes, you
are hungry. At least, you are experiencing a feeling of hunger. From where it stems from is no matter, you are still feeling hunger, you are still feeling the psychological effect.
Your space analogy is flawed, because up and down is dictated by gravity, whereas in space, there is no gravity (well, let's ignore the technicalities behind that statement). Therefore, absolutes
don't exist. The nonexistance of absolutes does not translate into relativism.
Originally posted by: XZeroII
Originally posted by: MAME
good and bad is 100% subjective, thus there is no real good or bad. Therefore, it all depends on who you ask. Thread over.
That is a big point that I am trying to make, but if I were to just say it, people wouldn't believe it. They have to see it for themselves.
It makes you think. The next time something 'bad' happens to you, will you just jump to the conclusion that it was bad?
*hands in pockets, whistling*
Originally posted by: XZeroIIRight, everyone, but lets say someone robs you and takes your TV and stereo (combined worth, $3000). Would that be good or bad? Can you really say that it is one or the other?
Theft is bad. Breaking property is bad. Let's agree on that.
Like SWScorch said, our perception of "good" and "bad" depends on if it negatively affects us, or others.
My quoting of his post was just to nef 
Back to the topic - If, say, exhaling in a downwards direction was bad, well, that would be a senseless code of ethics, wouldn't it? The morality I live by, as provided by the Bible, and as followed by the greater portion of Western civilization and society, is made such that it prevents us from being hurt or put down (persuant to proper following thereof).
Originally posted by: XZeroII
Originally posted by: conjur
Originally posted by: XZeroII
Right, everyone, but lets say someone robs you and takes your TV and stereo (combined worth, $3000). Would that be good or bad? Can you really say that it is one or the other?
If someone willfully inflicts injury (or death) upon another person (and it's not self-defense) or takes something that belongs to another person without permission, then, yeah, that's bad.
mmmmkay?
But what if there were some sort of wiring flaw in your TV and in one week, it's starts on fire and burns down the criminal's house. It would have happened to you, but it happened to the criminal instead. Was him stealing your stuff good or bad?
Theft is still wrong, regardless of chance ramifications of such an action. He eventually reaped what he sowed, but that nullify the ill effects of his initial transgression. This same argument can be used to discredit the following:
Originally posted by: gistech1978
Originally posted by: XZeroII
Right, everyone, but lets say someone robs you and takes your TV and stereo (combined worth, $3000). Would that be good or bad? Can you really say that it is one or the other?
no b/c the day you went to buy another TV or stereo was the day you found a dollar in the parking lot at CC that you used to buy a lottery ticket and won $250,000,000. you wouldnt have found the dollar that day if you didnt have to go to the CC to buy a new TV and stereo.
or the day your stuff got stolen you started reading & writing more and end up writing the next Harry Potter.
you cannot say. sure right after your stuff gets stolen, it would be 'bad'.
but if those two situations i presented materialize, it still doesnt make getting ripped off 'good' in the first place.
The fact that you were given a blessing after the act doesn't make the act good. It may make you feel good, but theft is still bad regardless. It led to a good thing, but the theft in and of itself was still a moral wrong.
Okay, I think I'm done now.
:wine:
*edit* All this effort and I haven't answered the OP's question.
Originally posted by: XZeroII
For example, killing another person is bad, right? But what if you were to go back in time and kill hitler while he is a child? Would that be bad still, or would it be good?
I'm going to discount this, only because time travel is outside the scope of this discussion. However, I'm going to say that if you lived during Hitler's time, and you murdered him before he did anything, then that murder is still wrong. Whereas if you killed Hitler after his atrocities, it would be an act of justice (vigilante or not), unless you killed him simply out of spite. What I'm getting at, is that the motivations matter also. If you killed him to save the lives of countless Jews, then it's justifiable. If you murdered him because he stiffed you $10, then it's wrong (although it has beneficial aftershocks).
Another example would be lying to our gov't is bad. But lets say you lived in Germany in WW2 and they came to your house asking if you were harboring jews (which you are). Would you tell the truth and let the jews be taken away to be killed, or would you lie? Is that good or bad?
I believe lying to protect the innocent/good is protected in the Bible (i.e. Rahab and the walls of Jericho). Not sure what it's defined as, but that would be put under "good"
A continuation of that is this: What if, after the war, that jew that you were harboring went on a killing spree and killed 100 men, women, and children?
You still did the right thing at the time. No way to know if he was evil or what. The "What if?" game can be played with everything. What if it turned out that the Jew you were harboring was Einstein? What if the German who was sent out to look for him was executed for not finding him, and said German would've been Hitler's next-in-command, and a tactical genius/fanatical Nazi? And so on...
Can you honestly say what is good or bad? It makes you think about just common everyday things that you do. You think you are doing good, but are you really? When you think someone is doing something bad, are they really?
I gauge them against my standard, which is the Bible. Like it or not,
your standards are largely based off of Biblical teachings, also. I just happen to take it as Gospel

.
No problemo!
~fin~