Originally posted by: dolph
oh man, it's getting late and i have to take on all these people myself?!?
Originally posted by: Astaroth33
From an ethics standpoint, I don't believe that there are any. Values such as "the right to exist", "the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness", "thou shalt not steal" et al are cultural artifacts. Mankind invented culture as a means of coexisting, but the underlying rules that provide a basis for each culture's function may be different depending on the local environment that formed the birthplace of that culture. Even religious beliefs are cultural artifacts, and are not based on absolutes.
you're right... kinda. don't you think there might be a reason why some (not all, but some) of these "cultural artifacts" seem... "universal?" let's put it this way: you're just a regular guy in 8th century... anywhere, where there's a recognizable society. you kill someone because you feel like it, and freely admit it. are you not accountable in any way for what you did? no, because any society that can stand up on its own has to adopt some values, otherwise wanton killing and destruction would destroy it. these values are almost exactly the same in any society, because chaos would ensue and humans wouldn't have been able to leave the caves to progress without a form of society based on some <EM>values</em>, that as time went on, were discovered to be <EM>universal.</em> there's the answer, boys and girls: universal values exist. even take animals: cannabilism is, for the most part, rare, and only occurs when necessary. instinctively, animals universally respect the rights of others in their species to exist (without fighting over something, i guess). it's not a learned trait, so where'd it come from? it's an inherent, universal value.