Rosewin, on 13 October 2009 - 05:03 PM, said:
What if good and evil are not truly opposites as we think they are. We have good on one side, bad on the other. This is the way the world is, right?
What if good and evil are not truly opposites but on the same side of an even larger balance. We have 'good and evil' on one side...so what is on the other side? Understanding? Acceptance?
Also choosing only happens when we choose to choose to begin with.
If someone does something to harm us, depending why, others will say this was either good or evil. You might be hurt if they do succeed in harming you, which is natural, you were harmed after all, but can someone simply not have to choose to label it as good or evil?
If so what is the opposite of 'good and evil'?
Back on topic, I don't think it is possible for someone to consciously not "choose" to do good or evil to another person, in thought or deed because good and evil are a result of the perspectives of both the person doing the deed and the person being done to.
By definition "choice" is a consciously made course of action or thought. The only way a person could not choose to be nice or bad to another person was if they genuinely have no opinion or knowledge of the other persons perspective
and for the other person to have no perspective on the outcome of the said action.
Both of these criteria have to be fulfilled for the action to not be interpreted as 'good' or 'bad.'
This is also the base concept of the Christian Golden Rule.
"Do as you would be done by" I would imagine that other religions have the same type of this in their dogma.
Therefore, the only way for a person to
not do good or evil to another is if neither have conscious involvement with each other. It's not even possible for a person to be aware of but ignore another and that not be considered good or bad if the other person has knowledge or awareness of the first; you do not have a balance of interpretation.
F