What do you place your faith in?

What do you place your faith in?

Spirituality

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Naturally Right

Somewhere Else

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16 Nov 07
1 edit

Originally posted by whodey
As a rule human prefer peace, however, human nature also seeks their own selfish pursuits at the same time. Therefore, those that may get in the way are then dealt with accordingly which may include sacrificing the peaceful ideal.

So do you think a man like Hitler was basically cooperative and peaceful? Maybe he was just misunderstood?
Humans cannot obtain what they want without the cooperation of other humans. They know this. We also have empathy towards our fellow man as do the higher social animals. Put both of them together and human nature is peaceful and cooperative. You know as well as I do that every human engages in peaceful cooperation with other humans hundreds of times a day but apparently rather than believing your own eyes and experiences you have chosen to believe some snake oil salesman.

As I said, you can list everybody with cancer but that does not show that our nature is to have cancer. Your reasoning is fallacious.

Naturally Right

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Originally posted by whodey
I believe that man underwent a process of evolution overseen by God and then when man physically met God's criterea he then breathed into him the essense of what distiguishes us from the rest of the animal kingdom. So yes, I do believe the account in Genesis but I don't interpret it the same way that you and others may.

I don't think blaming the state for ...[text shortened]... ch oppression and even why man feels the need to dominate and rule over others via the state.
All higher social animals engage in cooperative behavior; there is nothing unique about Man as far as that goes.

"Man" does not feel the need to dominate and rule over others though some men do.

w

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2 edits

Originally posted by no1marauder

"Man" does not feel the need to dominate and rule over others though some men do.[/b]
What? So you have to be a "men" instead of a "man" to want to dominate over others?

w

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Originally posted by no1marauder

As I said, you can list everybody with cancer but that does not show that our nature is to have cancer. Your reasoning is fallacious.[/b]
We have all had our mini wars, so to speak. What is the difference other than size and scale? In fact, we have all at times contributed to oppression to others. Have you never lied to someone? Have you never stolen from anyone etc.? It is our nature and we ALL do it at some point or another.

Naturally Right

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Originally posted by whodey
What? So you have to be a "men" instead of a "man" to want to dominate over others?
Did you notice the word "some" in there? No wonder you don't understand the Bible either.

w

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Originally posted by no1marauder
Did you notice the word "some" in there? No wonder you don't understand the Bible either.
So you have never oppressed another human being? You have never tried to dominate over another human being? You are better than those that do?

Naturally Right

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Originally posted by whodey
We have all had our mini wars, so to speak. What is the difference other than size and scale? In fact, we have all at times contributed to oppression to others. Have you never lied to someone? Have you never stolen from anyone etc.? It is our nature and we ALL do it at some point or another.
You are basically confused over what human nature is; understandable because you never bothered to study these things since someone told you that human nature is evil.

Wiki gives a good, basic definition: Human nature is the fundamental nature and substance of humans, as well as the range of human behavior that is, believed to be invariant over long periods of time and across very different cultural contexts.

All cultures condemn the acts you mentioned. Virtually all persons know that such acts are wrong and try consciously to avoid them. How then can such unusual acts be the defining part of our nature? Of course they can't; if people generally acted in such ways humanity would have ceased to exist long ago. Aberrant behavior, even if engaged in rarely by everybody, is not our "nature".

Naturally Right

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Originally posted by whodey
So you have never oppressed another human being? You have never tried to dominate over another human being? You are better than those that do?
Please review what you actually claimed:

Therefore, we must look at mans nature as the reason for such oppression and even why man feels the need to dominate and rule over others via the state.

Personalizing the discussion again? Fine; I and most everybody I know feel no need to "dominate and rule" over others.

w

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Originally posted by no1marauder

How then can such unusual acts be the defining part of our nature?
So takes someone like OJ Simpson for example. What if he is a good father to his children? Should he be defined as a murderer rather than a good father or vise versa? Of coarse not. I suppose you could define him as both a murderer and a good father, however. Perhaps a fatherly murderer? 😛

w

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Originally posted by no1marauder
if people generally acted in such ways humanity would have ceased to exist long ago.
Some would argue that mankind is on his well on his way to destroying himself.

w

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Originally posted by no1marauder
Personalizing the discussion again? Fine; I and most everybody I know feel no need to "dominate and rule" over others.[/b]
Not even on these forums......

Naturally Right

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Originally posted by whodey
So takes someone like OJ Simpson for example. What if he is a good father to his children? Should he be defined as a murderer rather than a good father or vise versa? Of coarse not. I suppose you could define him as both amurderer and a good father, however.
1) If someone acts like a good father, than you can "define" him as a "good father";

2) If someone murders, you can "define" him a murderer.


Which of the 2 above do you consider more consistent with "human nature" as defined by wiki?

Naturally Right

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Originally posted by whodey
Not even on these forums......
Not even on these forums.

w

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Originally posted by no1marauder
1) If someone acts like a good father, than you can "define" him as a "good father";

2) If someone murders, you can "define" him a murderer.


Which of the 2 above do you consider more consistent with "human nature" as defined by wiki?
So by your reasoning we should refer to OJ as a good father rather than a murderer because he is more consistently a good father than a murderer?

Naturally Right

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16 Nov 07

Originally posted by whodey
So by your reasoning we should refer to OJ as a good father rather than a murderer because he is more consistently a good father than a murderer?
🙄