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On Fri, 8 Jul 2005 at 04:48:52 in message
.com, Mike Granby wrote: As to the arguement that breaking one rule leads to breaking another, with respect, that is nonsense. That's like saying speeding leads to murder... I was once at a local discussion about crime when one person 'contributed' that speeding was the 'same as murder'. I started to have a real go at him but the police terminated the discussion and changed the subject! It made me realise what weird views abound. -- David CL Francis |
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On Mon, 11 Jul 2005 22:54:10 GMT, David CL Francis
wrote in :: On Fri, 8 Jul 2005 at 04:48:52 in message s.com, Mike Granby wrote: As to the arguement that breaking one rule leads to breaking another, with respect, that is nonsense. That's like saying speeding leads to murder... I was once at a local discussion about crime when one person 'contributed' that speeding was the 'same as murder'. I started to have a real go at him but the police terminated the discussion and changed the subject! It made me realise what weird views abound. Each of us is endowed with a finite amount of innocence. There is only one first cigarette, only one first copulation, only one first deliberate act of law violation. To the extent that breaking a petty law removes that innocence, it paves the way for further breaches of laws. So while speeding and murder are certainly not the same in their degree of transgression, they are both members of the class labeled breaches of law. For that reason, unreasonable laws (like the former national 55 mph speed limit) rob law abiding citizens of their innocence, and overcome one's natural aversion to wrong, thus facilitating further legal transgressions. |
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![]() thus facilitating further legal transgressions. Well, it rather depends whether you get your morality from man's law, or from a higher source. |
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On 12 Jul 2005 03:57:19 -0700, "Mike Granby" wrote
in .com:: thus facilitating further legal transgressions. Well, it rather depends whether you get your morality from man's law, or from a higher source. I prefer to remain among the rational, thanks. |
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![]() So religious people are irrational? |
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Mike,
So religious people are irrational? How could they not be, with respect to their religion/faith? Faith by definition is irrational. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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![]() So someone who holds an irrational belief is an irrational person? |
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In article ,
Thomas Borchert wrote: Faith by definition is irrational. by what definition? -- Bob Noel no one likes an educated mule |
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On 12 Jul 2005 06:13:37 -0700, "Mike Granby" wrote
in .com:: So religious people are irrational? Haven't you noticed? :-) Would you characterize those 19 religious Islamic suicide terrorists who attacked the US on September 11, 2001 as rational? |
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