Right, a topic right up my alley. This is supposed to be my field of expertise.
...
*Supposed*.
So, 'ere we go.
My problem is that I just cannot define "good".
Feel proud. You share a common problem with every philosopher that has ever lived, from Plato, the self-righteous bastard, to whoever is The Man nowadays. What is
good, not in terms of morality or the ever interesting dichotomy of good and evil, but in terms of quality, remains forever a subjective category. The Universal Rule, The Everapplying Standard that loke is trying to pinpoint is, in reality, the Rule of Society - what is considered
good, acceptable and even decent is dictated by the ebbs and flows of the Great Social River. Point in question, dresses. One hundred years ago, a mini skirt would brand you for life. Nowadays, women of the opposite sex tend to walk half-naked through the streets, giving to the world a glimpse of the sky (to paraphrase Therion). Far from me to complain.
I caught all of your points of view and i think ill give a turn to this topic, now the q is, is there a universal standard for, honesty, good taste, etc i mean, there has some line that if you cross it is bad taste or good taste, there has to be limits, or everything is subjective?
Universal standards are another problem of philosophy. Pointless, in my opinion. The only universal thing, as Lucy pointed out, is change. Or, as Neal Peart said it:
(...) [C]hanges aren't permanent
But change isAnd therein lies the Universal.
That would be kind of like trying to define when does an egg stop being a bunch of cells and become a baby... there is never a "switch" point, there is just continual transition.
If there is only continual transition, at which point can we say we committed homicide? During the abortion or when we buy a pack of Durex Goodness?
Do you see what I'm getting at? We have to define a turning point. Even if that's not the exact moment, we, limited as we are, need boundaries. Our
justice system (oh, a bitter play with words) needs boundaries. Our moral compass needs a North Pole. Continual Transition perverts the do-what-thou-wilt law.
Believe me, my friend, we are not dependent on outer ideas - our ideas depend on us.
Wee, apriorism be damned!
I agree with Lucy and Kant (to an extent) on this one.
what is good art and what is not?
What is art?
If there is such a universal law of arts or morality or honour or any of these concepts, there is an important question to consider:
Who would we trust to tell us what that law is?
God. The or one of. I wouldn't trust a limited, human being to impose on me something so life-determining as a moral code. I'd want to hear it from God (big G, little g) himself.
Then again, I probably wouldn't trust the bugger, Him being an omnipotent being and probably with an agenda of his own.
But, considering the Christian ideal of God as the Higher Love... I'd trust Him, but only if He told me so himself.
But still the important thing is to search for that inspirational work and to reach our own understandings relevant to ourselves... so whilst we maybe do not agree on whether there is a universal rule, it does not matter... because in our own way we are both interested in arts and maybe even hold very similar values as to what makes art 'good'. The search and discovery is a joy.
Are you a partial agnostic?
So you are saying that arrivingg the time a mass murderer can have a good reason to do i t and that would be right cause is his point of view?
It would be right for
him. The trouble would be in the society that probably wouldn't agree with him.
For the sake of argument, let's presume we agree that for one human being to take another human being's life is unacceptable. Furthermore, we agree that all such acts should be punished. We then agree to determine rules, or rather prophecies, that would tell all those who digress in such a way what would happen to them in hope they would refrain from killing. We formulate these rules (prophecies) and call them the law. We apply this law to our society.
We then see a wolf slaughter a sheep. We think to punish the wolf for digressing, but then realize we are out of the bounds of our society. The laws that we created to help govern our world turned to be inapplicable on someone from beyond our social sphere. The wolf, being an animal and, as such, not a human being, can kill a sheep, another wolf or just about anything without having other wolves come over to his den with a search warrant.
The wolf will be killed if he jeopardizes man, out of man's folly that he is too important to be jeopardized.
The rule that was universal for us turned out to be just a hollow scream to everyone else. Terms like
good and
evil, moral categories that define our existence, are absolutely meaningless once you step out of the confines of the City (and I use the term
city as
a gathering place for those bi-pedal buggers we're so fond of).
Once you step out of the boundaries of something, that something ceases to have the same meaning. You can't see London if you're standing in Trafalgar Square.
...
I'm not really sure how much sense that has outside my head. I'm a bit tired, so if I'm babbling incoherently, I apologize. I'll do my best to rephrase anything that's not clear... as soon as I get some sleep.
And what is honour, honesty or courage to the average rock or plant, planet or star?
Pretty much nothing, considering all but one of those isn't even alive.
But your point is conceded and agreed upon. Pretty much everything we bash our heads against, be that morality or the quality of good tea, is a human concept, meaningless outside the sphere.
Now, ontopic... A wonderful person? I *do* wonder what that person looks and acts like. I'd guess that'd be a person who tries to minimize his or her hypocrisy as much as possible. A sense of humour is always important, because if there's one thing I hate it's someone who can't take a joke. This sense of humour should be all-encompassing - the person would have to, if not realize, then at least
feel that there is nothing you can't joke about and that life's too important to be taken seriously.
Yeah, and nice eyes and a good body and...
...
Yeah.
In all seriousness (ha! And I just said you can never be serious about anything), open-mindness is a cardinal quality.
A wonderful person... is a bit too much to ask. An okay person. Now that I could manage.
[everything said here is, of course, my opinion and my opinion only - as such, it's probably wrong]