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Politics : Sharks in the Septic Tank

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To: Solon who wrote (32101)10/12/2001 3:30:23 PM
From: TimF  Read Replies (1) of 82486
 
My point was that Twofowler's assertion that he would "call someone an evil person if they habitually and knowingly commit evil", was dismissive of his previous statement that a person committing evil could be a "good" person provided they were "mistaken"

How does is one idea dismissive of the other? Imagine two people. One caring and concerned and trying to do good but who is either deluded as to the consequences of his actions or would fit the legal definition of insane (he is "unable to appreciate the nature and quality or wrongfulness of his acts." The second is someone who understand the horrible consequences of his acts and has the mental capability to recognize the evil in them, but who doesn't care or cares more about his own desires or ideology or whatever.

The second person seems clearly to be an evil person. The first person probably is not. If you would like to describe them differently then you are of course free to do so. You might even convince me that my ideas about this are incorrect but that still would not mean that your implication that they are self contradictory was correct.

Tim
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