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Discussion and Debate
Discussion and Debate
Physical & Life Sciences
Does determinism really negate free will?
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<blockquote data-quote="partinobodycular" data-source="post: 76693656" data-attributes="member: 435281"><p>I sometimes think that we focus too much on justice and retribution because it's easier than focusing on compassion. We're moral and just when others have failed us, but we seem to take little or no responsibility when we have failed them. When we fail the poor, or the oppressed, or the exploited, or the addicted, or the mentality ill. I think that if we focused more on what we should do out of compassion, then we'd be far less concerned about we need to do out of justice.</p><p></p><p>To me that's where humanitarianism should lie. Not after the system has already failed, but before it has been given the opportunity to.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="partinobodycular, post: 76693656, member: 435281"] I sometimes think that we focus too much on justice and retribution because it's easier than focusing on compassion. We're moral and just when others have failed us, but we seem to take little or no responsibility when we have failed them. When we fail the poor, or the oppressed, or the exploited, or the addicted, or the mentality ill. I think that if we focused more on what we should do out of compassion, then we'd be far less concerned about we need to do out of justice. To me that's where humanitarianism should lie. Not after the system has already failed, but before it has been given the opportunity to. [/QUOTE]
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Does determinism really negate free will?
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