Or perhaps people spending time and energy on irrelevant texts about
tribal godlings rather than helping the starving people around them?

On Feb 8, 5:49 am, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 3 Feb, 04:44, fiddler <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > A starving man steals a purse, knocking the woman to the ground and
> > breaking her leg. Evil? Might he have not stolen a purse without
> > physical action? Couldn't his frustration be the cause of unnecessary
> > violence? and is frustration then evil?
>
>   As soon as I read the second word, the problem was revealed.  The
> society that allowed the person to become starving is the truest evil
> in your example.  All the rest could have been avoided by a society
> that cared.  Perhaps, then, societal carelessness is the greatest evil
> we face in today's world.
>
> > On Feb 2, 4:13 pm, MajorOz <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > On Feb 2, 6:26 am, Lee <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > What is the greatest evil?
>
> > > > I wanted to use the word sin, but I want to get away from any
> > > > religiousness in this one.
>
> > > > So what is the greatest evil, and why?
>
> > > For me, there is only one evil: unnecessarily harming someone.  I view
> > > all OTHER so-called evils simply as disturbance of someone's
> > > prejudice.
>
> > > cheers
>
> > > oz, newbie- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -

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