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you've just woken up you're not sure who
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you are where you are or where you've
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come from you look down and see only a
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hazy outline of a mostly translucent
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indiscernible body around you is a vast
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seemingly unending white space
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in front of you is a large screen on it
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an icon reads build your world begin
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here you press it and a window appears
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revealing a list of what appear to be
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features descriptions and rules for how
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a world Works how the society you will
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be born into will work according to you
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each item on the list has a description
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and the option to toggle it on or off
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for some indeterminate amount of time
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you read through the list and select the
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conditions of the society you will live
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in the laws and regulations the way
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people in groups will be treated what
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rights people and groups will have the
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way people in groups will be aided what
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will be allowed and forbade how wealth
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goods and labor will be distributed and
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redistributed and so on
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soon realize a problem
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you don't know who you will be you don't
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know if you'll be black white asian
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Hispanic and so on you don't know if
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you'll be male or female disabled or
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able-bodied you don't know what you will
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enjoy you don't know what your sexuality
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will be if you will be born into a high
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or low income family you don't know
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anything about you
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you quickly determine that the best
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thing you can do is ensure that the
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world you create treats everyone as
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fairly and as well as possible so that
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no matter who you are born as even if
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you're one of the worst off you will
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still have a fair shot at a pleasant and
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prosperous life
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finish you review your work happy with
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what you've created then at the bottom
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of the final screen you press done
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this is a version of the thought
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experiment known as the veil of
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ignorance or the original position which
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was originally formulated by American
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philosopher John Rawls in his book a
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theory of Justice Rawls used this
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thought experiment to illustrate a
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neutral point of view that members
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Founders and leaders of a society must
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strive to adopt in order to evaluate and
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determine Fair rules and principles
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although this thought experiment does
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arguably promote a very useful ideal for
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how we ought to consider and strive
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toward a fair and just Society a problem
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that we quickly discover with it is the
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apparent impossibility for anyone to
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ever truly reach such a position
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Rawls himself understood this to be the
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case when he wrote the original position
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is a purely hypothetical situation the
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conception of the original is not
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intended to explain human conduct except
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insofar as it tries to account for moral
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judgments and helps to explain our
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having a sense of justice
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when referring to a perspective of
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balance and neutrality he continues it
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is doubtful whether one can ever reach
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the state
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and here we arrive at our first
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philosophical problem the problem of
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fairness how do we Define and Carry Out
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fairness in a world where everyone can
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only make decisions and determine rules
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and principles from bias partial
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self-interested and unoriginal positions
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is fairness ever really possible
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not only does the veil of ignorance
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bring up the problem of fairness and
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justice but it also brings up the
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problem of luck of course we in fact do
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not know or choose who we are going to
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be born as or what Society we will be
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born into and so whether we are born
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into a particular society as someone who
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is favored or Not by said Society is
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entirely luck and furthermore all the
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uncontrollable events that happen to us
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during our lifetime regardless of who we
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are and where we are born are also a
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product of luck
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this brings us to our second
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philosophical problem the problem of
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moral luck
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the term moral luck was first introduced
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by English philosopher Bernard Williams
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in 1976 and was then further developed
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primarily by American philosopher Thomas
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Nagel broadly moral luck refers to
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situations in which a moral agent is
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given a certain amount of moral blame or
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praise for an action but the individual
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did not have any control over the action
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the action's consequences or their own
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personal circumstances that influence
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the degree of moral blame or praise that
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they received
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to be clear a moral agent here refers to
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an individual who has the ability to
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think in terms of right and wrong and
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can decide to act accordingly in his
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essay moral luck Thomas Nagel identifies
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the following four kinds of moral luck
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resultant or consequential
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circumstantial constitutive and causal
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situations containing resultant moral
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luck are cases in which moral blame is
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assigned to an individual or not based
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primarily on the consequences of their
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action and not merely the action itself
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and the consequences were caused or not
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largely by chance
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for example consider two separate bars
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that are down the street from each other
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in the first bar there was a man named
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Tom and the second there was a man named
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Larry both Tom and Larry are reasonably
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decent people but tonight both find
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themselves in an argument with someone
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else at their respective bar in both
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cases the argument escalates to a
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physical altercation a common bar fight
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that happens countless times every day
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across the world at some point in the
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altercation Tom throws a punch at the
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other individual and hits them in the
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face the other person then proceeds to
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throw a punch or two back at Tom and
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then the fight is broken up by the bar
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staff both Tom and the other individual
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are kicked out of the bar and Tom goes a
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separate way home with a couple minor
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bruises and a body full of adrenaline at
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the same time over in Larry's bar at
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some point in his altercation he too
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throws a punch at the same speed and
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force with the same bar fight level
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skill set as Tom and he also hits the
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other individual in the face this person
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however Falls backwards and hits their
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head on the ground later that night the
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individual is pronounced dead as a
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result of the head trauma they suffered
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Larry is arrested charged with
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manslaughter and is sentenced to several
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years in prison
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both Larry and Tom committed the exact
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same act but based only on the
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consequences which occurred by chance
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Larry is assigned significant moral
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blame while Tom is assigned essentially
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none
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circumstantial constitutive and causal
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moral luck are all relatively similar to
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each other as they each refer to the
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luck or Misfortune of an individual's
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conditions or circumstances that either
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lead them to commit an act that is
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deemed moral or immoral or to receive a
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different degree of moral blame or
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praise compared to someone else who
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committed the same act for example
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specifically in the case of
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circumstantial moral luck consider the
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same bar situation but let's go further
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down the street to a third bar where
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there is a man named Marcus who has also
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found himself in an argument that has
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turned into a physical altercation in
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Marcus's case however right as he is
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about to wind up to punch the other
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individual in the face the fire alarms
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in the bar go off completely distracting
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both Marcus and the other person and
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causing the energy of the fight to
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dissipate as the two are ushered outside
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the bar along with the rest of the
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patrons and employees Marcus was going
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to punch the other individual in the
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face as hard as he could but he didn't
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solely because of the luck of his
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circumstances
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and so he receives no moral blame
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whatsoever even though he had the same
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intention to commit the very same act as
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Larry
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now let's travel to One More Bar a few
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streets over in this bar we find
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Stephanie a woman who is also getting
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into a bar fight this night it's an
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active night in Stephanie's case at some
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point in the altercation she too throws
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a punch at the other individual and hits
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them in the face causing them to also
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fall backwards and hit their head on the
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ground later that night this person also
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dies because of their head injury
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Stephanie however receives no jail time
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because while in trial it is discovered
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that she was horribly and relentlessly
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abused as a child and had recently been
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diagnosed with severe borderline
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personality disorder directly causing
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her to become overly physically
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aggressive and have little to no control
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over her actions and so instead she is
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only temporarily subject to a mental
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health facility in this case Stephanie
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experiences constitutive moral luck
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because although her actions and
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consequences are identical to Larry's
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the condition of her life that caused
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her to be the way she is affected or
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reduced the moral blame she received
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this case may seem reasonable enough
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that Stephanie receives at least less
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moral blame but let's go back to Larry
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Larry was not abused as a child did not
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experience a particularly unusual life
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and is not diagnosed with any mental
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illness he was just a bit tired this
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night and is a bit selfish and
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physically aggressive in general at
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first glance Larry would seem to be the
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more morally blameworthy individual but
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did Larry choose to be tired and on edge
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that night who would choose this did
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Barry choose to be slightly selfish and
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physically aggressive in general Larry
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is not the original cause of Larry what
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caused him to be this way was merely a
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series of circumstances outside himself
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that he could not control who he was
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raised by what he was exposed to what
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happened to him and so on as well as the
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behavioral Tendencies inside himself
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caused by his genetics which he also
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never decided or controlled if this is
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true how is Larry any more morally
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responsible for being someone who got
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into a bar fight that night than someone
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like Stephanie according to Nagel's
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Theory Larry's case includes the final
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kind of moral luck or Misfortune causal
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moral luck
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with this in mind if moral acts by a
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moral agent require the ability to
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evaluate right and wrong and make
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decisions accordingly can anyone truly
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be morally responsible for their actions
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if their actions are invariably caused
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by other actions and events that were
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not their own that they never had a
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Saiyan or control over
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of course none of this means that there
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shouldn't be consequences there can and
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should be but that does not negate the
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prior Point consider a violent dog we
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would generally not view a dog as a
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moral agent and thus we would not deem a
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violent dog as immoral we may determine
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it best to put the dog down but at no
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point would that equate to or acquire us
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to assign moral blame to the dog
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likewise consider a tornado certainly a
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tornado is exorbitantly dangerous and if
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we could contain or perhaps kill
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tornadoes we would but again nowhere in
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the process would we need to assign
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moral blame to a tornado and so why do
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we do it with ourselves are we so
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conceited to think that somehow we are
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the only thing separate from nature
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above it the only being that can somehow
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Escape what Nature has propelled forth
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for us we are conscious but what formed
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our consciousness
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a human being wrote Albert Einstein is a
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part of the whole called by us Universe
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a part Limited in time and space he
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experiences himself his thoughts and
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feelings as something separated from the
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rest a kind of optical delusion of his
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consciousness
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this brings us to our third and final
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philosophical problem the problem of
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moral knowledge what even is morality on
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what are we to base it is there anything
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objectively true about morality
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this problem Finds Its origins in the
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classic philosophical problem the is odd
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problem first established by the
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Scottish philosopher David Hume in the
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18th century the isot problem is what
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arises when one tries to make ethical
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claims how the world ought to be and how
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one ought to behave within it based on
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facts about how the world is Hume
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suggested that facts need to be combined
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with ethical assumptions in order to
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arrive at any sort of ethical statement
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but we arrive at these ethical
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assumptions solely through subjective
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interpretations because on what other
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basis do we have to ground and form our
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interpretations
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arguably we only can and do determine
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moral principles through the following
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methods spiritual or religious doctrines
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emotional responses and science and
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reason the problem is all of these rely
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on assumption subjectivity or both when
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deriving moral principles from spiritual
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or religious sources the problem is of
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course the sources in which these
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spiritual or religious sources
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themselves came from in order for
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religious doctrines to be objectively
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true the religion itself needs to be
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objectively true and with what proof do
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we have to conclude this the problem
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with basing morality on emotions is of
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course that emotions are inextricably
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linked with individual subjective
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perception influenced by things like our
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cultural background temperament
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upbringing and so on and lastly
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seemingly the strongest method for
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asserting moral principles is through
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science and reason in his work the moral
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landscape philosopher Sam Harris argues
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that morality can be derived from
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scientific knowledge about how the world
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is because moral values are facts about
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the well-being of conscious creatures
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and so by understanding what actions or
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events maximize the pleasure or
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well-being of conscious creatures and
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what actions cause harm and suffering
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onto conscious creatures we can
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determine objective moral truths about
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good and bad
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but here too Sam along with other
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proponents of this Theory seem to
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smuggle in an initial ought that we
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ought to maximize well-being as a matter
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of objective fact but on what basis is
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there to ground this claim objective
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means something that is independent of
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our feelings and Views that would be
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true with or without conscious
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observation or experience how then could
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the flourishment of subjective conscious
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experience be a metric used in providing
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objective Truth for what purpose or to
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what end outside of ourselves could we
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attach this metric to
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ultimately there appears to be no clear
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way out of the loop of is and ought
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without smuggling in an odd assumption
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first a claim about how reality should
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be not how it is
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in the end perhaps the only solution to
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the problems of fairness of luck of
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morality is somewhat less about finding
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Perfect fairness or objective right and
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wrong and more about moving forth with
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an effort of understanding forgiveness
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and compassion for the absurdity of it
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all a sort of compassion for everyone
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and everything for those who appear to
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us to be good for those who appear to us
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to be bad throughout history throughout
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the globe and into the future
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again this does not mean complacency and
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total tolerance one can punish fight or
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resist someone or something that they
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believe is wrong while still having
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compassion for the other situation in
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truth none of us chose that we would be
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born into this world as what and who we
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are none of us set up the rules none of
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us ever really had a say
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but we are all here now and compassion
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appears to be one of if not the only
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through line that has saved us
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throughout history that bolsters
00:15:13
positive change that accepts and
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forgives the mistakes we have and will
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undoubtedly continue to make into the
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future
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in the words of the German pessimist
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philosopher Arthur schopenhauer
00:15:24
boundless compassion for all living
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beings is the surest and most certain
00:15:28
guarantee of pure moral conduct and
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needs no casuous tree whoever is filled
00:15:33
with it will assuredly injure no one do
00:15:36
harm to No One encroach on no man's
00:15:38
rights he will rather have regard for
00:15:40
everyone forgive everyone help everyone
00:15:43
as far as he can and all his actions
00:15:46
will bear the stamp of justice and
00:15:48
loving kindness
00:15:55
this video was sponsored by imprint for
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many of us understandably our attention
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spans have been at least some amount
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eroded if not fully because of the
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constant influx of stimulation in
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today's world as a result staying
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focused engaged and motivated toward
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