13eowulf wrote:Secondly, this is a great example of Evil being subjective, aka, in the eye of the beholder....
In my opinion that is...
From my perspective, we'd need to take a closer look before knowing what it's an example of.
To me, there is nothing inherently evil about naked people, nor about pictures of naked people.
There is nothing inherently evil about pictures/film of naked (or clothed) people having sex.
I think that most people would agree with me so far.
IF there are exceptions, we can look at them as they arise (so to speak).
There IS something evil about the ways that a lot of pornography is procured, though. Women or girls are often bullied, conned, manipulated, or (in worst-case scenarios) enslaved in order to make pornography.
And I think that this is one of the places where people get confused, and declare that because some pornography is created using immoral means, then ALL pornography must be immoral.
But if a couple who loves each other happen to film themselves for their own enjoyment, where is the evil in that?
I can't see any.
Some extremists (who are few and far betwee) would likely argue that ANY filming of women having sex with men is demeaning to the women... but such extremists in my experience tend to have their perceptions colored to the point where they tend to think that women having sex with men is demeaning to women in general, whether it's filmed or not.
So even then, the problem that they're seeing isn't actually the filming, it's the act being filmed.
The filming would simply be a compounding of something that they already see as demeaning to women.
Now, I might disagree with these extremists that sex is inherently demeaning to anybody... but I DO agree with them that demeaning women is bad.
Okay, now step aside for a minute, and say that I am in the jungle with one of these extremists.
(So as not to offend anybody, we are not having sex)
Suddenly, we're confronted by a snake.
The extremist says, "Snakes are poisonous!!!"
I say, "That's not a poisonous snake; it's safe."
Whether or not what I'm saying makes ANY sense to them, whether or not they perceive the difference between poisonous and non-poisonous snakes... that doesn't affect the fact that there ARE poisonous snakes out there.
It doesn't make venom something that is subjective.
It doesn't mean that venom isn't real.
It doesn't mean that venom exists in some kind of mental state, dependent upon belief.
All it means is that some people have trouble telling whether or not something IS venomous.
I see no reason why the same principle would not apply to evil.
Just because some people see it where other people do NOT see it, that does not mean that it isn't real, or that it's subjective, or that its existence in any way depends on belief.
In discussion regarding evil, in my experience, the primary issue is that people aren't seeing things the same way (though this doesn't mean that what they're seeing is actually subjective).
Switching from porn to drugs:
Person A says, "Drugs are EVIL!"
Person B says, "Drugs are GOOD!"
Then they argue, tooth and nail about the disagreement.
The thing is, usually they're not talking about the same thing.
When Person A says the word "Drugs," that sound they're making with their mouth is shorthand for a concept, for a huge bundle of information based on the speaker's experience and information.
When Person A says "Drugs," they mean "addictive substances that re-prioritize people's lives in a negative way, bringing significant harm to not only that person, but to the people around them."
When Person B says "Drugs," they mean "Chemicals that, when ingested, are really, really, really FUN, stuff that make a person mellow, and expands their perceptions of the world."
Even if they're talking about the same specific chemical substance, they're NOT talking about the same thing. Or, at least, they're not talking about the same substance from the same angle.
It kind of ends up being like the story about the
Blind Men and the Elephant, where they're all examining the same thing, but they each only see different things.
From my perspective, it's not that Evil is actually subjective, it's that our perceptions of Evil are subjective.
Sometimes we see it where it is not.
Sometimes we fail to see it where it exists.
But none of that means that it doesn't exist at all, or that it only exists when seen.
The elephant is an elephant, not a snake, or a wall, or a tree, or a rope, or anything else.
It's real. It exists independent of external observation.
The thing is, it's not always observed correctly.