But I know deep down I would do the exact same thing, as would many..Agayek said:Looks like we're just going to have to agree to disagree then. Theft is never a valid option, in my opinion. If said beggar needed money so badly, he could have approached the man and offered to do an odd job for a few dollars or something like that. Instead, he attacked him. I can't see justification for that.InfiniteSingularity said:If the beggar is poor, and genuinely needs it, I would say it is the right thing to do, yes. And I have always stood by that belief. If you were rich, and had no need for all the money you had, would you give it to those in need? I assume you would say yes, in which case, we agree.
Fair enough. I would sympathize with the man too. That doesn't make what he did right though.Baneat said:My dissonance comes from the fact that I wouldn't say the beggar was justifiable in his actions
But I'd at least understand why he did it, and sympathise with his position to a degree.
and it's so confusing, since giving the beggar the same treatment as a millionaire who did the same thing seems wrong, but deontology expressly forbids such an act. I wouldn't feel comfortable punishing the beggar, at all, I'd feel some moral dilemma for sure, though I shouldn't.
Normative ethics are pulling themselves away from useful, practical ethics, and following think-tanked, reasoned, well thought systems in the real world does not do what it's supposed to, and hit your intuition as much as it possibly can.