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05-13-2003, 01:24 PM | #11 |
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Perhaps the woman's idiot child chucked the purse out her vehicle window unbeknowest?
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05-13-2003, 02:38 PM | #12 | ||
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Re: A question for you...
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http://ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03/nqpmr10.txt But to give you an interesting sampling (since I know full well that most people do not like reading very much): Quote:
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05-13-2003, 03:15 PM | #13 |
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I shall return the money (as I have in relevant situations in the past), without expecting a reward, and without accepting one if it was offered.
Why? For the long answer, I refer you to the Ethics Without God series that I am posting. For the short answer, it is because I wish to do so. Furthermore, I would defend it as the right thing to do. A person with good desires would want to return the money and not want a reward -- where "good desires" are themselves understood to be those desires which tend toward the fulfillment of desires generally. If you want to know the gory details of this account, I again point you to the above mentioned series of posts. |
05-13-2003, 03:46 PM | #14 | |
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Re: A question for you...
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To those who would unconditionally return the money, substitute a scenario where that money was the difference between life and death for a loved one. No, I think there could be circumstances where I would keep it. (And this is coming from someone still bruised from a domestic blue (argument) over a pair of $1500 ear-rings for f#$%^’s sake ) |
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05-13-2003, 04:07 PM | #15 |
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I would return it. I have this voice in my head that tells me things(it sounds a lot like my Mom's voice ), and in this case it would tell me that the rightful owner probably worked hard for their cash and needs it and that only a huge ugly piece of shit would keep it from them. Then I would imagine a mother going through bills and being unable to pay them, and berating herself for losing her purse...and a child crying because its hungry. Yes, my conscience gets very dramatic on my ass.
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05-13-2003, 05:34 PM | #16 | |
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Re: Re: A question for you...
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If I knew it was drug money or gained through some other illicit activity, or part of a payoff as a cash bribe to a Senator, I would likely keep it. Would I keep it for surgery for my wife? No. After all, maybe they were depending on the money for their child's surgery. I would return it, but accept the reward, and ask them to tell the newspaper so that the story about the person who returned the money even though his wife needed surgery would run in the weekend edition inspiring some philanthropist to donate the money for the surgery. Yes, ultimately, it depends. But, barring extraordinary circumstances, if I were to find that money, say, today on my way home from work, I would return it and accept no reward. |
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05-13-2003, 05:46 PM | #17 | |
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Re: Re: Re: A question for you...
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05-13-2003, 06:18 PM | #18 |
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Money is overrated. I would rather see the happy look on the persons face then keep the money. I of course wouldn't decide this easily though. Hopefully I would come to my senses. The more money it is, the more tempting it would be, but in the end, I return it. A week from then, I would be carrying to much for one person -- a ton of money and a ton of guilt.
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05-14-2003, 08:11 AM | #19 | |
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As with everything I take this to a comparison with our animal bretheren. Are scavengers immoral for eating the food, left at a kill site, that they did nothing to secure other than find(they did not participate in the labor of the kill) They are eating a resource, provided and worked for by another. The original provider, may be off snoozing with a full belly, this does not mean that predator would not want to come back for leftovers the next morning, but alas, the scavengers have picked the site clean. Say a T-Rex killed a duckbill(did they even live in the same era?) anyway, the elderly T-Rex kills the herbivore, but dies of a coronary at the same time due to her age, her crappy diet, and the exertion of chasing and killing the prey. Her nest is only one kilometer away, where her infant is starving to death.(she's old but still fertile) Are the scavengers immoral for eating both her, and her recently killed prey thus assuring the death of her offspring as well? The same can be said of lion prides, or even caches of provisions stored in trees by squirrels and other animals that work for and store assets. The only value in returning the asset that you have found is if there is a reward, either material or in esteem (which will eventually lead to a material reward as well) within the community from which you draw support. And said eventual reward needs to outweigh the value of what you stood to gain by simply keeping the assets in the first place. Simple survival mathematics. It's how we have evolved. But before I am accused of being too mercenary. This is a really silly example where keeping the assets is something that no one else would ever know about (it has no effect upon your position within your society and is thus neither social, nor antisocial, it is asocial) I am far more interested in helping others in my society when it is not an asocial activity, because this reaps benefit for me eventually, and that is what it is all about. |
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05-14-2003, 09:01 AM | #20 | |
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Am I understanding you correctly? |
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