Personally, I could be said to adhere to the school of Moral Absolutism; in the sense that there is a set of key principles that should not be violated; and while violating merely a single one of these principles does not make one automatically evil, violating two or more does. However I also recognize that besides these principles there are other specifics that vary from culture to culture in regard to what exactly evil is; so I also have a flair of Moral Universalism. The principles I mentioned are as follows:
- The dead are sacrosanct, and defiling\disturbing them in any way is immoral and wrong.
- The murder or willful harming of children is deeply immoral and wrong.
- The defilement of houses of worship and holy places is immoral and wrong.
- The engagement of a human in sexual intercourse with an animal is immoral and wrong.
- The willful destruction of beauty is immoral and wrong.
- The desire to abolish government and/or civilization is wrong.
- The willful taking of the life of a human outside official context is immoral and wrong.
- The infliction of pain on another for one's personal pleasure is immoral and wrong.
- The consumption of a human is immoral and wrong.
Now, these are the core precepts which humanity and society abide by almost universally. Any one by itself is disgusting and perverted, but two are evil. There are of course other definitions but I feel that I have covered the basics. The only reason Amoralism could be adopted is the defense of these precepts. While I believe the precepts are generally universal, they are at heart my own personal definition of evil and I would like to hear the views of others on the matter.
So, what say ye', NSG?









