Ever seen the world in black and white? One thing is good, another is evil.
One may make absolute differentiations between things, and believe them until they are faced with a paradox. Religion, ideologies, law, science, may all put things into absolute perspective. You can determine all nazis to be evil people, and you can determine all Final Fantasy fans to be good. Yet you are faced with a paradox when you come across a final fantasy-loving nazi. You have to either change your view or bend the rules one way or another...
The law, however, is absolute and objective, unless it is tampered with by direct human influence. Someone either breaks the law, or they don't. It is up to the human judge and jury to decide guilt and punishment. The law is open to misinterpretation, but when interpreted objectively, it is absolute... you get the idea. You can't logically say that something is not a crime, when it clearly is.
We don't know if the universe is objective yet. The purpose of science is to objectively find out the absolute laws that govern everything.
You can be objective if you are specific. "What I apparently percieved with my senses was ......"
"The law clearly states, in accordance with .... that X is a crime, and the evidence suggests that suspect Y has committed it .... ."
I'm not really sure what I was thinking when I started this topic, but I wouldn't want this to go to waste.
One may make absolute differentiations between things, and believe them until they are faced with a paradox. Religion, ideologies, law, science, may all put things into absolute perspective. You can determine all nazis to be evil people, and you can determine all Final Fantasy fans to be good. Yet you are faced with a paradox when you come across a final fantasy-loving nazi. You have to either change your view or bend the rules one way or another...
The law, however, is absolute and objective, unless it is tampered with by direct human influence. Someone either breaks the law, or they don't. It is up to the human judge and jury to decide guilt and punishment. The law is open to misinterpretation, but when interpreted objectively, it is absolute... you get the idea. You can't logically say that something is not a crime, when it clearly is.
We don't know if the universe is objective yet. The purpose of science is to objectively find out the absolute laws that govern everything.
You can be objective if you are specific. "What I apparently percieved with my senses was ......"
"The law clearly states, in accordance with .... that X is a crime, and the evidence suggests that suspect Y has committed it .... ."
I'm not really sure what I was thinking when I started this topic, but I wouldn't want this to go to waste.