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mark tyler
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Bitcoin & 🫂 Oh and dimly trying to think through interesting issues. I think that I don’t have a right to force you to do anything other than not harm me or others. Seems like most people I interact with in the real world disagree with this statement. To be fair.. the devil is in definition of “harm”.
Replying to Avatar MichaelJ

Alright, this is good, you're making me think deeply about this, and I appreciate it. Let's get into the qualities of moral acts some more.

To put more precisely part of what's already been discussed, there are three parts to a moral act: the object, the circumstances, and the end. The object is the thing acted upon, the end is the reason for which the act is done, and the circumstances are the conditions of the action, such as place, time, and so on. The object and end determine typically determine the moral quality of the act, but circumstances can, at times, modify that.

To apply that precisely in the case of the beggar, the end of giving the beggar cigarettes may be good or bad, depending on the giver's intentions. The object of the act, that is, giving the beggar cigarettes, is bad because cigarettes are harmful to the beggar's health. Therefore, that action is bad.

To apply this precision to the case of a soldier in a war, the objects and ends can be all over the place. Let's suppose the end, or intent, on the soldier's part is to defend his country. This is a good end. Let's take as an object firing a gun at an enemy. That is a bad object, however, in a particular circumstance, the soldier may be firing the gun at an enemy because it is the only means of achieving the end of defending his country. In this case, the extremity of the circumstances make the action morally good, if resulting in an unfortunate natural evil. The key here is extreme circumstances are required to make such an act morally good.

Extrapolating out to the scale of, say, a whole war, I think it is understandable that we typically give soldiers a pass, but that doesn't mean we necessarily should. However, greater responsibility lies in the leaders who order their soldiers into battle, to conduct a just war, that is, one oriented towards defense against an unjust aggressor, conducted as a last resort, and using the minimum violence necessary to repel the unjust aggression.

Zooming out again, the commandment is "thou shalt not kill." Killing as a moral act consists of a specific object, end, and circumstance. In the case of home defense or a just war, the type of moral act is defense, rather than killing. It's a very fine distinction, and thus the use of violence, even when it seems justified, always treads a very thin line, morally speaking. That's why violence should be avoided whenever possible.

I know I retreaded a bunch of ground, but I think it was good for the discussion and for my own understanding to put all this as precisely as possible. I hope I addressed some of your big-picture questions as well, from your last paragraph.

People are really good at convincing themselves that their side in the war is the morally good side. “Defending one’s country” or one’s people. Just look at Russia and Ukraine or Hamas and Israel. This effect needs to be taken seriously when thinking through some planned violence. The “bad guys” are usually thinking the same thing you are.

Interesting. From the FAQ

“Why are there empty blocks?

When a new block is found, mining pools send miners a block template with no transactions so they can start searching for the next block as soon as possible. They send a block template full of transactions right afterward, but a full block template is a bigger data transfer and takes slightly longer to reach miners.

In this intervening time, which is usually no more than 1-2 seconds, miners sometimes get lucky and find a new block using the empty block template.”

I must not fear. Fear is the *freedom*-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration.

I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain. nostr:note1hjl4qqfm45glwacm4lf4xt68klxv7uulaaafqtp3hjuaj8zd6rrsqh468t

Maybe the acc move is to be pro CBDC and secretly against them

Excuse me Mr Musk. In this scenario I’d have no money, no relevant skills, no future earnings potential.

Whose dole am I on and what stipulations does it come with?

I’d recommend skipping it tbh unless you’d want to see for yourself why it’s worth skipping. It just seems to me like it makes itself out to be much grander than it is.

Maybe I’ve finally understood #softwar. In a hypothetical world where the only medium of exchange is Bitcoin, countries that aren’t popular enough to get their transactions through miners, and don’t have their own, might have a hard time spending.

Ahhh ok no worries. I thought you had me for a moment, that I’d have to do some serious rethinking and all, but then I realized this note is just another psyop that I can probably safely ignore. Yeah, definitely that and not a subconscious coping strategy kicking in.

😮‍💨😂