Tag: Morality
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Beyond Guilt 5 – Responsibility After Guilt: The Ethical Life Transfigured
A Life Beyond Guilt We began this journey with a radical claim: that guilt cannot be the foundation of ethics, because guilt depends on an illusion—that we could have done otherwise. But if no appearance comes from nothing, if the self is not the source of Being but its site, then guilt falls, and with…
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Beyond Guilt 4 – The Source of Action: Love as Recognition, Not Will
When Control Falls Away, What Remains? So far, we have seen the collapse of the traditional moral structure:– Guilt falls, because what-is cannot not be.– Blame falls, because no one is the author of Being.– Punishment falls, because justice is not retribution, but coherence. But this raises a deeper question still:If will is not sovereign,…
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Beyond Guilt 3 – Justice Without Blame: Law, Protection, and the Structure of Response
When Guilt Falls, What Holds Society Together? The objection arises naturally:Even if guilt is an illusion, isn’t justice still necessary? Don’t we still need laws, boundaries, consequences?What happens to society when we no longer condemn? The answer is not the disappearance of justice, but its transformation.Justice does not vanish—it becomes response rather than retribution, protection…
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Beyond Guilt 2 – Coherence Without Condemnation: The Shape of Ethical Life in Eternity
After Guilt, What Remains? If guilt collapses—if no one could have acted otherwise, and no appearance is a mistake—what remains of responsibility?Is everything now permissible? Is the ethical life lost? On the contrary, what remains is not the end of ethics but its clarification.When guilt falls away, responsibility is seen anew—not as judgment, but as…
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Beyond Guilt 1 – The Collapse of Moral Control: Why Guilt Cannot Ground Ethics
The Crumbling Foundation For centuries, human behavior has been regulated by the machinery of guilt.Societies, religions, and moral systems have sought to preserve order by appealing to a fundamental fear: the fear of having done wrong, of having failed, of being condemned. Guilt was the leash that tethered the will to control.It was assumed that…
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Nature of Guilt 1: The Quiet Tyranny of Guilt
The Familiar Ache There is a kind of suffering that does not scream. It doesn’t arrive like trauma or tragedy. It doesn’t demand attention. Instead, it lingers, quiet, persistent, folded into the daily rhythm of thought. A single memory. A regret. A word left unsaid. A moment you replay a thousand times, whispering, “If only…
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Post 9 – Ethics, Morality, Love and Freedom
Ethics and Morality Beyond Nihilism Here’s a provocative question to start with: If everything is eternal and unchanging, does that mean reality is predetermined? At first glance, this might seem disheartening—almost as if our choices don’t matter. But in Post 4, we explored the concept of free will and arrived at an intriguing conclusion: our…
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