tinyfood: (postyng Ethycally. wythyn reason)
Entrapta, Princess of Dryl ([personal profile] tinyfood) wrote in [community profile] aefenglom2019-10-25 10:33 pm

(no subject)

Name: Entrapta
Date: oct 16th
Format: text

HELLO! I WANT TO COLLECT SOME DATA.

IF YOU HAVE OPINIONS ABOUT ETHICS, PLEASE ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS:

1] ARE THERE ACTIONS YOU CONSIDER UNACCEPTABLE REGARDLESS OF CONTEXT? IF SO, PLEASE PROVIDE EXAMPLES

2] ARE THERE SOME MITIGATING CONTEXTS THAT RENDER OTHERWISE UNACCEPTABLE ACTIONS ACCEPTABLE TO YOU? IF SO, PLEASE PROVIDE EXAMPLES

3] IF A PERSON HAS PERFORMED AN UNACCEPTABLE ACTION, WHAT DO YOU CONSIDER AN APPROPRIATE PUNISHMENT?

THANKS! 8)
manlet: (39.)

[personal profile] manlet 2019-10-30 02:51 am (UTC)(link)
"I AM DEFINITELY NOT A ROBOT" sounds like robot talk to me.

[Heh heh. But he'll play along.]

1) Wasted potential is the greatest sin, if you ask me. Oh, murder and the like are common answers, but a story can be retold in a thousand different ways from a thousand different perspectives. "Heroes," "monsters," "good," "evil" - my role isn't to pass judgement upon them but to simply observe.

In any case, I believe every human is born the possibility to become their best selves. Squandering their possibility is unforgivable to an author such as I. In short, I can't stand aborted character arcs!

2) Oh, some actions will always be evil. I knew a woman who was evil to her core. A creature of rotten filth, down to her very roots. She manipulated, stole, lied, killed, murdered, and did it all without lifting a finger. And she still saw herself as an innocent! She was a cow, too. Her breasts were practically an ocean.


[ANDERSEN NOBODY NEEDS TO FUCKING KNOW THAT]

What was I saying? Hm. The point got away from me. I suppose it all boils down to the fact that I believe one should be true to their nature, regardless of how it manifests.

3) Whatever is poetic.
manlet: (68.)

[personal profile] manlet 2019-11-02 07:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes. As I said, I'm an author. What I want to see is the core of a person.
manlet: (112.)

[personal profile] manlet 2019-11-06 03:52 am (UTC)(link)
I'm a twisted creature with hardly any positive traits to boast of. If I were held up as a moral standard... ha! What a joke that'd be. No, it's simply because I'm too much of an artist and too little of a human.
manlet: (45.)

[personal profile] manlet 2019-11-08 02:48 am (UTC)(link)
In a sense. Tell me, what is an artist to you?
manlet: (83.)

[personal profile] manlet 2019-11-08 08:38 pm (UTC)(link)
A cut-and-dry definition, one you can't argue with. Interesting. I've a bone to pick with the word "aesthetic." Beauty is not the purpose of art, nor is it the artist's duty to portray beauty.

Here is my definition of it: an artist is one who observes. Are you a scientist, by any chance?
manlet: (30.)

[personal profile] manlet 2019-11-09 06:01 am (UTC)(link)
Both your points are taken. But isn't science, too, an art? The line between mysticism and progress is thin, and what you create is a reflection of what you deem to be of worth.

In any case, here is my point. As a scientist, you know that the best observer when it comes to practical data is one outside of the phenomenon. So it is with artists. We create a replica of what we believe is the human soul. Such a creature thrives in being an outsider, and is often at odds with what human society accepts.
manlet: (135.)

[personal profile] manlet 2019-11-13 03:10 am (UTC)(link)
But of course. That is why those who straddle the line between outsider and human are ideal observers, in my opinion.
manlet: (21.)

[personal profile] manlet 2019-11-18 12:07 am (UTC)(link)
The straddling or being human?

[Andersen can you not make jokes like this.]
manlet: (4.)

[personal profile] manlet 2019-11-21 03:30 am (UTC)(link)
Ideally? Yes. But they must understand human nature in a fashion that ironically separates them from their fellow man.