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6/19/2025, 12:11:53 AM
>>713020710
Adachi's problem is simple - not everyone is destined to be a winner. And that's a (regrettable) fact of life - someone has to suffer for someone else to be happy, it's not possible to build a human society without suffering. And once he understood his position, all he could do is throw a tantrum. "I suffered, why shouldn't they?". The obvious flaw is how destructive this idea is - you piss in a person's cornflakes, they will shit in yours, continue ad infinitum until there are no cornflakes left.
The real answer here is to learn from your suffering, and help others with your knowledge, so they would raise you up in return. That's the golden rule of morality, the key to human civilization.
>>713032332
>If there is no means of fixing it, it must be destroyed
There's one massive flaw here - how can you tell that the system is past the point of no return? Is your judgement objectively true, or are you just too narrow-minded to see a solution? The latter is infinitely more likely. Whenever a catastrophe happens, we always look back and see a dozen ways it could've been prevented, and none of them are ever "just burn it down lmao".
Adachi's problem is simple - not everyone is destined to be a winner. And that's a (regrettable) fact of life - someone has to suffer for someone else to be happy, it's not possible to build a human society without suffering. And once he understood his position, all he could do is throw a tantrum. "I suffered, why shouldn't they?". The obvious flaw is how destructive this idea is - you piss in a person's cornflakes, they will shit in yours, continue ad infinitum until there are no cornflakes left.
The real answer here is to learn from your suffering, and help others with your knowledge, so they would raise you up in return. That's the golden rule of morality, the key to human civilization.
>>713032332
>If there is no means of fixing it, it must be destroyed
There's one massive flaw here - how can you tell that the system is past the point of no return? Is your judgement objectively true, or are you just too narrow-minded to see a solution? The latter is infinitely more likely. Whenever a catastrophe happens, we always look back and see a dozen ways it could've been prevented, and none of them are ever "just burn it down lmao".
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