GodOfOrder
Well-Known Member
Today, I heard a friend say to me that if everything was good, the world would be out of balance. Yet this obviously would be bad. So it seems if something was to be "good" it would have to be absolute.
I suppose the notion that even too much of a good thing is bad is what they meant, but at this point, I think the thing is no longer "good".
For my part, I subscribe to the notion that what is good is what is fitting, such that nothing insofar as it exists is good or bad, but only insofar as it relates to its system.
Even something like a cancer cell can be considered good or bad in a particular context. It may be bad for the body it inhabits, but cancer regulates the population of a species and keeps the ecosystem healthy.
And on this scale of systems within systems, what would be defined as good in one smaller system, could also be potentially bad in the larger system, or vice versa.
So what defines good, and is there such a thing as an absolute universal good?
I suppose the notion that even too much of a good thing is bad is what they meant, but at this point, I think the thing is no longer "good".
For my part, I subscribe to the notion that what is good is what is fitting, such that nothing insofar as it exists is good or bad, but only insofar as it relates to its system.
Even something like a cancer cell can be considered good or bad in a particular context. It may be bad for the body it inhabits, but cancer regulates the population of a species and keeps the ecosystem healthy.
And on this scale of systems within systems, what would be defined as good in one smaller system, could also be potentially bad in the larger system, or vice versa.
So what defines good, and is there such a thing as an absolute universal good?