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Re: Poll - Legalities
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Re: Poll - Legalities
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Re: Poll - Legalities
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Or you're kids will if you don't survive the impact. There is one unconditionally correct law. It's called the law of physics. Such as two objects cannot occupy a space At the same time. |
Re: Poll - Legalities
I'm sorry, I should have been more specific. no Governmental Law, I took for granted that nobody would take that wrong.
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Re: Poll - Legalities
I think that we're debating something much bigger than breaking rules. We're essentially trying to debate the very essence of what is right and what is wrong. We're going to have some very different opinions on that and I don't think a general resolution can really be reached.
My opinion is that you should do the right thing. What you think the right thing is will be different for everyone, since again, "the right thing" could be defined as a lot of things for a lot of reasons. One thing I do try to do everyday though, even if it is small, is to "Do a Good Turn Daily." Yes, that is the Scout Slogan, and it's a pretty easy and basic thing to do. If everyone did one good thing for someone else, the world would be a pretty friendly place. |
Re: Poll - Legalities
Are there really endangered lizards in the U.S.? I just think of lizards as things from a completely different part of the world, because I never see them here in PA...
anyway. Laws apply wherever and whenever they should (as defined by themselves and other laws). If there's some special case that warrants an exception, that will be determined by a judge--but you can still be arrested for jaywalking and you still probably won't win a lawsuit if you're hit by a car. The law isn't necessarily unconditionally correct, but it does unconditionally apply. I admit that I'm the kind of person who would question and challenge rules or statements I'm given, but I recognize that even if a law is unreasonable it still has to be honored to "maintain order." Back to the poll...I agree that I should never break a rule as a FIRSTer, as a member of my team, as a leader, and as a student. Breaking rules is wrong. Once in a while it happens anyway, and when I do break a rule, I usually willingly take the risk of suffering consequences. Nonetheless, it's never OK. |
Re: Poll - Legalities
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Consider that morals are not absolute and universal, except in the twisted imaginings of religious fanatics and totalitarians. While our society (as in, Western civilization) is founded upon some important principles, they are expressed with varying fervour and effect wherever you go. Now, if we step back into the world of FIRST, rather than the world in general, I think that the practice of following rules becomes a little clearer. In life in general, we have the nebulous idea of a social contract to force us to abide by the rules. Our options for "taking our ball, and going home" are very limited in real life—we can't easily declare part of western New York to be a No-Rules Zone, and therefore exempt ourselves from society's judgment. But in FIRST, we're participating because we want to. I can't say that it's unreasonable to presume that we have given (at the very least) implied consent to be bound by the rules set forth by FIRST, and enforced by its officials. If we don't like them, and can't abide by following them, we can take our ball and go home. But doing that doesn't make for good sport. And furthermore, in FIRST, there is a reasonably reliable way to effect change, if the reasons behind it are good enough. As for the poll? Well, unsurprisingly, I think that it's an inadequate way to summarize one of the big questions of philosophy. Especially when indiviuals' motivations for their answers (and similarly, their actions) are not simple in the slightest. One look at Kohlberg, and you'll see what I mean. |
Re: Poll - Legalities
Without considering the morality of creating and breaking rules, I wanted to point out that there are considerable figures of history that are known and admired precisely because they broke the rules. Surely, we'd not condemn as immoral folks like Rosa Parks, Mohandas Gandhi, Samuel Adams or Martin Luther King, Jr., would we?
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Re: Poll - Legalities
Of course the world is flat. It is because we say it is, and that makes it true.
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Without King I would never even to be able to participate in FIRST. |
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So I would reconsider what I originally said about that people should never challenge a law. |
Re: Poll - Legalities
To suggest breaking rules can be broken down to a poll is very narrow minded. My main problem is not if rules are ment to be broken or even if they should, but this poll. The poll is lopsided and biased. Lets discuss and not break down people and single them out.
I break some rules and I love it, not for the thrill, but for the fact it progresses what others and I know. |
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I'm pretty sure it was Ghandi. And it applies to oppression. It comes close to the argument at hand, and could possibly be the argument at hand. In that case, it has been discussed. |
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We all know that we can build better robots with more motors, better pneumatics and more weight. Does this mean that it is OK to break the rules to progress these areas? |
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