"Gary Ridgway, what do you have to say in your defence?"
"I followed the Golden Rule, your honour."
by willmarite 99 Replies latest watchtower beliefs
"Gary Ridgway, what do you have to say in your defence?"
"I followed the Golden Rule, your honour."
I don't think they're skippable, Vivian. I'd start by asking would I like someone else to skip them for me? (the GR) The Golden Rule serves as a starting point when you know little or nothing about someone. You can't do to them as they'd like to have done if you don't know them, so you start with little knowledge and use the Golden Rule to guide your way forward.The caveats aren't caveats to the rule, they arise by asking "Would I like this done to me"? (the GR)
I'm not sure if you're kidding Splash, but if Gary Ridgway were following the Golden Rule, the first thing he'd have to think of is "Would I like to be brutally assaulted and killed"?
I don't think they're skippable, Vivian.
They aren't in the golden rule. They are things YOU are adding. They are completely skippable by anyone else.
I'd start by asking would I like someone else to skip them for me?
Again, that's YOU. Not everyone would interpret it that way.
You can't do to them as they'd like to have done if you don't know them, so you start with little knowledge and use the Golden Rule to guide your way forward.
The golden rule doesn't say to do unto them as they would like. You've got what it says exactly backwards.
Rather than assume people want the same thing you want, you could always ask them.
I think the Golden Rule doesn't omit this. I would want someone to ask me how I would like to be treated instead of just assuming. This is in line with the Golden rule.
If you feel the need to have a rule for guidance, try the Kindness rule: make it your goal to treat each person you meet with kindness.
Eliminates all the fuss.
What you're calling caveats are derived from the GR, specifically from asking oneself "Would I like it if this were done to me?". If it fails that test, then whatever action you're taking is not the Golden Rule.
What I am calling caveats are actual, literal caveats. They also aren't from the golden rule. The golden rule, at best, allows for asking that, but it doesn't say to do that. You are adding on to the golden rule to make it work and no amount of pretending the golden rule says something it doesn't will change that.
The Golden Rule is a maxim, it does not attempt to spell out concrete actions. It provides a means of testing potential actions by placing yourself in the other persons shoes and asking "Would I like to be treated this way?"
Do, no does not. It literally does the opposite, saying to do to people what you would want done to you. Any concern for the other person's wishes is outside of the golden rule. You are pretending the golden rule says something it does not.
The Golden Rule does not attempt to place you over the other; it is specifically designed to counter that by asking you to place yourself in the shoes of the other person. ("Would I want this done to me?").
Again, the golden rule doesn't say that at all. It literally says to do the opposite of that.
I really don't think that the Golden Rule would have endured the test of time if it was as stupid as some here are trying to make it seem.
It's actually obvious. I'm hungry, so I want YOU to eat something. So I can follow the Golden Rule. Come on, people. It's a good rule. Quit bickering about every little thing.
I really don't think that the Golden Rule would have endured the test of time if it was as stupid as some here are trying to make it seem.
Most people rarely follow the golden rule. Instead, they follow generally accepted customs in their society and defer to other people's wishes and desires.
It's actually obvious. I'm hungry, so I want YOU to eat something. So I can follow the Golden Rule. Come on, people. It's a good rule. Quit bickering about every little thing.
The golden rule is one of those things that sounds great until you actually think about what it's saying and follow it to it's logical conclusion. As far as bickering, sounds like you're the one with the problem, so feel free to exit the thread or quit partaking. What you aren't free to do is to tell me what to do.