But to purge that nature. You believe it's impossible?
[Some feverish part of him refuses to believe this, logical and rational as it sounds. Some feverish part of him that sees the world only in black and white with no shades of gray believes that the ugliness must be gone entirely for someone to be better.]
[But if that were the case, he wouldn't be Dio's child at all, would he.]
Did you know that the original meaning of "gestalt" is "other", not "more"? Thus not greater than the sum of the parts--other than the sum of the parts. Not inherently positive. That says something about human nature, I think, that it's been so willfully mistranslated over the years. Although perhaps that looks different from the outside in.
[Some feverish part of him refuses to believe this, logical and rational as it sounds. Some feverish part of him that sees the world only in black and white with no shades of gray believes that the ugliness must be gone entirely for someone to be better.]
[But if that were the case, he wouldn't be Dio's child at all, would he.]
Did you know that the original meaning of "gestalt" is "other", not "more"? Thus not greater than the sum of the parts--other than the sum of the parts. Not inherently positive. That says something about human nature, I think, that it's been so willfully mistranslated over the years. Although perhaps that looks different from the outside in.
Pruning. Or breeding. It's a sound enough practice that humans use it on species they deem to be less than themselves, for whatever reason. Demons aren't the only ones who believe in this, either. Frightened humans do, too. Best to be strong and impermeable.
It says that human beings want desperately to be better than they truly believe they are. To be capable of betterment. Sentience breeds self-loathing, which breeds failure.
It says that human beings want desperately to be better than they truly believe they are. To be capable of betterment. Sentience breeds self-loathing, which breeds failure.
No.
[This he answers without hesitation. Then, a moment later:]
Not if he models it well and thoroughly. Someone who only models empathy up to a point and then makes the choice not to at a point when a loved one's life is in danger is
If he models it well and thoroughly, there is no difference. I don't think so.
[This he answers without hesitation. Then, a moment later:]
Not if he models it well and thoroughly. Someone who only models empathy up to a point and then makes the choice not to at a point when a loved one's life is in danger is
If he models it well and thoroughly, there is no difference. I don't think so.
Have you?
[He wonders if he has, too. In the mirror, maybe, over a year ago now--after he passed Polpo's test, before he met Mista and Fugo and Narancia and Abbacchio. Back when he was teetering on the edge, strong enough that he didn't feel in danger all the time, ambitious enough to be a danger himself.]
The flaw in the argument is the concept of good and evil, I think. The premise itself is flawed. But so is the world; people live their lives on the assumption that someone is judging them worthy or unworthy, whether that someone is their fellow person or something otherworldly.
[He wonders if he has, too. In the mirror, maybe, over a year ago now--after he passed Polpo's test, before he met Mista and Fugo and Narancia and Abbacchio. Back when he was teetering on the edge, strong enough that he didn't feel in danger all the time, ambitious enough to be a danger himself.]
The flaw in the argument is the concept of good and evil, I think. The premise itself is flawed. But so is the world; people live their lives on the assumption that someone is judging them worthy or unworthy, whether that someone is their fellow person or something otherworldly.


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