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Did Romans have any kind of “morality” as we understand it

It seems like they were all alpha af and would kill each oth...
appetizing new version
  05/02/24
Of course they did, but they borrowed a lot of it from the G...
Adventurous Fluffy Box Office
  05/02/24
...
frum ceo
  05/02/24
(inbred spawn of nigger flippers)
sienna kitty hell
  05/02/24
of course they did
Multi-colored canary gas station dopamine
  05/02/24
As we understand it -- no of course not. Their morality ...
racy principal's office
  05/02/24
Of course not. Christ was revolutionary with the inherent v...
Galvanic tripping cuckold giraffe
  05/02/24
i know youre flaming, but the infusion of Christian ethics i...
Hairraiser kitty cat
  05/02/24
...
blathering garnet fat ankles
  05/02/24
intended or not, this is a very hot take, at least as far as...
Anal autistic trailer park rigpig
  05/02/24
this is completely crazy Romans thought the Christians we...
diverse internet-worthy public bath
  05/02/24
couple things: there were wild outliers, like ascetic saints...
Hairraiser kitty cat
  05/02/24
are you aware that no part of your post (or anything youve p...
trip transparent brethren chapel
  05/02/24
a revolutionary ethic would have called for a new moral orde...
Hairraiser kitty cat
  05/02/24
not a big "christian" guy myself, but i'm pretty s...
trip transparent brethren chapel
  05/02/24
LOL, that guy debated you in good faith and you came back wi...
Rambunctious space
  05/03/24
...
thriller area generalized bond
  05/04/24
They did. There is a good passage on it from one of my rome ...
Free-loading Base Patrolman
  05/02/24
If they were so focused on rules and following them why are ...
Copper telephone
  05/02/24
Ostrogoths had bad blood and their awe at Roman culture, tec...
purple indian lodge trump supporter
  05/02/24
Cr.
citrine national
  05/02/24
as the empire was falling, its aristocrats fled and became a...
silver exhilarant lay
  05/02/24
...
trip transparent brethren chapel
  05/02/24
Good post. I'm having a hard time expressing what I'm gettin...
appetizing new version
  05/04/24
Yes, morality was largely centered around public service and...
plum rough-skinned sanctuary
  05/02/24
(Nietszche at age 7)
Duck-like cerebral ticket booth
  05/02/24
“Pietas was the Roman attitude of dutiful respect towa...
citrine national
  05/02/24
yeah their morals were just the opposite of ours lol
trip transparent brethren chapel
  05/02/24
...
Big Native Laser Beams
  05/02/24
...
Duck-like cerebral ticket booth
  05/02/24
Pagan societies generally have virtues, which are not necess...
soggy stirring ladyboy therapy
  05/02/24
"o tempora o mores" is perhaps *the* most famous l...
diverse internet-worthy public bath
  05/02/24
I remember a few things sticking out to me. I was interested...
wonderful gold haunted graveyard
  05/04/24
Komodus fucked his own sister. And the Spaniards killed him ...
Red Odious Church Building
  05/04/24
In theory they had high if narrow minded notions of justice ...
Free-loading Base Patrolman
  05/04/24


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Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 10:38 AM
Author: appetizing new version

It seems like they were all alpha af and would kill each other over nothing and feel no remorse, idk just different

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47627801)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 10:41 AM
Author: Adventurous Fluffy Box Office

Of course they did, but they borrowed a lot of it from the Greek writers of the 5th and 4th centuries.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47627812)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 10:44 AM
Author: frum ceo



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47627823)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 10:45 AM
Author: sienna kitty hell

(inbred spawn of nigger flippers)

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47627828)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 10:46 AM
Author: Multi-colored canary gas station dopamine

of course they did

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47627837)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 10:50 AM
Author: racy principal's office

As we understand it -- no of course not.

Their morality placed ancestors, family, citizens, and nation first.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47627864)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 11:04 AM
Author: Galvanic tripping cuckold giraffe

Of course not. Christ was revolutionary with the inherent value of human beings and treating people well because it’s the right thing to do and all that

Edit: they certainly had their own morality and it was 180 as fuck

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47627932)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 11:33 AM
Author: Hairraiser kitty cat

i know youre flaming, but the infusion of Christian ethics into roman morality is something i think a lot about.

Whether what Im calling "christian ethics" is a faithful reading of the NT, or the true message of Christ etc, is a debate Im not addressing.

I think its fair to say the main gist of Christian ethics is to moderate and to universalize.

It was seen as a moral good to punish criminals. Christian ethic is to moderate that punishment. Visit prisoners, etc. Important to note Christ did not seek to abolish prisons, but only that people visit prisoners. It was a moral good to adjudicate in courts. Christian ethics call judges to listen to plaintiffs who lacked social standing, like widows. Don't overthrow courts, but just have fair judges. It's seen as a moral good to abolish prostitution. Christians ethics: make the prostitute stop, but don't actually kill her, etc.

In a sense, Christian ethics don't have - or didnt have - their own content. It was just a moderating influence on Jewish and Roman ethics.

And it was always moderating towards leniency.

The other big push was universalizing obligations to family and tribe beyond bloodlines. The samaritan is your brother as much as the jew.

This is also, kind of, content-free. Its just an expansion of already formulated duties, often exaggeratedly so. "Loving your enemy" is on its face incoherent, because it undermines the meaning of the word enemy.

So, in effect, the Christian contribution was to moderate and to universalize.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47627996)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 11:59 AM
Author: blathering garnet fat ankles



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628061)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 1:06 PM
Author: Anal autistic trailer park rigpig

intended or not, this is a very hot take, at least as far as thinking and writing on the subject of Christian and NT ethics goes

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628223)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 2:28 PM
Author: diverse internet-worthy public bath

this is completely crazy

Romans thought the Christians were wild flame-branded zealots. think St Simeon Stylites

you're mixing up milquetoast 20th century suburban catholicism with Christianity as the late empire Romans would've experienced it

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628564)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 3:08 PM
Author: Hairraiser kitty cat

couple things: there were wild outliers, like ascetic saints. but I dont think theyre representative of the larger ethic

if i were to make the argument the other direction, I think it would go like this. There were core christian ethical tenets that wildly shocked romans and jews, in turn, and were definitely new content.

on the roman side, christians absolutely refused to venerate gods, even when most sophisticated romans thought it meant nothing, cost nothing, but was crucial to be a part of society. romans couldnt believe someone would die over this. they also rightly saw that if it spread, it would undermine everything

on the jewish side, christian ethics was based in the foulest blasphemy, besmirching the God whose name was inutterable by talking about the incarnation. They were also disgusted by the cannibalistic elements of the eucharist. And, perhaps most egregious, they were threatened by christians out-piousing them on things like divorce.

but a lot of this is more theological than ethical, and i still think the main push of christian ethics was to moderate and universalize pre-existing ethical codes. They were reformers more than revolutionaries

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628747)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 3:15 PM
Author: trip transparent brethren chapel

are you aware that no part of your post (or anything youve posted in this thread) supports the conclusion of your final line of this post

in fact it supports the complete opposite conclusion (that these people were revolutionaries and not reformers)

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628776)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 3:26 PM
Author: Hairraiser kitty cat

a revolutionary ethic would have called for a new moral order. the liberation of slaves. the overthrow of the moral leaders. a different set of different moral obligations. etc.

NT ethics were explicitly about two things:

1. upholding the current moral order of the jews, but moderating their harshest consequences. Jesus did not reject the notion that the crippled man was being punished for sin, but he forgave that sin. Jesus did not seek to empower the adulteress woman, but he instructed her to stop sinning while sparing her the death penalty. Jesus did not reject the ethics of the jewish covenant or the commandments, he said it all should be followed with exactitude, but with mercy.

What makes the pharisees so contemptible in the gospels is that they used sophistry and trickery to ensnare jesus and portray him as scandalous, when a straight reading indicates that he was posing no direct threat to their ethics, only their hypocrisy.

2. Jesus universalized tribal moral duties beyond the tribe. This was novel and probably shocking. But in essence, when you expand moral obligations to include others, you are reforming, not revolutionizing. It was an instruction like this: "You already know your obligations to group X. You owe the same to groups Y and Z."

You can call that revolutionary and make an argument I guess. But I think its a losing argument

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628807)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 3:27 PM
Author: trip transparent brethren chapel

not a big "christian" guy myself, but i'm pretty sure that "The last shall be first and the first shall be last" (sic) is in fact a "new moral order" and an overthrow of existing moral leaders and obligations

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628810)



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Date: May 3rd, 2024 2:35 AM
Author: Rambunctious space

LOL, that guy debated you in good faith and you came back with this?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47630219)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 4th, 2024 3:25 PM
Author: thriller area generalized bond



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47635032)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 11:12 AM
Author: Free-loading Base Patrolman

They did. There is a good passage on it from one of my rome books maybe i will find it online and post.

The cult of the family was the framework which was kind of replicated in the state religion. They were very legalistic and obsessed with “rules” at least on the face of things. Their treatment of slaves until the latter part of the empire when legal SCHOLARS and philosophers started to ascribe them basic human rights was the big departure from our modern notions of morality

Ask me more



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47627950)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 11:17 AM
Author: Copper telephone

If they were so focused on rules and following them why are Italians lazy corner-cutting pieces of shit today whereas Germans and northern Europeans are more obsessed with rule following?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47627962)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 11:27 AM
Author: purple indian lodge trump supporter

Ostrogoths had bad blood and their awe at Roman culture, technology, and architecture cowed them from any ambition to build something better

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47627989)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 12:05 PM
Author: citrine national

Cr.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628080)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 11:57 AM
Author: silver exhilarant lay

as the empire was falling, its aristocrats fled and became aristocrats elsewhere

the germans and northern europeans are probably descendants of those aristocrats

italy was left with mostly bottomfeeders

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628057)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 12:20 PM
Author: trip transparent brethren chapel



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628130)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 4th, 2024 12:36 PM
Author: appetizing new version

Good post. I'm having a hard time expressing what I'm getting at itt. Basically as a christian westerner, you're told to Not Sin, and not be Bad and to Behave. Your parents tell you to Play Outside and maybe play Sports in hopes that you become a Jock. It doesn't seem like there's a lot of emphasis on virtue in the Roman sense. It's more about Conformity.

At the same time, any read of Roman history shows how violent it was, and I'm talking mainly about political or "casual" bourgeoisie violence and not the type that criminals engage in. There were 70 Roman emperors, of which 33 were assassinated. I get the sense that people didn't balk at these assassinations the way that we did at the Kennedy assassination. Conspiring to cut off the emperor's head for no reason other than you want more power for yourself would be frowned upon in today's society. If it weren't then the CIA would come out and say "Yeah we did it."

You can also look at historical events like the Crusades, where there were ulterior motives involved but the rank and file knights were basically like "we are doing this for the sake of our God imo," i.e. not for personal glory or that of an empire. It just seems quintessentially not Roman. Maybe the most quintessentially modern value that we've introduced which the Romans lacked is Hypocrisy. Discuss.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47634677)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 11:54 AM
Author: plum rough-skinned sanctuary

Yes, morality was largely centered around public service and civic duty. One’s inner sense of self-worth was indistinguishable from their outward reputation for public service. “Res publica” literally means “public business.” This overriding sense of public duty led to competition among the elite to strive for the glory of the republic by winning wars and providing will for resurrecting themselves even after devastating defeats that would have squashed other empires. They simply never gave up.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628047)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 12:00 PM
Author: Duck-like cerebral ticket booth

(Nietszche at age 7)

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628067)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 12:13 PM
Author: citrine national

“Pietas was the Roman attitude of dutiful respect towards the gods, homeland, parents and family, which required the maintenance of relationships in a moral and dutiful manner.[21] Cicero defined pietas as "justice towards the gods.”[22] It went beyond sacrifice and correct ritual performance to inner devotion and righteousness of the individual, and it was the cardinal virtue of the Roman hero Aeneas in Vergil's Aeneid. The use of the adjectival form Pius as a cognomen reflects its importance as an identifying trait. Like Fides, Pietas was cultivated as a goddess, with a temple vowed to her in 191 BC[23] and dedicated ten years later.”

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mos_maiorum

Lol at sewer skunk millennial white women, just lol.



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628104)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 12:20 PM
Author: trip transparent brethren chapel

yeah their morals were just the opposite of ours lol

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628128)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 2nd, 2024 12:24 PM
Author: Big Native Laser Beams



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628143)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 1:16 PM
Author: Duck-like cerebral ticket booth



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628264)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 1:10 PM
Author: soggy stirring ladyboy therapy

Pagan societies generally have virtues, which are not necessarily in line with our idea of what morals are. It's what a person's actions say about their character, not whether the action itself is moral.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628244)



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Date: May 2nd, 2024 2:29 PM
Author: diverse internet-worthy public bath

"o tempora o mores" is perhaps *the* most famous line in Roman rhetoric

I assume he was referring to something



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47628571)



Reply Favorite

Date: May 4th, 2024 7:30 PM
Author: wonderful gold haunted graveyard

I remember a few things sticking out to me. I was interested in what a roman prison would be like. Basically they didn't have them. If it was a moderately bad offense you were a slave. If it was worse, you were a slave in a literal salt mine where everyone died within three years of hard labor. Any worse than that and it was death.

The other thing was an account of Christians that stuck out to me. Deformed babies were tossed in the river and they kicked the early Christians that would go in and fish the babies out to care for them. I figure early Christians were the shit libs of the day.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47635586)



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Date: May 4th, 2024 7:35 PM
Author: Red Odious Church Building

Komodus fucked his own sister. And the Spaniards killed him and also fucked his sister.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47635592)



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Date: May 4th, 2024 10:52 PM
Author: Free-loading Base Patrolman

In theory they had high if narrow minded notions of justice and due process. If you read trajans letters to pliny he gives all kinds of examples and instructions about how to govern the province in a very pedantic and detail oriented, legalistic way. Even when describing how to handle cases of alleged christians he basically tells him that anonymous accusations are not evidence and that any accusee christian who repents or venerates the roman gods will just be given the benefit of the doubt

They were also obsessed with legalistic and political formalities even if on the surface. Caesar and Augustus both went through all kinds of lengths to take on offices or assume what appeared to be constitutional grants of power when in reality they just controlled the army and had power by the sword. But it was important to appear dedicated to the civic customs to the extent possible

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5523976&forum_id=2#47636034)