I first explain what Care/Harm foundation is before I give my observations, moral interpretations, and connections. Haidt says how cold-blooded reptiles are cold-hearted as the majority of reptiles bet that few offspring will survive as they give birth to many offsprings just to leave their offsprings to their fate. Mammals, however, make sure that their offsprings reach adulthood as they take care of them.
First of all, I side with the views of King. If you feel that something is unjust, and you aren’t harming anyone why must you follow it? You have a responsibility to all of society to challenge what you feel is wrong. I agree with King when he says “The answer lies in the fact that there are two types of laws: just and unjust. I would be the first to advocate obeying just laws.
Leaders protect the community by having laws. Although some laws are just others are unjust because it goes against moral rights. Rule breakers are influential because they fight for what they believe in, while facing hardships. If there are no rule breakers or activist then there cannot be a healthy community. Rule breakers have to break the law to make communities healthy because the leaders can’t always see where they made mistakes.
Disobedience for the most part, is seen as a bad thing. However, in some way disobedience and rebellion can help to bring a favored outcome through a situation. An issue with obeying is that if people obey something blindly it can be problematic for one’s own well-being. For people looking for change in some ways, pushing against the rules is the only way to get what they want. Although to most, disobedience can be viewed as wrong and immoral, in many cases it can be the key one needs to make progress.
If something is constitutional, it goes with and agrees with what the constitution stated. Checks and balances would change Animal Farm in a really big way. Checks and balances would help Animal Farm to eliminate Napoleon's abuse of power when he killed lots of animals, slept on a bed, and allowed pigs to get up later than others. Napoleon killed lots of animals even though the sixth commandment states "No animal shall kill another animal." (Orwell 25).
People must protest and perform civil disobedience peacefully, and trust that there are people listening to them somewhere, and that their cause is valid. The idea that laws being removed ruthlessly in order to make things fair is not rational in fact Walter Woon from the essay titled "Rough Justice" adds to this point: " 'Loosening up won’t mean there will be chaos,' he says. ' But the law must be seen to work. The punishment is not the main thing. '
Michael Scofield gets himself in enough trouble in order for him to get sent to the same penitentiary as his brother’s in. Michael’s main idea is to get his brother Lincoln Burrow’s out of the prison, who has been set up and wrongly convicted, and will be incarcerated within a shorter amount of time, giving Michael a tight deadline. Michael is no harm to anybody in the prison; however, he breaks a lot of rules, and one of them is getting his brother out of jail. Michael accomplished tricking the whole system and planning on how to get his brother out of jail, meanwhile the prison guard’s believed they were just working.
We have rules for a reason and if we start breaking our own rules then there will be no more order. If you break one then there is no reason you could not break
When people do not agree with the law, the first instinct is to show their opinion and disapproval of the law. A lot of people will protest, sign petitions, or even peacefully resist the law. In today's society we see this everyday throughout all of the country. For example right now in the united states there is a humongous issue with authority and citizens. This matter is particularly African Americans feeling they do not get the right amount of justice from law enforcement officers.
Animal Farm -the history of a rebellion that went wrong- is George Orwell 's brilliant satire on the corrupting influence of power. It was first published in 1945. According to Orwell, the book reflects events leading up to the Russian Revolution of 1917 and then on into the Stalin era in the Soviet Union. In the book, Mr. Jones, the owner of the Manor farm is so lazy and drunken that one day he forgets to feed his livestock.
A utopia is beautiful and peaceful place or state which is perfect for everybody. What is a utopia for animals? According to the animals in Animal Farm, it is a place where there are no cruel humans killing and using them for their selfish needs. A revolution is the overthrow of a ruler or a system, which results in dramatic changes in society. The rebellion spurred by Old Major results in the overthrow of Mr. Jones, but does it make everything better?
“It is not wisdom but authority that makes a low.” Thomas Hobbes’ quote reveals that the world is all about authority and how powerful people are. In other words, to be able to rule, wisdom is not essential. However, authority is crucial. This quote relates to George Orwell’s Animal Farm as it represents the theme of power by the pigs that use propaganda, intimidation and false informations to take over the farm and to control the animals.
Imagine a community with no hate, no war, and no famine. A place where everyone is accepted and everything is better than imaginable. This idea of perfection is known as a utopia, an ideal society. A utopia is known as a successful, perfect society. A place where everything goes right for everyone that lives there.
Published in 1945, Animal Farm is a satirical dystopian novella written by English author George Orwell, and is perhaps his best known work. An allegorical tale, Animal Farm tells a literal story - of the animals on the farm - that is intended to be representative of another situation - Stalin 's rise in the Soviet Union. Animal Farm opens on Manor Farm, where animals are subservient to their human master, a farmer named Jones. One night an aged boar called Old Manor calls a meeting of his fellow animals, and puts forth the call that they should one day rise up in rebellion against the humans who enslave them. Old Manor suggests that once humans have been overthrown, no animal should act like a human by sleeping in a bed, wearing clothes, drinking alcohol, or engaging in trade.
George Orwell’s novel, Animal Farm, was a great example of political satire and allegory. One of the main ideas in this novel was how each event paralleled events from the Russian Revolution. The novel was written to criticize tyrannical rule and particularly Joseph Stalin's corrupt rule in Russia. The characters, settings, and plot described the social disturbance during this period and proved how the good nature of communism could be turned into something atrocious from an idea as simple as greed.