adam1701z wrote: ↑May 11th, 2022, 3:50 pm That's not really the question. Even if Germany would win WWII it still wouldnt justify what the Nazis did. The question is not whether any society felt what is moral or not. It is whether there are eternal truths. Rape or torturing babies surely can come under something as an immoral act? At any given time? No?No, not even that.
The point about the actions of the German state is that they were purely legal and justified on moral grounds.
Hitler mobilised that great arbiter of moral reason; disgust and order. He made all but the "German" disgusting, and led them to a well ordered moral society in their own terms.
Raping a non-human is not rape.
In the earliest legal document on earth: The Gortyn code, it sets out the "penalties" for rape. The price did not go to the woman for compensation but to her husband. Such an act was only illegal if the victim was owned in some way, and the crime was against the owner.
When you read it, the document reads like a price list, where the wives attract a much higher price than other women. Slaves could be raped with only a small fee to be paid to the owner.
This was the norm- the eternal moral truth ancient Greek style and it was seen as progressive.
So in answer to your question Rape or torturing babies surely can come under something as an immoral act? At any given time? No?
The answer is definitely, NO.