sith_happened: (Anakin: seriously?!)
Anakin Skywalker ([personal profile] sith_happened) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2010-09-30 08:54 am
Entry tags:

Ethics [Thursday, September 30]

Anakin had backed himself up against his desk looking a little hunted as a unicorn talked to him. "You're so tall," it was saying happily. "And have such nice blue eyes--"

"Um, right," he said, turning his attention to the class. "Everyone look under your chairs, please," he said. A third of the students going by how they sign into class would find a bag with a full-sized chocolate bar waiting for them. A third would find a bag with a fun-sized chocolate bar. A third would find nothing at all.

"Oooh, chocolate!" the unicorn squealed. "That's so nice!"

Anakin ignored the unicorn as he waited for whatever grumbling there might be to subside. "Anyone feeling a little ripped off right now?" he asked rhetorically. "Two minutes ago no one had any candy and everyone was fine. Now I haven't taken anything away from anyone, no one's any worse off than they were when they walked in the door, and some of you are thinking very nasty things about me. Some of you have more than you did when you came into the classroom and still feel like you've been given an unfair deal."

"That's really smart," the unicorn commented.

Anakin moved on. "Isn't envy fun? Under its grip we never concentrate on the gifts we have been given."

"Like your hair," the unicorn added.

"Instead we focus on what others have that we want," Anakin said as his cheeks heated. "It's entirely a question of attitude. Today's question: how would someone capitalize on that very human failing if they were seeking to manipulate others?"

He looked around. "And where did that rainbow come from?"

The unicorn looked embarrassed.

Re: Answer the discussion question [9/30]

[identity profile] give-areason.livejournal.com 2010-09-30 04:07 pm (UTC)(link)
It was very tempting to ignore him. Rosalind wasn't, erm, particularly forgiving. So, still very cool.

"The hostage taker is being manipulated by their own needs, not by outside influences," or they could be, but that was an added level of manipulation Rosalind wasn't going to bring up at the moment, "and they are the one doing the manipulation in this scenario. The victim can only do what they're being manipulated for unless their family bond is not so strong."

Some people would choose themselves over their family. Rosalind... wasn't one of them.
furnaceface: (Sitting On Steps)

Re: Answer the discussion question [9/30]

[personal profile] furnaceface 2010-09-30 04:16 pm (UTC)(link)
And some people didn't have family to worry about in the first place. Or, at least, family that cared enough to bother keeping in touch, even before their son had managed to blow a whole in himself and level half a building while he was at it.

//It makes for a few levels of manipulation, in the end,// he noted. //I suppose, in the end, it all boils down to th'same thing. Find something that a person believes they have an immediate need for, and there's a chance that they could be driven to do some very... desperate things.//

Re: Answer the discussion question [9/30]

[identity profile] give-areason.livejournal.com 2010-09-30 04:20 pm (UTC)(link)
"That," she said, "we can agree on."

Though Rosalind strongly wondered how far their definitions of desperate differed and that made her feel a bit--awkward.
furnaceface: (Loooonely)

Re: Answer the discussion question [9/30]

[personal profile] furnaceface 2010-09-30 04:29 pm (UTC)(link)
And Jono as well, but only if he let himself think on it too thoroughly.

He had a good many other things on his mind today. And so he was going to let the conversation end with a nod, a bit of a fidget, and then some more awkward poking at the chocolate that he couldn't eat.