TragicMonkey
Poisoned Waffles
Well, you're wrong. For instance, someone could be strongly opposed to lying as a matter of principle, but could be drive to lie in order to, for instance, avoid causing serious harm or death to someone. That's not abandoning their actual principles; it's recognising that they're on a scale, and no principle can be seen as absolute all the time. Otherwise one would be Bobbing.
When has declaring "you're wrong" ever convinced anyone of anything, or been considered a good argument in support of a point?
And I disagree. Some people do hold some principles as absolutes.
