Me wrote:I'm annoyed that relativists and people who don't believe in good and evil merely dismiss Knives as a "victim of circumstance." They blame his hatred of the human race on his poor upbringing. This, to me is a weak argument because Vash recieved the same amount of education/abuse from the human crew of SEEDS and ended up cherishing all life. If two brothers live in the same environment with the same influences and end up acting totally different from each other, then their differences are attributable to a fundamental difference in their personality and convictions. In other words, they themselves are responsible for how they turn out. We see that Vash is more emotionally sensitive while Knives is more logically minded. I will consider three things...
1. Their education about Earth. They learned humans fight amongst themselves and are chiefly responsible for the deterioration of the environment.
2. Rem's lessons on morality.
3. Steve's abuse.
The two react to the three situations in different ways. Knives is more receptive to 1 while Vash is more receptive to 2. This shows itself chiefly in their attitude concerning number 3. Vash is primarily concerned with how to get along with everyone while Knives looks at everything at a cause-and-effect basis and adapts himself and his surroundings to his favor. In situation 3, Vash cries because he can't get along with Steve while Knives applies his education from 1 to ameliorate their situation, primarily the whole "thinking of the smallest sacrifice one can make to survive". Of course, the primary rift between the two occurs during...
4. The spider-butterfly incident.
The emotional Vash wants to preserve the butterfly without harming the spider but the logical Knives knows that in order for one to survive, the other will die.
Another thing that annoys me is how people try to say Vash or Knives is "right" when it comes to the spider-fly argument. IMHO they're both wrong. Vash is wrong because of the reasons Knives stated. Knives is wrong because 1.) He assumes the spider can only subsist on butterflies 2.) His paradigm dictates that an entire species of animal needs to be destroyed to preserve another. This means he decides who lives and who dies, which is playing God. People whine about how Rem's teachings "corrupted" Vash into a "spineless coward", but considering her slight Judeo-Christian leanings, I think she meant something deeper like "It's not up to us who lives or dies." And Vash isn't so stringent when it comes to his no-killing policy. He likes to eat meat.
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