For [livejournal.com profile] lastvoyages: Second Casefile [Written]

Sep. 12th, 2011 05:50 pm
cannibalmind: (getting the scent)
[personal profile] cannibalmind
[Private]
Case Study Two: Richard, "Ritchie", Inmate to Will Graham, last name unknown.

Ritchie presents as a quietly nervous young man with the distinct goatish odor of schizophrenia to him. Outwardly neat, presentable and soft-spoken, he carries around a tremendous amount of tension and I suspect has a violent temper. From his dependency and immaturity I suspect that he never had the opportunity to grow in a healthy manner before he was struck down by his illness. He does not appear to have received treatment, or even a clear diagnosis from a professional, and may well be in complete denial about his illness. Will and I discussed him, and his Warden agrees that acknowledging what the young man has suffered, alone or near to it and certainly without proper help, will be key to gaining his trust and cooperation. Despite his illness and certain...unpleasant proclivities toward women, he strikes me as quite intelligent and with a great deal of untapped potential.

Note to self: talk to him one on one.

[Public]
Every culture and society has its own moral standards. I speak not of the laws of a society, but rather its unwritten cultural rules and mores--that which is assumed to be so obviously right and wrong that it need not even be codified.


As an example, consider the four Japanese Pillars of Moral Character. [His pronunciation of each term is perfect.] On is the principle of repaying one's debts, both literal and debts of honor. Gimu is the principle of owing allegiance to the holder of any debts you cannot repay, such as when one owes one's life to another. Giri refers to the execution of one's obligations, both of occupation and of private life, to the best of one's ability. Finally, Ninjo, the compassionate acknowledgment of the interconnectedness of all people and in a larger sense, all living things. The value of these principles were impressed upon me in my youth, and I have come to be reminded of them of late.

Yet no moral code means much of anything unless it is internalized and brought into action by individual people. In internalizing cultural mores, of course, the mores themselves tend to change. People will relate to one part of a code and yet find others irrelevant to their lives; others will attempt the whole exercise, subsuming any personal moral thought in favor of what their society deems to be right. And even then, the ways in which each person acts upon commonly accepted morals changes with their characters. A soldier sees nothing contradictory in fighting for peace, for example, though he by all rights values it more by knowing its opposite so intimately. Yet many civilians would see this as a contradiction. They forget the need for rough men standing ready in the night because violence is so foreign to their day to day experience. Who is right? Is there not room in society for both points of view?

Is morality rigidly unshakeable at its heart, or is it fluid and subject to cultural, situational and personal relativity? I would argue the latter...but only to a point. Like a willow tree, morality bends with the wind, but it has certain immovable roots. Can they be identified and agreed upon? And if so, what are they?

Where is your baseline for morality? What do you believe are the moral arguments that all can agree upon, or which are most practical?

[private; very good Japanese for a nonnative]

Date: 2011-09-14 10:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cannibalmind.livejournal.com
You make an excellent point.

Ah--I spent eight years being raised by my aunt, a descendant of Lady Murasaki. We visited Japan on a few occasions, but most of what I learned I learned from her.

[He is keeping to polite pronouns as well, despite her age.]
From: [identity profile] nicebluehat.livejournal.com
[Well that's an interesting claim. She doesn't know as much about real literature as even a high school student forced to sit through a literature class, but she's not that ignorant. She's also struck by the way he's talking to her, and a little flattered despite, well, who he is from what she can tell of the other responses.] Really. I take it she valued tradition greatly despite living in a foreign land.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-15 02:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cannibalmind.livejournal.com
She carried Japan in her heart. I admit that sometimes I fear I could not quite live up to such a high ideal. But she was...a light for me in a very dark time.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-15 08:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nicebluehat.livejournal.com
[Naoto is a teenager and less than impressed with Japanese social morals in practice, though the basic principles of traditional morality are sound.] It's certainly a difficult ideal to practice without two or more of the principles coming into conflict. She must have been an incredible woman to still impress you all these years later.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-15 10:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cannibalmind.livejournal.com
They do come into conflict. One must find ways to handle such conflicts gracefully, something I have done with...heh heh...varying degrees of success.

Lady Murasaki was...one of a kind. She is one of only three women I have ever known who truly inspired me.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-16 12:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nicebluehat.livejournal.com
Why not discard them altogether, construct your own system for your own peace? [It's clearly not meant as a practical suggestion.]

I'll be lucky if I'm ever able to say the same.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-16 03:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cannibalmind.livejournal.com
Between you and I...

When I died I found that it was my unmet obligations that I regretted the most.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-16 07:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nicebluehat.livejournal.com
But because you had wanted to fulfill them, or felt a duty to?

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-16 11:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cannibalmind.livejournal.com
Both. I had not allowed myself before that moment to fully understand how important it was to me to regain my honor, and make up for the breaches I had made in my own code. I am not a good man. I admit that fully; I would not be an Inmate here if I were. But...I am still a man of noble aspiration.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-16 11:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nicebluehat.livejournal.com
[She doesn't know how much of this is true. If he's here, he's done some terrible things, but if there's anything she's learned professionally, it's just how many kinds of sinners and criminals there are. Your murderer might not be your liar or manipulator, and that second might not do it out of malice.]

What do you aspire to, if you were to be freed?

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-16 11:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cannibalmind.livejournal.com
I would want my practice back, for those were my best years. A quiet home somewhere with a well-stocked kitchen and art room. And...well. Some things are impossible. But those are the basics.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-17 12:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nicebluehat.livejournal.com
Peace, then, was what you fought for before? [sotto voce] No... that's simply what he had, before whatever brought him here.

I mean, you would only take back what you had before? You seem much easier to please than most people here on either side of the bars.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-17 02:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cannibalmind.livejournal.com
I suppose if I could have anything it would be my ancestral home and holdings. But...yes. It is true, in many ways I am a simple man with simple needs.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-17 02:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nicebluehat.livejournal.com
Then... if I can ask without being too presumptuous?... what is it that brought you here?

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-17 03:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cannibalmind.livejournal.com
I have done several very wicked things which Will Graham mentioned in a Bargewide warning. I have killed several times, for example.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-17 03:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nicebluehat.livejournal.com
Please forgive my ignorance. I wasn't present for that warning. I'm a fairly recent arrival, you see. How long have you been here?

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-17 03:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cannibalmind.livejournal.com
A few weeks. Ironically the man to whom I owe the debt of honor is Will Graham.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-17 03:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nicebluehat.livejournal.com
At least this place might offer you the opportunity to repay it.

[private, JP]

Date: 2011-09-17 05:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cannibalmind.livejournal.com
It is a hope of mine.

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