Banality of good
The banality of good is a concept of Christian ethics evil deeds carry much more weight than good ones. This truth can be observed in creation in the it is far easier to destroy than to build. A small amount of poison can contaminate a well, but a vast amount of water is required to dilute it to the point of safety, and no amount of dilution can truly remove the poison. This leads to the Christian concept of sin. The Bible teaches that all people sin and are falling short of the 100% standard required of them. Since no-one is able to meet this standard, humans are equally guilty before God of "missing the mark".
Ecclesiasties 9:18-10:1 Wisdom is better than weapons of war, but one sinner destroys much good. Dead flies make the perfumer's ointment give off a stench; so a little folly outweighs wisdom and honor.
"The toil of all that be
Helps not the primal fault
It rains into the sea
And still the sea is salt" - A. E. Housman
Contents
Analogies
Drinking water is necessary for life, but drinking poison results in death. Imagine a glass of pure water and one of pure poison; only the pure water is drinkable, but any mixture of the two is undrinkable. Whether your glass contains only one drop of poison, or if it contains 50% or 100% poison, it's result is the same, the drinkers will end up equally dead.
Entropy
Within physics, The second law of thermodynamics holds that within a given system, overall [entropy] or "disorder" will always increase until it reaches a state of maximum entropy. This physical law, is parallel to the principle of the banality of good in that every action undertaken to increase order locally inevitably does so at the expense of order elsewhere, so that entropy is maintained and the second law remains true.
Game theory
In a branch of mathematics known as "game theory" The prisoners dilemma and Nash equilibria.
Implications
An understanding of the banality of good (and the malignancy of evil) leads the farmer to be skeptical of biocides which are intended to deal with a specific problem, but often end up creating problems bigger than the original issue they were intended to address. Within the fields of medicine and bio-ethics, a principle precept is Primum non nocere or first, do no harm. This principle which is taught as
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