Every ideology is based on a fundamental belief that there is "good" and "evil". Every stable ideology discovers that there are good and evil ways of defining "good" and "evil", and that it must be good, and is now extrapolating itself into its own attractor of ultimate goodness.
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Replying to @Plinz
Not every ideology is dual like this. Specifically the Hegelian dialectic calls out the fact that it is impossible to decide if any situation is "ultimately" good or evil, because it is impossible to know where it will lead.
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Replying to @Polycephaland
Yes, ideologies don't have to be totalistic ("all things are either good or evil"), and rationality must make it conditional (i.e. if good is consistent then the goodness status of most things must be derived from very few primary good or bad things, i.e. fundamental values).
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To fully understand this, it is necessary to realize that everything that actually exists is physics, and nothing in physics can be really good or evil.
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