Mr. Superhero
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But surely, the enjoyment of murder is considered "totally irrational"?I disagree with that notion, and I said that in my previous post. Many people today have posted definitions on insanity, and none, NONE of them said, "one who enjoys killing."
Sanity:Now, I'm not saying it's okay to enjoy killing. It's not, it's wrong. But that relates to morals, not sanity. We believe it is morally wrong to kill, so a person who enjoys killing is morally wrong, not insane.
1. The quality or condition of being sane; soundness of mind.
2. Soundness of judgment or reason.
I beg to differ. If you are morally correct, then you have a "soundness of mind". If you enjoy killing people, then you are morally inept, and thus are not sound in the mind.
It's a symbiosis.
Okay, so, according to you, a man who can fly a plain, fend Batman off at the same time, all while making a joke out of the situation, is not "immoderate, wild or senseless" (definitions for "insane")?A person who enjoys killing does not need to have a deranged sense of the world. They don't have to have multiple personalities or hear voices. Sometimes we hope they do because it gives us a reason to explain why these people do what they do. But sometimes, people are born with no moral compass, and they simply enjoy killing. This is NOT insanity, this is SOCIOPATHY.
If you ask me, I just think you're having difficulty understanding the dictionary definition for "insane". The Joker exhibits many "insane" attributes. I mean, what is your definition of insane, other than someone who eats poo or whatever?
According to my dictionary, the Joker is very much insane, because he seems to tick all of the boxes. Also, I refer you back to the slogan for "The Killing Joke". Apparently, the Joker is beyond insanity...
Alan Moore disagrees with your opinion that the Joker isn't insane.
I see the difference perfectly, but it is you who cannot accept that Joker is both insane and a sociopath. I mean, if he is "beyond insanity", then surely he is beyond sociopathy?Do you see the difference?
Oh my Goodness; you have just gone and assumed what the word "insane" means, without looking it up. An insane person is someone who is highly immoderate, irrational and senseless.An insane person perceives the world in a completely different way then we do.
Kind of sounds like a good description for the Joker, wouldn't you say?
So, you can understand why the Joker takes pictures of dead people for his own personal amusement?A way we can't understand.
The dictionary disagrees with you. All that says is that being insane is all about being immoderate, irrational and senseless. You are just assuming what these words mean.A sociopath perceives the world the same as us. They know what's right, they know what's wrong, they know you don't crow like a chicken and dance naked in the street, they don't hear voices or see people who aren't there.
What a sane thing to do, right?They just enjoy killing.
What an outright contradiction.That has nothing to do with my point. Yes that man is insane. His reasoning is skewed, and his sense of right and wrong is completely off.
By this statement, you are implying that the Joker's actions are perfectly justified and that his reasoning isn't skewed. I mean, how is trying to "prove a point" a justifiable excuse for shooting an innocent person and then showing pictures of their naked body to their parents? That reasoning seems pretty skewed to me...
Also, what you seem to be forgetting is that the guy who raped his own daughter is the only crime he every committed -- doesn't the Joker commit appalling crimes on a regular basis?
So, why isn't the slogan to "The Killing Joke" read as: "Beyond evil is sociopathy, beyond sociopathy is the Joker"?A sociopath on the other hand, could do the same thing, but do it for no reason other then they felt like it.
Seems to me like you are neglecting the key synonyms for the word "insane". If you read the definitions for the word, then you will see that they are a very accurate description for the Joker.
And, as I have stated, the Joker is both. I'm trying to be reasonable with you here...They know it's wrong, and they don't need to try and justify it the way this man did. They simply have no moral compass. Do you see the difference?
Kind of sounds like a good description for the Joker...This man is insane because he now is viewing the world in a tilted view. He has to use skewed logic to justify them.
What a muddled argument. You are trying too hard to define these words. Just use the dictionary. The Joker exhibits attributes from both the synonyms used to describe "sociopath" and "insane".he way he perceives life has been altered. A sociopath would know what they did was bad, but just do it because they wanted to.
It's a simple argument, really...
The Joker is insane. According to the dictionary, anyway.
So, according to your superb logic, the Joker is "of sound mind"? He shows "good judgment"? He acts "rationally"? The Joker is the complete opposite of all these descriptive words, and is thus not sane. If this is what you have concluded from reading up about the Joker character, then I am afraid that I may not be of any help to you.I'm implying that he is sane, but also a sociopath. I thought I made that clear.
And that's exactly what did happen. He fell into the chemicals, and was driven insane.However, I'm not trying to say that the Joker is this way 100% of the time. I actually prefer him to be the guy that was driven mad after a crappy life and one bad accident. But I don't mind this other point of view either.
Hey, Alan Moore seems to share the same opinion...
No, don't worry -- I'm not that insane.I hope you're not trying to imply that Joker wasn't trying to prove a point. He says it himself.

You have missed my point.If you think Joker did all that to Gordon just to get his rocks off then you completely missed the entire point of that book. Everything he did was to prove his point.
Sure, the Joker tried to drive Gordon insane to prove a point, but who asked him to prove a point? Nobody. He did that himself, because he felt that it would be a fun thing to do, and who knows, he might have proved something to himself and to others in the process. But, in all actuality, the Joker tried to drive Gordon insane because he, himself, is insane. That's what insane people do. They do things that are completely against rationality.
I really don't see what you are trying to show by this. If the Joker insists that driving Gordon insane will prove his point and show that he isn't so different to others, then what does that say about Joker's state of mind? It says that he is friggin' insane, himself, doesn't it? Because by driving Gordon to lunacy, he will show that that is how he was driven to lunacy.
What aren't you getting here? The Killing Joke, in of itself, kills your argument, because the entire book is based on the Joker's insanity, not his sociopathy, or whatever...
And yet driving Gordon insane would have proved Joker's point. And what was Joker's point? That he wasn't so different from the world. His insanity was developed over the coarse of "one bad day".As I proved above, Joker did all he did in TKJ to prove a point. All the actions he did could be the same actions of a sociopath who likes to hurt people and wants to prove a point.
Sociopathy is merely a resulting factor in being driven insane. There are many holes in your argument.
Yep, I suppose none of the Joker's actions are immoderate, irrational and senseless, are they?His actions do not make him insane
And what has insanity got to do with "viewing the world differently"? It's got nothing to do with how you "view the world" in a generic sense. This is just your own personal definition of the word. Insanity is all about displaying a great deal of mental derangement. If you are deranged, then you have a morally inept approach to life. When the Joker fell into the chemicals; he looked at himself, and burst out laughing...It's his perception of the world. If the Joker sees the world the same as us, but simply likes to hurt people, then he's a sociopath.
He explains why, in TKJ, when he tries to persuade Gordon to do the same thing that he did. When the Joker explains all those things to Gordon about "madness being the emergency exit", he is speaking from personal experience.
He did the same thing. Why do I even need to explain this to you?
"My point is... my point is -- I went crazy."
The Joker is goddamn insane.
HAHA...another "assumption" on your part.If the Joker sees the world through a completely different view, one that makes no sense and is not comprehensible to us, then he's crazy.
What I don't understand is, if Joker is just a "sociopath", then I take it that Joker is lying to Batman about him being "reduced to lunacy"? It really is quite confounding, because your entire argument seems to be rebelling against everything that was presented to us in TKJ.
To prove his point, the Joker had to drive Gordon insane within the coarse of "one bad day". Why? Because that's what happened to the Joker. He wanted to prove to the likes of Batman that everyone is just as insane as he is, when breached. How does this not show that Joker is insane?
And through insanity comes sociopathy.A Sociopath is not merely a anti-social disorder. It's a person who has no moral compass. A person with no conscience. They could do the most horrible deeds alive and it won't bother them.
And it's not just my interpretation, as I said above, I enjoy both takes on the character.
That's why the Joker attempted to drive Gordon insane. Because through insanity Gordon would have become just as morally deranged as the Joker.
That's the entire point of the book -- it explains how the Joker became so evil.
It happened because he was driven insane.

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