I already covered it all. You need to read my post again.
If your way of having "a thrill of the moment" is not "thrilling" to other people around you then you need to keep it for some other private moment or surrounding. If we are mature then we should not have problem in understanding such a simple thing.
I kinda understand now, but then that leaves me questioning religion. There's always something having to end up with something else.A triumvirate of Religion, Influence, and History mixed together in a melting pot of smut, in all honesty. You take several spiritual societies (not just the super-powerful and super-political Catholic Church [back in the day]) all agreeing that certain words are nasty and shouldn't be said, you bring that powerful influence down upon the people, the generations of parents believe the same thing as well, and you let the melting pot stew for 1.5 thousand years. You have now just enveloped all of society to believe that these words are hot buttons that should be addressed with soapy mouths.
In philosophy, we discuss Lord of the Flies, where those who are put into a place of anarchy have no influences or rules to abide by. Then they all of a sudden say a word that would have been devious against society. Would they think it so? No, they would have considered it just another word.
Ass is still considered offensive at my school, but hell or bugger are not. I wonder what would happen if we gave up telling the next generation of kids to swear. Would our society crumble or would it be the same just with more idiots walking around.I completely agree that current profanity will lose it's impact. As a kid the 'bad words' I was taught never to use were simple ones like ass/bugger/hell. These words have pretty much become perfectly acceptable in everyday conversation.
I don't totally agree with giving up and letting profanity have it's place in life. It would be nice for the words to lose their impact but them being a tad touchy is still quite useful. The reason why I make an effort not to curse around kids is because it is a good way to teach restraint. Teach them to think about whether it is appropriate to say what they were thinking. Kinda like how some of the people who swore their heads off as kids are generally the ones who got physically aggressive first.