>>103384841in Japan it's shocking for someone to blow their nose in public, you're supposed to wait til you can get to a bathroom. until recently, it was normal in china for kids to just shit in the streets. none of this is inherent, nobody is born thinking this way, it's all learned. and it's all bollocks. because even when a behavior is good, it's worthless if you're only holding to it out of habit.
Think for yourself. and lest I sound too Rick Sanchez, if the answer you come up with is "nothing matters" you need to fucking keep thinking. you haven't found it yet. Thinking for yourself isn't an excuse to be selfish, you still have to care about other people, but it has to be YOU caring, not just some shit you were taught.
I do like how the book reminds girls to wash their hands afterwards, though. that never occurred to me since our activities are somewhat drier
to answer your insipid post though (and by answer, I mean with another question), do you think there's a moral component to another person's gratification if it literally makes no difference to the action (or in this case a non-action such as being-seen)? It sounds like you do, you wouldn't have asked unless that bizarre concept made sense in your head. Get it checked out, dude. You have a severe, and i mean a severely problematic and even dangerous break in your logic because you seem to think exposure-to-something is the same as involvement in that thing, and that being seen is forcing someone to look.
Or here's something simpler: has sexual crime (actions, remember) gone DOWN in places and times where they cracked down on viewing thing perceived as sexual?