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| Epistemology The Philosophy of Knowledge. Is knowledge really important and in what ways is knowledge acquired? Rationalism or Empiricism? |
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| Re: The Selfish Nature Of All Actions Quote:
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| Re: The Selfish Nature Of All Actions
The answers surprizingly enough still lay in familarity of the material in question, both the reading of, and understand of, Mark Twain's "What Is Man." and Arthur Schopenhauer's "The Foundations Of Morality." |
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| Re: The Selfish Nature Of All Actions Quote:
What is a thick view of selfishness? A selfish motive is wanting something to which one is not entitled at the expense of someone else. A selfish action is an attempt to get something to which one is not entitled at the expense of someone else. Why is that view thin? |
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| Re: The Selfish Nature Of All Actions Quote:
I read a book which said self-sacrifice is exemplified by the deontological position, and att the opposite end of the continuum is self-actualization ("selfishness"?), exemplified by the eudaemonic position. Sure eudaimonists can reframe every charitable act as selfish--they may not be capable of actually accurately SEEING charity, because their eudaimonic worldview distorts their input. It biases every event, forcing it to be consistent with their worldview, in a self-maintaining loop. I come to this discussion as a psychotherapist, not as a philosopher. It is difficult for most of us to imagine a Western individual therapy that aims for anything but the personal well-being, happiness, or self-actualization of the individual client. A eudaimonist therapy endorses personal happiness, and never asks a person to sacrifice apparent self-interest for a greater good. All mainstream individual therapies take this eudaemonic position. On the other hand, the deontological position holds people have an obligation to sacrifice apparent self-interest for greater goodness. A number of collectivist therapies take the deontological position that the individual members of a couple or client family must sacrifice their pursuit of self-interest in order for the families' presenting problems to be resolved. For what it's worth. Billy |
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| Re: The Selfish Nature Of All Actions
I'm just jumping in also. Question: Can any act be 100% altruistic?
__________________ de omnibus dubitandum est |
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| Re: The Selfish Nature Of All Actions
de Silentio's question raised this one for me in response: How could we tell? One way or the other? We have no measuring instrument for the human heart... Of course my musing above assumes that humans have a "heart". |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - NeitherExtreme for the above post! | ||
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| Re: The Selfish Nature Of All Actions Quote:
Who decides what he is entitled to? are any of my siblings entitled to any of the cookies my mom bought for the family? If I eat them all, am I selfish? What if the family has been depriving me in other ways, and this is just my way of righting the injustice? Am I still selfish? Anne Frank (and more recently, Will Smith) said they believe people are basically good. Do you believe this? Can people be basically selfish AND basically good at the same time? Ayn Rand would say YES, that the only good person is a selfish one. That charity is always bad, not only because it erodes the self esteem of the receiver, but because they are receiving something they are not entitled to. Does that make me truly GOOD for eating all the cookies? I think I need help. Billy |
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| Re: The Selfish Nature Of All Actions Quote:
My argument applies to both, what you call self-interested and what you call selfish. My argument being: that claiming "all action is self-interested" or "all action is selfish" or "all action is X", X being any sort of motivation, is something that simply cannot be shown. Such claims are nonfalsifiable. Quote:
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But seriously. I think people can be basically good and act selfishly. If, for example, you have a Randroid, the goal is still to act "good", even if they take good to mean selfish. |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - Didymos Thomas for the above post! | ||
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| Re: The Selfish Nature Of All Actions Quote:
For the Deontologist, selfish is bad. Some people are stuck wearing worldview lenses that prevents them from framing any action as other-than-selfish. |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - Billy for the above post! | ||
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