Proven? Are you certain? — Banno
Do you understand that? — Outlander
You love it. You keep coming back for more. — Banno
So, nothing went wrong, it's just, it didn't seem to "catch" or what have you, in the sense of throwing things at a wall and seeing what sticks. — Outlander
Impossible = not possible.
Theoretically (practically unattainable) = possible. (albeit unlikely) — Outlander
But you probably will not get that reference. — Banno
If you start with the wrong question, you will get the wrong answer. — Banno
But for you, that's all there is... — Banno
you are, like it or not, a part of a community, a member of a group — Banno
To put it bluntly, your views, your limitations perhaps, weakness even, are yours and yours alone. Even if in principle they are shared by every person you've ever met or ever will meet, there's more than enough people (7 billion+) to warrant the belief that perhaps your way of looking at life, or rather, how your mind is forced to process life, isn't the only way to do so.
Does that make sense? — Outlander
Well, this is one person's opinion. Your assurance, your worldview, the way you were raised and so live your life. Surely you don't think out of the billions people alive and who were once alive, it's impossible not one person could have thought differently than how you do in a way that laughs in the face of the way you perceive life must be lived? — Outlander
separate the self from what is not self — Paine
Your version of solipsism is not the one I follow. Something like anarchism vs libertarianism vs liberalism. Close, but different.
— Copernicus
It's not my version - I don't exist. It's the reality of your realisation that you are the only mind, closing in on you.
So you are certain that you are never certain about anything. Cool. I'd say that problem was with coherence rather than certainty.
What I argued was that you can't betray your self
— Copernicus
You are betraying yourself, by writing as if we were here. We don't exist. There is only what you have in your head. — Banno
You seem very certain bout that. — Banno
Yeah, it is. All those threads about not caring for anyone else - that's all part of your realisation that you are alone. — Banno
If you are taking letters coming through a screen, then there exist letters and a screen. But no, you are a solipsist. There is only your mind, so the stuff I write here is somehow just part of that. — Banno
It's all in your head — Banno
Most people are selfish — Outlander
With the right fine-tuning and your own personal chaperoning and stewardship can turn into something readable and thought-provoking. I feel you've yet to take that step, however. Pardon me for saying. — Outlander
See that "we"? There is no "we" in solipsism. — Banno
something from "outside your head"? — Banno
Out of the billions (perhaps more) persons who have lived, there is absolutely no way to know at least one person never lived a life doing exactly that. Sure, it's likely it ended prematurely, perhaps violently, and the person died an unknown and was never heard of or spoken of. But that doesn't matter as far as the premise of your OP is concerned. — Outlander
That makes selflessness theoretically (of course, practically) unattainable. — Copernicus
For him, we don't exist, so you already have left him to it. — Banno
You miss the point where the distinction arises. If your vision is of peace and justice for everyone, it is altruistic. If your vision is of your own well-being and prosperity alone, it is selfish. — Ludwig V
You only read part of what I said. You will surely not see what you choose not to look for. — Ludwig V
How would you know? — Ludwig V
Great post, just that one line sticks out to me as something that others might gloss over thus prematurely proving the OP's premise as valid.
— Outlander
Thanks for that.
But they're still your children.
— Outlander
There's a case for considering generosity to one's children is a kind of selfishness. But that just reveals that what counts as selfishness is not necessarily obvious. What do we make of the virtue of looking after one's family? In the context of wider society, it can look like selfishness. In the context of traditional individualism, it is altruism.
Think of benefactors of your town or city or of art rather than homelessness.
I could spend my money and time on my personal pleasures and leave the kids without. Would that not be selfish? Is helping out my friends and neighbours not generous, because they are my friends and neighbours? Yet, I agree that exclusive attention to my kids, neglecting my partner, would be wrong.
It benefits your family and existence directly to have happy children who live productive lives, possibly earning lots of money, holding you in high regard, esteem, and favor, and then taking care of you when you're enfeebled.
— Outlander
Yes, but the point is that I consider those happy children to be a benefit and not a drag. The rest of it is far from guaranteed. However, if my generosity to them was predicated on those happy outcomes. that would undermine my claim to generosity. — Ludwig V
those is at least a candidates for a selfless action — Ludwig V
There's nothing wrong with personal satisfaction, emotional fulfilment and existential meaning in themselves. — Ludwig V
Where does the meaning, the discipline, the other come from? — Ludwig V
The difference between someone who gets pleasure from the pleasure of others is different in important ways from the person who gets pleasure from the pain of others. — Ludwig V
if you can recognize that solipsism is a cage, there is some hope for you. — Ludwig V
say some sort of hypothetical secret act to make the world a better place, by someone without children or family, who therefore has nothing to gain from making said world a better place? :chin: — Outlander
The problem with your bubble is that the generality of the explanation renders any particular instance useless for inquiry. Distinctions without a difference. — Paine
I desire to eat but I want a six pack set of abominals. I want to have the high from exercise but don't want to put in the time. I crave sugar but I'm diabetic. In what sense can the "self" be against itself? — Nils Loc
I'm simply assuming that if the definitions are true, can it be logically claims that a transman is a man? No. — Philosophim
