Proper philosophy depends on overcoming egotism — Wayfarer
But many of the classical philosophies, East and West, see the task of philosophy as being able to rise above the ego — Wayfarer
Are you guys absolutely sure you do not dodge the fact that some people are extrovert and some introvert? — Ansiktsburk
OK. So how do you find that everyone’s increased selfishness will lead to improved conditions for selves? — javra
Please don’t misunderstand. Trying to better understand your point of view does not equate to me agreeing with it. — javra
Or one could sacrifice one's ego for the benefit of a whole of which one's ego is but one constituent of. Some soldiers have been known to do this. Sometime for love of one's country. Sometime for the love of some ideal, such as that of democracy. The ego here holds part of its identity as that which inheres into something greater than itself ... and can willfully sacrifice its own life for it. — javra
I'm not yet certain, but, from one vantage, I think I can get what you mean. As egos we are at the center of the world we experience. Hence, your use of the term "egocentrism". Even so, altruism, empathy, humility are commonly described as selfless endeavors. This being shorthand for "less selfish than those endeavors that are the opposite" or something to the like. — javra
There's a difference between, for example, being empathetic and pretending to be. The first is deemed to be a virtue in most cases, the second not. The first is commonly deemed a selfless endeavor, the second a selfish endeavor. — javra
selfishness is an accurate description of what you want to present? — javra
To me, and doubtless to many others, your use of selfish to describe things such as altruism and empathy makes no sense. Selfishness describes the opposite of these things. — javra
It's about discovering a higher truth for yourself, granted usually with a purpose of helping others, if not just people you deem worthy. — Outlander
Does one willfully sacrifice one’s being out of an interest to optimally preserve the very same being one sacrifices? — javra
And if our experienced understanding of tree were to in fact be completely unique to each of us, we could not then be referencing the same thing by this empirically apprehended term. — javra
For the concept of "property" to exist, the only thing required is law — Ciceronianus the White
psychological science. — apokrisis
except in literary sources? — apokrisis
I guess it is consistent with your egoism that you would want respect? That you could demand it rather than earn it? — apokrisis
Sorry. I respect arguments clearly put and backed up by suitable evidence. I was interested to see if you could mount a more spirited defence. That hasn't happened. So we can move on. — apokrisis
But you are making claims about the nature of societies that don’t fit the facts. It is essential to a complex system that it optimises a balance of the selfish and the cooperative.
So to the degree that we egocentrically make society, we have to be skilled at striking this particular balance. — apokrisis
But to say we are unselfish for selfish reasons becomes a rather contorted description of what is going on — apokrisis
Hah. Yes life is complicated like that. Intellectual discussions are dialectical as every thesis presents its antithesis.
One can either stick rigidly to one’s precepts or follow that two sided flow of ideas to discover where it goes. — apokrisis
So, the more one loves, the more egoistic one becomes? — javra
You are a different person, a different "I", with each miliisecond as well. But this does not address why or how you nevertheless remain the same person, the same "I", throughout. Not such if you're understanding what I'm here addressing, so I'll drop it for the time being. — javra
Not when it comes to many of the details regarding these experiences, but these details can well be argued accidental and not essential to that which is you (as an "I") through time. When it, for example, comes to things such as belief that cats are termed cats in English, or to the very experiencing of being as a being, we both feel/experience the exact same thing. In the latter two cases, my experiences are identical to yours, and yours to mine. No uniqueness whatsoever. Uniqueness only presents itself in the differences, which then divide, or ration, or give boundary to, some given from some other. — javra
Thank you for the honest reply. — javra
Is my proof sound? Is there another proof that there exists only 1 god. — TheMadFool
This is still a one sided reading of the story. A complex adaptive system like a society is the product of a local~global dynamic. Nature harnesses the complementary forces of competition and cooperation to strike balances. — apokrisis
Not science but the meme factory of Romanticism. — apokrisis
So, you are denying the reality of that which I described in my previous post, yes? — javra
What makes you you? The you of four minutes past was a unique constituency (be it of givens such as intentions and percepts or of brain and bodily states, take your pick if needed) that is not the same you of the present moment. Yet you are the same, quote-unquote, unique you. How so? — javra
I believe what is truly good for the individual is also good for the whole. — Tzeentch
Do correct me if I’m wrong regarding your stance on love. — javra
Now, in order in this paragraph, you use the words people, something good, seen from another point of view, cat, tree, the owner has a positive view, purpose, cat being saved, need of the person that saved it, be seen as someone good, being seen as good, many benefits befall the "good person". Literally every one of those concepts is fully constructed on your personal belief in the existence of a physical world that you share with other minds and beings. You even constructed a little society of two people and a cat. — Pro Hominem
Oh, poor me. Something which is not dependent on me. Let’s kill it. — Wayfarer
The ego is an illusion based on past experiences and future aspirations. It is literally worthless and the cause of much personal grief. If one is interested in happiness for oneself or others, the ego should be regarded with nothing but suspicion. — Tzeentch
My perspective is based on the dynamic of competition~cooperation. So it recognises “egotism” over many scales of social organisation without lapsing into claims that self interest is purely a matter of individual psychology. — apokrisis
The point is that your “individuality” only exists in opposition to “sociality”. You could never have come to your views unless they were already widely entrenched as a cultural meme that you could learn and pretend to be implementing. — apokrisis
Out of curiosity, what were you thinking of as a Bronze Age step towards the social invention of individuality? [Edit: Gilgamesh?] — apokrisis
Again my own position is based on the interaction between the individual and the social group. I just say that societies need to create the right kind of individuals if they are going to persist. So the causality is switched around here. The individual only exist to the degree that “the crowd” supports that as a functional concept. (Or to the degree the crowd can afford to be indifferent to individual variety.) — apokrisis
But when is “be selfish” ever a recipe for success? Maybe you can explain. — apokrisis
I guess what I'm saying is that there are only so many shoemakers in town and sooner or later you'll meet someone wearing the same shoes as you are and in that we lose our uniqueness, our identity - egocentrism has no leg to stand on. — TheMadFool
What constitutes the uniqueness of my experience if not as one filtered through my beliefs and no one has a monoply on beliefs, right? You and I could have the same beliefs and if we do, my experience and your experience will not differ to such an extent that the two of us could be distinguished and seen as two and not one individual.
The notion of a unique ego or self has to contend with the fact that beliefs and circumstances go hand in hand in shaping our experience of the world and both beliefs and circumstances are not unique to a single individual but constitute a shared universe and being so, there'll always be more than one individual with the exact same sense of self/ego which is to say egocentrism understood as an individual thinking of him/herself as distinct from everybody else is an impossibility. — TheMadFool
How so? The flock/pack/crowd is only possible if attributes are shared i.e. no single individual can stake a claim on the attributes in question as their own personal possession. — TheMadFool
Therefore a ham sandwich is better than heaven. — Pfhorrest
What are your thoughts on this and what are the profound effects this would have on life, society, and our views on existence altogether? — Outlander
What if when we dream we get to "view" into these universes from our alternate selves? For example you know when you're doing something either exceeding interesting (buying a house, meeting someone, enjoying your family, skydiving, etc) or exceedingly boring (filling out paperwork, doing your 9-5) sometimes you (in a way) zone out for a bit... and just kind of let sensory experience takeover, as in your mind takes backseat to whatever emotions your feeling at the time. Again either out of pleasure or sheer boredom. What if during these times... in both your life in this universe and your life in another universe... these are gateways or "opportunities" for your alternate selves to experience or "view" these lives while dreaming? We've all done or said things during times "when we're not paying attention" or simply "lost track of the time"... do you think this theory could possibly account for this? — Outlander
theory — Outlander
Take a closer look at the trend: we were killing each other in countless wars in the past, we've more or lesss stopped doing that; we used to keep slaves, we've put an end to that; we keep and kill animals in cruel ways, now there's animal rights groups... Do you see where this is going? The rest of the world is just playing catch up with the Jains. — TheMadFool
All people, excepting the delusional and those who're hallucinating, are in agreement on what it is that they perceive through the senses - no grounds there for any uniqueness in experience that could define an individual ego. — TheMadFool
Then comes the matter of beliefs - there too people behave like birds of the same feather, they flock together. — TheMadFool
In my humble opinion... — TheMadFool
My god man, you live in a Matrix of one. Fella finds a formula to justify the pathology of his egosyntonicness, then labels it as intelligence. — JerseyFlight
Not if people have to live in a shared social and cultural reality. — apokrisis
Feral children (reared by wolves, etc) would be your truest egocentrics. But I don't think you would envy them. — apokrisis
For us normal humans, everything about "us" comes by way of our evolutionary history and current cultural circumstances. Even this Romantic notion of the "ego" that is so fashionable. — apokrisis
I wasn't making any argument that empathy was "good" - some kind of abstract moral judgement. I was saying it is functional in obvious evolutionary ways. It is a large part of our basis as social creatures. — apokrisis
- especially as part of that modern creed of individualisation and self-actualisation that is so central to being .... a cog in the modern economic machine with its atomisation of society. :grin: — apokrisis
Nope. The neurobiology and its functionality are still there inside every head. — apokrisis
If it is necessary, it is necessary because it is basic to humans as social and cultural creatures. Any selfhood we have arises out of that. — apokrisis
This "you" you claim to be primary is just a member of some crowd. It needs that crowd to exist. — apokrisis
"be yourself" is what Apple, Nike and every other expensive crap peddler will empathetically sell you as society's core message. — apokrisis
So by this understanding or fact, the entire OP is something of an autobiography. How could it not be? Hm? — Outlander
Well... I dunno stop doing that and actually care for others for a minute lol :grin: — Outlander
You’ve not said anything to rebut my points, just restated your faulty conclusion. — apokrisis
So you are taking the self as something that brutely exists. Along with a world that also brutely exists. — apokrisis
So to get to your point, empathy is completely reasonable for a social animal like a human. Egocentrism would be a failure of neurobiology. — apokrisis
We are evolved to have a consciousness that is "us" in a modelling relationship with a "world" that is full of social significance, and not just physical significance. — apokrisis
It doesn't make much sense being "a self" in a world that lacks sociality (with its demand to balance empathy against hostility and other complex judgements). — apokrisis
On the other hand, linguistic culture can indeed construct antisocial and nihilistic worlds for people these days. That is what your post was doing, wasn't it? — apokrisis
So we have now developed that kind of thought freedom. But that doesn't make it good philosophy as it is based on a fundamental failure to understand the actual evolutionary basis of the human mind. — apokrisis
What say you? — TheMadFool
Is choosing an universal language and sticking to it really so hard? Can't we create a language that uses very few vocal sounds so that everyone can become fluent in it, and is made to be internally consistent? And most importantly, how are people okay with the state things are now? — Seth72
Evil is ultimately this — hypericin
What are your thoughts on possible afterlives? — Random Name
I don't want to have anything to do with this forum after reading some of the most disgusting posts by those who run this forum. — Sam26
Was Judas a hero and most trusted disciple, or a traitor? — Gnostic Christian Bishop