Golden Dime rule:
I want others to treat me as I want to be treated, therefore I will treat others as they want to be treated — Yohan
No membership required. However, consider purchasing a good plated dime online to serve as a memento.:up: Great manifesto. Where do I sign up? :smile: — TheMadFool
No membership required. However, consider purchasing a good plated dime online to serve as a memento. — Yohan
Serial killers treat people the way they want to be treated to make them trusting and vulnerable, so that they can eventually treat them as they(the serial killer) wants to treat them.Like a serial killer? :scream: — TheMadFool
2. The Diamond Rule: Do unto others as others would like to do unto themselves (Others define your actions. You do what others want you to do to them. Others are the measure of your actions] — TheMadFool
If taken to extremes this creates problems as well. What if I would like you to have sex with me? Are you duty bound to do so? Or perhaps I’m narcissistic and think you should greet me by bowing when I enter the room, and bid me farewell by kissing my ass on the way out. Is that acceptable?
As an alternative, let’s try the Platinum Rule: Treat others however you want, but adjust your behavior when asked to do so (trial and error). — Pinprick
Rules are meant for everyone. The narcissist who wants people to bow before faer and kiss faer ass must consider the fact that other people don't want to bow to faer or kiss faer ass. Thus, a narcissist shouldn't demand such things. — TheMadFool
This doesn’t seem to jive with the Diamond Rule though, at least as you’ve described it, or perhaps as I’ve (mis)understood it.
If we’re to let others define our actions, that holds us accountable for treating them the way they want to be treated independent of how we actually want to treat them. I don’t see where the obligation of the narcissist to consider others wants when he decides how he wants to be treated is derived from. — Pinprick
Morality is based on the recognition of the value/sacredness of life. — EnPassant
Ok, but why does the person’s wants the narcissist encounters trump his own? The narcissist demands X (ass kissing), the other person demands Y (respect), but only Y is honored. — Pinprick
You should've told me this about 20 years ago! I wouldn't have made as many mistakes as I have. :sad: — TheMadFool
Morality is based on the recognition of the value/sacredness of life. — EnPassant
Good question. X wants ass-kissing and Y wants no ass-kissing. So, what happens when the two of them meet? X would think, I can't let Y kiss my ass. Y would think, I have to kiss X's ass. This'll happen: Y will try and kiss X's ass but X won't let Y kiss ass. Both are happy! — TheMadFool
It entails paying attention to other people's specific needs or preferences. — Yohan
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