In crediting people with Liberality their resources must be taken into account; for the liberality of a gift does not depend on its amount, but on the disposition of the giver, and a liberal disposition gives according to its substance. It is therefore possible that the smaller giver may be the more liberal, if he give from smaller means. — Aristotle, Eth Nic, IV, 19
But here's the catch, when a therapist helps a patient they are doing so because it is their job to help them, and not because they are care. And at the end of the day, nobody has actually cared about the mentally sick however much help they get. My question is: How valuable is the help of those who do not actually care? — Wheatley
An able physician is more useful to a patient than the most devoted friend, and progress in medical knowledge does more for the health of the community than ill-informed philanthropy. Nevertheless, an element of benevolence is essential even here if any but the rich are to profit by scientific discoveries. — Russell
when a therapist helps a patient they are doing so because it is their job to help them, and not because they are care — Wheatley
And at the end of the day, nobody has actually cared about the mentally sick however much help they get — Wheatley
How valuable is the help of those who do not actually care? Can a system that is based on salary replace genuine human kindness? — Wheatley
My question is: How valuable is the help of those who do not actually care? Can a system that is based on salary replace genuine human kindness? — Wheatley
How valuable is the help of those who do not actually care? Can a system that is based on salary replace genuine human kindness? — Wheatley
My question is: How valuable is the help of those who do not actually care? Can a system that is based on salary replace genuine human kindness? — Wheatley
:up:I wonder how they got that way. But I'm glad they did. I think they should be paid for it, too. That way they can keep doing it. Apparently it makes them happy and they are doing good. Win-win for everyone. — James Riley
:up:Does your mechanic need to care for you to do a good job on your car? I'd settle for non-judgemental professional skill over emotive caring most days.
Human kindness is overrated. — Tom Storm
Can a system that is based on salary replace genuine human kindness? — Wheatley
Does your mechanic need to care for you to do a good job on your car? I'd settle for non-judgemental professional skill over emotive caring most days. — Tom Storm
The care offered by a professional is like being friendly without being a friend. It's an important distinction that probably needs to go with a lengthy dissertation on professional boundaries and the like. — Tom Storm
My background, amongst other things, is in suicide intervention, post incident trauma support and alcohol and drug counselling and psycho-social services management. — Tom Storm
The care offered by a professional is like being friendly without being a friend. It's an important distinction that probably needs to go with a lengthy dissertation on professional boundaries and the like. A professional offers care in the sense of a duty to provide a quality service that meets the person's needs, just as a reputable mechanic provides a quality service to a car that ensures it is safe to driver regardless of who the drive is. All very general I know. — Tom Storm
I've never met a competent person - mechanic, doctor, engineer, cook, cashier, dentist... - who didn't care about providing good service to their client, customer, patient. — T Clark
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