:up: :up:Yes, it seems like a false dichotomy to me. Like you must choose individualism or collectivism. I think you can use either or depending on what goals or paradigms each is best suited for. — DingoJones
Libertarian socialism¹ (s.g. economic democracy²).“What’s best” is what concerns me.
“what’s best” in your eyes? — NOS4A2
So, for example, if you declare a particular universal right you are expressing your primacy? Wouldn’t everyone need to agree with whatever right that you declare and also agree to your primacy?
You are expressing every individual’s primacy. If you realize the primacy of the individual you afford him rights and defend those rights against infringement. I’m not sure everyone has to agree to that. — NOS4A2
In the other hand: if the collective is effective, both sides win, the individual and the group. — javi2541997
The individual doesn't exist there, but the group or collective is unstoppable due to their efficiency. — javi2541997
because it's not effective at making me happy at all. — Tzeentch
Should the unhappy individual simply sacrifice this one life they're given for the sake of some imaginary higher power we call "the collective"? — Tzeentch
This sounds like a nightmare. — Tzeentch
First of all: what is happiness? — javi2541997
We have to take care of the individual, that's for granted. But this doesn't mean that one group has to step down just for one person. That would be selfish and ineffective. — javi2541997
I guess that's why the economy of my country is in the 16th position and theirs are the 1st, 3rd and 5th of the world. These are pure facts not personal opinions. — javi2541997
it's certainly not up to a "collective" to decide for others what constitutes happiness. — Tzeentch
How would that be any more or less selfish than asking of the unhappy individual to simply sacrifice themselves? — Tzeentch
South Korea and Japan also have notoriously high rates of suicide, so I guess that answers part of the question of how they deal with unhappy individuals — Tzeentch
As for China, well... If you believe economic prosperity is worth living under an authoritarian dictatorship then our ideas about what is happiness must lie very far apart. — Tzeentch
I was speaking about effectiveness. I don't care if they are happy or sad, ... — javi2541997
But why happiness should be a factor to consider of in terms of functionality? — javi2541997
The concept of death in Japan is different from the western world. — javi2541997
I wonder if a person from Andalucía in Spain - which is one of the poorest regions of Europe and with a high unemployment ratio - is happier than an individual of Asian countries. — javi2541997
My question was what the individual is supposed to do when the "collective" they are living in is making them unhappy. — Tzeentch
I doubt many Japanese would agree this is normal, regardless of their views on life and death. Do you believe this is normal? — Tzeentch
Happiness and life satisfaction - wonder no more — Tzeentch
Leave. — javi2541997
That the altruistic spiel that accompanies collectivist rhetoric is merely window dressing becomes apparent as soon as they are presented with a dissident. Their answer will always be the same: "If you don't like it, you may leave!" — Tzeentch
They killed themselves for many complex reasons. — javi2541997
Who cares if a Spaniard is happier than a Chinese citizen? — javi2541997
Libertarian socialism¹ (s.g. economic democracy²). — 180 Proof
Clearly the collectivist believes otherwise - they believe they are entitled to the individual's cooperation, which is why they demand their departure when the individual refuses.
This entitlement stems from a belief that they are right, and therefore the individual has no right to refuse, and no right to exist if he does. — Tzeentch
Surely for someone to commit suicide they must be deeply unhappy, or am I missing something? — Tzeentch
You, apparently. Weren't you just now wondering about that? — Tzeentch
In this regard one could claim that collectivism is exclusive and individualism is inclusive. The former affords primacy to a faction while the latter affords it to each and every individual involved. This is true both in theory and in practice.
Are there any objections to this? — NOS4A2
But if the individualist regards the individual as the primary unit of concern in any political society, he necessarily regards each individual in that way. — NOS4A2
I agree that individualism is a personal belief, but so is collectivism. And it is no collective decision if others accept either of these principles. These are personal, individual decisions made by real, flesh-and-blood human beings, not arbitrary and abstract groupings.
Any collection of people is a collection of individuals. Each of these individuals adopt beliefs and principles on their own accord, and not by any collective agreement. — NOS4A2
I accept any individual to have his own beliefs and interests, and defend his right to have them, whether communist, fascist, theocratic, or any collectivist doctrine. What I do not accept is any individual to infringe on the rights of another individual, and this is the direct result of individualism, not collectivism. — NOS4A2
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