I will bring this point up again when discussing both Levinas and Cabrera. Moral living requires one to get one’s hands dirty. It’s not clean, pure or easy. We feel compelled to hurt other people in order to spare others from similar or worse harm, neglect certain duties so we can honor more “important” ones. Sometimes we legitimately do not know what to do, and have to arbitrarily choose and simply hope we did the right thing. We may do the wrong thing unintentionally - well-intentioned acts may nevertheless be wrong. Pure moral existence is a rare and fleeting accident. — darthbarracuda
1) Does anyone ever truly "get" anyone or do we tolerate their presence with jovial laughs for a bit until we retreat and regroup our own cherished thoughts? — schopenhauer1
2) Doesn't everyone have their own agendas that compete? In almost every waking action when exposed to others, there seems to be a competing for space, territory, action, goal, outcome, rights not to be impinged and to impinge ones desires on others. Negotiation might be the answer, but the fact that there is always a need to negotiate also must be taken into account. — schopenhauer1
These are the relationships that are maintained not out of selfish desire but for a genuine concern for another person's well-being, their projects, their feelings, etc.
For the most part, though, relationships are dispensable and replaceable. This, of course, is a relevant factor in our decision-making. If a relationship is not very solid, there isn't going to be overriding reasons that privilege the maintenance of it. — darthbarracuda
Yes, precisely, although altruistic action is possible in the form of "welcoming" another person into your own space. — darthbarracuda
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