If the gift giver cares a lot about you, being careless about how the giver feels, will surely have a bad result. You may not be aware of the negative effect but there will be a negative effect. Sometimes the result is a divorce after many years of being careless about someone else feelsings, or it can lead to heart attack and death of an elderly person. Our sense of feeling loved and valued is that important. — Athena
Science tells us, people with bad hearts who feel loved live longer than people with bad hearts who don't feel valued and I don't think that consideration is an overreaction. — Athena
Let's say you get a lot of books for Christmas.
You also have a long list of books that you would like to read, but you didn't get any of those for Christmas.
Should you always read the books you already have before getting new ones? Even if they're not as interesting? How would you justify buying new books when you already have unread ones? What if a friend or family member asks whether you've read the book they got you and are sad when you say no? — Fuzzball Baggins
I think you altered the OP a little ( or I’m dumb, happy to accept either ) but interesting post and I agree. I really need to read Kant. — Dan84
I do not understand? You seem to be saying my thinking is, but I think it may be your thinking that is wrong. When someone gives you a gift what is important about that gift? Is just a thing or something more? — Athena
When someone gives you a gift what is important about that gift? — Athena
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