"being a mean person" might not be as bad as being a mass murderer or an arsonist, but certainly meanness is a moral flaw. Take a look at the synonyms:
unkind nasty spiteful foul
malicious malevolent despicable
contemptible obnoxious
vile odious loathsome
disagreeable unpleasant
unfriendly uncharitable
shabby unfair callous
cruel vicious base low
horrible horrid hateful
rotten lowdown beastly
bitchy catty shitty
Harm causing, all. Bad news. — Bitter Crank
If it's in the culprits best interest, how could it be a flaw of their personality? It all depends on who answers the question. The supposed mean person, or the one (s) who they're doing something to. — Razorback kitten
I like people to be honest/to honestly express themselves/to be existentially authentic. So if being an asshole or a bitch is how they authentically feel, I think they should express that. I'm just not going to be hanging out with them if it's a way they regularly are. — Terrapin Station
Actually, it's not so uncommon at all for most people to split off from their own mean behavior and not recognize it for what it really is. I'll never forget a colleague I had years back who had been shamed and humilliated by her doctoral exams committee (mean, insecure people), and she loved to be mean to undergraduate students. Meanwhile, she saw herself as the loving mother of four children. — uncanni
IFF one predicates his own morality on the existence and power of moral law, he is immediately immoral, that is, subjectively, by having mean-ness incorporated into his personality, yet only mediately, that is, objectively, immoral if he should subsequently act to treat another subject as an end, by means of the satisfaction of his own feelings of arrogance.
To be arrogant in its various forms, is the prime facilitator for actions that exhibit such immoral conditions in a subject, but does not thereby make such actions absolutely necessary, re: the deviation from which is impossible, for it is not uncommon to witness people generally known for being mean circumstantially acting kindly. — Mww
Do you think all mean acts/people come from a place of unresolved conflict in some past event or trauma? — schopenhauer1
Can it be just a general attitude of the person without being from some past event? What happens if one chooses to freely be a mean person vs. some indistinct prior emotional event? — schopenhauer1
Yes, I can see that. Though I think they are connected, it is difficult to think outside your own idioms. I think that spiteful people are always trying to get back at somebody rather than improving things, presumably because they give up hope early on. Thus Brexit?This is an interesting response but this would be about the British definition of "stingy" or "ungenerous" when this is more about the asshole kind of being mean. Someone being mean to a person. — schopenhauer1
Wouldn't it be the easy way out to love one's own kids and then treat other people and relations with cruelty? — schopenhauer1
I think the whole point is that there are people who think it's ok to be mean in whatever situation, and I view those folks as lacking control and believing it's ok for them to "act out." Acting out is never ok in my book.Is meanness at a workplace ever called for or is it usually always some sort of either character flaw or some hot-tempered thing in the heat of the moment, perhaps from some stressful situation? — schopenhauer1
So, meanness comes from arrogance? — schopenhauer1
The question would be why one desires to intentionally hurt others, and in otherwise healthy human beings I would relate such a desire to unresolved negative emotion.
I would list intentionality as another aspect of 'meanness', come to think of it. — Tzeentch
I've mentioned this before, and I'm pretty sure I've mentioned it here. I think sometimes that people thinking I'm joking about stuff like that, but I'm not. I'm serious. People who get offended are the problem when that happens, not the person who offended them. — Terrapin Station
Yes, I can see that. Though I think they are connected, it is difficult to think outside your own idioms. I think that spiteful people are always trying to get back at somebody rather than improving things, presumably because they give up hope early on. Thus Brexit? — iolo
The word 'mean' is too flimsy for a definitive answer about whether being it is moral, or not. I would say it's a perception of another more than a personal trait. — Razorback kitten
How do you see this as an easy way out? From what??? — uncanni
I think the whole point is that there are people who think it's ok to be mean in whatever situation, and I view those folks as lacking control and believing it's ok for them to "act out." Acting out is never ok in my book. — uncanni
I suppose being mean is like being callous, insensitive, showing a disregard for the feelings and sensitivities of others.
I think “being mean” isn’t so much an aspect of our being or character as it is a method of social relations. — NOS4A2
When both parties withdraw kindness, then nothing positive will result, and any suggestion otherwise is a matter of ignorance, IMO. — Possibility
I think continuing to demonstrate the level of kindness we expect from others is the most effective way to eliminate mean-ness in an exchange. — Possibility
Is the method immoral? Is it simply consequential? Only if the consequences for that person are bad, is it bad? What if a mean person gets a lot of praise from those that admire the mean person for his/her meanness? What if they don't perceive it as mean? What if they do? Does this make a difference for the admirer of the mean person? When can someone judge when someone is mean?
I suppose it depends on if the meanness is deserved. If it is deserved it is just, and therefor moral. If it is undeserved it is unjust, and therefor immoral. — NOS4A2
I notice you using "withdraw kindness". I think that's an interesting phrasing as withdrawing kindness assumes that the default is kindness. Perhaps that isn't everyone's default? — schopenhauer1
What if a mean person gets a lot of praise from those that admire the mean person for his/her meanness? What if they don't perceive it as mean? What if they do? Does this make a difference for the admirer of the mean person? When can someone judge when someone is mean? There may be no bad consequences for the mean person. It is like asymmetric warfare if a person is continually nice in the face of meanness. There is an unfair advantage that is being exploited. — schopenhauer1
What is your definition of a mean person or someone being mean?
Is being a mean person a moral flaw, just a personality quirk, or something else?
When is being mean called for (if ever) and when is it not? — schopenhauer1
So what is "acting out" and what makes it immoral versus just imprudent or something that some people disapprove of. — schopenhauer1
What would be the moral way to handle unresolved negative emotions? — schopenhauer1
Also, is it ever appropriate to be mean? — schopenhauer1
Well, sure. But I want to be able to trust people. If I am paying them for that communication or it if is integral to work I am doing or if I have a close relationship with them, or if it would be cruel to mislead me and you are a stranger - iow to knowingly make me waste time.Yeah, not immoral to me.
I'm someone who wants people to express themselves as they feel like expressing themselves, and who thinks that we need to not put too much weight on things that people say/we need to be at least a bit skeptical of things that people say. — Terrapin Station
I think this is odd. That guy is dishonest and manipulative - perjorative terms - but not immoral - pejorative term. Could you parse that for me`? To immoral is a larger category, in which one subset of behavior would be dishonest and manipulative behavior.I don't feel it's immoral for people to express whatever they want to express, even if it's dishonest, manipulative, etc.--again, be at least a bit skeptical of what people say.
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