friendships are made of interests, of a "Union of Egoists" — Gus Lamarch
I think Aristotle was referring to [homo]'philia'. — ovdtogt
young lovers (1156b2), lifelong friends (1156b12), cities with one another (1157a26), political or business contacts (1158a28), parents and children (1158b20), fellow-voyagers and fellow-soldiers (1159b28), members of the same religious society (1160a19), or of the same tribe (1161b14), a cobbler and the person who buys from him (1163b35).{/quote] — Hughes on Aristotle
unenlightened — unenlightened
I experienced quite a shock when acquaintances who I barely even spoke to would say without doubt or hesitation that we were "friends". — Judaka
If someone calls you "friend" and you turn around and say "uhh, no we're not", it's going to make you seem unapproachable and anti-social. I know that because that's exactly what I did and it was obvious as soon as I said it that it highlighted the truth that I don't particularly care for them or trust them. — Judaka
What's the name of the song? — Gus Lamarch
what I want to say is that everyone cares only about themselves, their friendships are but a functional structure that facilitates the acceptance of both their shortcomings. — Gus Lamarch
The first clause of the sentence is not true. I am confident in saying that it is not true because you made it universal ("everyone") and you made it extreme ("only"). We do and ought to care about ourselves, but we gain too much from caring interactions with others to leave it there. Yes, friendships do have functional qualities, one of which is as an aid in self acceptance. — Bitter Crank
I do not say that lasting, good and inspiring relationships cannot come into existence, what I want to say is that everyone cares only about themselves, their friendships are but a functional structure that facilitates the acceptance of both their shortcomings. It is something we should embrace, and thank ourselves for building, because only then, affirming this ego projection, will the negative mass cease to be bad, and ultimately, to have rotten and short relationships ... — Gus Lamarch
what I want to say is that everyone cares only about themselves, their friendships are but a functional structure that facilitates the acceptance of both their shortcomings. It is something we should embrace, and thank ourselves for building, because only then, affirming this ego projection, will the negative mass cease to be bad, and ultimately, to have rotten and short relationships ... — Gus Lamarch
everyone cares only about themselves — Gus Lamarch
'Care' can't work like that, although as above, I think the notion that we only really 'care' for ourselves is a modern narcissistic myth. — mcdoodle
1. Relationships v. friendships — 3017amen
The virtues of selfishness is an Ayn Rand concept from years back. — 3017amen
I find it hard to imagine that a mother of an infant, for example, cares only about herself. How would you explain her care for the infant? — mcdoodle
I think the notion that we only really 'care' for ourselves is a modern narcissistic myth. — mcdoodle
we need to reinvent the concept of "friendship" with the virtues of past times, but accepting that it is rooted on self-interest, so that we can make the better of it. — Gus Lamarch
https://ndpr.nd.edu/news/husserl-s-crisis-of-the-european-sciences-and-transcendental-phenomenology-an-introduction/The history of modern philosophy is, indeed, nothing less than a struggle for the meaning of man, a struggle over the very fate of human civilization. And so the crisis of the European sciences is revealed to be something even larger and more grandiose (if that is imaginable): a radical life-crisis of European humanity, and of the human race as a whole. Philosophers -- the genuine ones, that is, not those fraudulent "philosophical literati" (Crisis, 17) who dominate the philosophical scene -- are the only ones suited to face up to the true struggles of our time, "between humanity which has already collapsed and humanity which still has roots but is struggling to keep them and find new ones" (Crisis, 15).
It is easy to dismiss such talk and even to laugh at it. Few philosophers operating today, surely, are able to take such ideas seriously. Dermot Moran is no exception, and so in his introduction to the Crisis in the Cambridge Introductions to Key Philosophical Texts series, he treads lightly whenever issues such as the "telos of European humanity" come up for discussion. Throughout the book, especially in his chapter on Husserl's so-called "turn" to history,[2] Moran dutifully records Husserl's deepest convictions on these matters, but he is careful to keep his distance from Husserl's more radical and controversial claims, and by the end of the book, after having played the role of honest broker for almost 300 pages, he finally allows his own skeptical take to slip out, endorsing the judgment of David Carr, who, he tells us, "has pointed out that Husserl was simply wrong to think that phenomenology, even in its most transcendental form, could save humanity" (299).
— link
Of course, these friendships are made of interests, of a "Union of Egoists", but of an almost utopian tone, one that lasts for years and years, seasons and seasons, and this feeling, with regret, also makes me question it: — Gus Lamarch
You have gestated another being, a dear other human being. Had carried him for nine months, fed him indirectly for that period, and flattered him, and had being flattered by others for being on this difficult journey that will eventually reward you as being"mother". After this time, you give birth to this "blessing", this "happiness", this independent bit of life that used to be part of you, and will forever be part of you. There is nothing more selfish in this case than to love, and to worry about your child's life. If you don't care about yourself, adn only about yourself, you are not being a good parent. — Gus Lamarch
a situation beyond both selfishness and altruism. — mcdoodle
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