we all wear a social mask. This mask is compiled of etiquette, behavioural cues, social and cultural expectations and mannerisms along with what is "okay to say" in public and we refine this mask as we grow up and mature. But I often wonder what people really think. — Benj96
How is the 'social mask' not part of what people really think? — Isaac
what they want people to see and what they actually are inside are two very different things. — Benj96
I imagine those who never consider whether they are nice, who dont self reflect on such matters, are probably the worst kind of people. — Benj96
the only truly selfless act (one that it is impossible to personally gain from) is sacrifice of ones life in order to protect another. — Benj96
If we're honest with ourselves, the internal monologue of our minds is often very different to the words we speak out into the world or the actions we do. — Benj96
One example of that belief vs knowledge mental phenomenon is the "unconscious bias" of Implicit Racism.What I'm struggling to understand is the means by which you're distinguishing how people want others to see them from the way they really think. Isn't how you want others to see you one of the things you really think? — Isaac
genuinely nice — Benj96
How you interact and what you say and do to other people is the only thing you are known for. People cannot know what you actually think. So what dishonesty you are talking about? As BitterCrank explain from Freud (just as an example) the id is quite hidden.There is a level of dishonesty in effective social interaction because if we were all 100% truthful some nasty things would be said. — Benj96
Great advice on a Philosophy forum.Above all, stay away from social scientists and philosophers - they are all psychopaths. — unenlightened
It appears that the "genuinely nice" are actually less impressive in re niceness than people who aren't nice by nature. — TheMadFool
What one “truly thinks” doesn’t matter—he can think whatever he wants with no demonstrable affect beyond his surface—but the manner in which one acts is key. — NOS4A2
I can't picture a scenario where being "nice" is something that can be measured objectively. — avalon
As to what to define nice as is difficult — Benj96
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