If you really want to find a flaw in it, I suppose you should be focusing on the implicit indifference. — TheMadFool
I think we are, and I think if you want, you could come up with evidence for this, such as stats for loneliness being an indicator for shorter lifespans and unhappiness etc... Bakunin feels alone and unhappy because of it, it's hard to argue with that. It is what it is.
I guess the question for me now personally is not whether we need social relations and communities, I think we do — ChatteringMonkey
But in this point I still disagree that introvert o more “lonely” people don’t need to be selfish at all. — javi2541997
But sure, people do differ, and maybe you could question the validity of making these general claims about all of humanity like Bakunin does, based on his personal experiences alone. — ChatteringMonkey
But in this point I still disagree that introvert o more “lonely” people don’t need to be selfish at all. — javi2541997
Studies have repeatedly shown that the loneliness has little to do intro- or extroversion
Somewhere Camus writes "solitaire et solidaire" – a nietzschean pendulum which, like breathing, must swing back & forth between being free from fear/hope & being free for danger-rebellion – which I signify when signing-off my posts here on TPF with :death: & :flower: (also interpretable as memento mori & memento vivere), respectively. Perhaps Bakunin didn't appreciate, for whatever (ideological?) reasons, how much his bouts of "loneliness" had invigorated his promethean rages against the machine ...In order to understand the world, one has to turn away from it on occasion; in order to serve others better, one has to hold them at a distance for a time. But where can one find the solitude necessary to vigor, the deep breath in which the mind collects itself and courage gauges its strength? There remain big cities. — Albert Camus, a moralist-anarchist
Nevertheless, it surprised me why he thought being lonely for voluntary or personal reasons is considered as “selfish” then, he established that a selfish man cannot reach happiness. — javi2541997
So, is it isolation that's being explained here? If so, I can see his point that voluntary isolation is selfish. — Caldwell
Perhaps Bakunin didn't appreciate, for whatever (ideological?) reasons, how much his bouts of "loneliness" had invigorized his promethean rages against the machine ... — 180 Proof
Bakunin (I guess) thought that those people who don’t want to be with anybody and also not interact at all so not making communities is somehow selfish. — javi2541997
Why would someone isolate himself from the rest? — Caldwell
Thoughts? — javi2541997
The hypocrisy of the left making itself present!
This somehow breaks the theory of Karl Marx of human is a social animal and is forced to live in communities. So here opens a tangent in the debate about if we are free of living in our own or we are forced to live with others because this is how ever works. — javi2541997
It is a personal decision, absolutely, but still does not provide an answer to why isolation? Could it be a rejection of something? And then there's the continued questioning which doesn't seem to go anywhere.This action is not necessarily selfish or bad if it is a personal decision. — javi2541997
provide an answer to why isolation? Could it be a rejection of something? — Caldwell
Another example, yet it only begs what is being asked. They retired in the middle of nowhere because they want to live in the middle of nowhere. I hope this is getting to the point.Also another example. Imagine a person who has been retired and then buys a house in the middle of nowhere and wants to live alone with their own circumstances. — javi2541997
This is the point I want to debate with you about. It is interesting how Bakunin defended a life with social relation and then communities. Nevertheless, it surprised me why he thought being lonely for voluntary or personal reasons is considered as “selfish” then, he established that a selfish man cannot reach happiness. — javi2541997
Bakunin never really gave a reason for why isolation is selfish
So is he not selfish at this point?
Who am I that I need to set myself apart from all others just to spend time with my self-absorption?
Then we can argue if it is good or bad for whatever reasons — javi2541997
The time you are spending off by yourself you could be contributing to community, either in terms of actual work and interaction, or even via solidarity.
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