So you already dismiss the alternative that the social relations are the source of the personal individuation? The capable individual is what society in fact has in mind? — apokrisis
The 'Protestant Ethic' has proved itself valuable to our form of society, it keeps us going, striving and progressing toward, that shining city on the hill. — Cavacava
What Weber argued, in simple terms:
According to the new Protestant religions, an individual was religiously compelled to follow a secular vocation (German: Beruf) with as much zeal as possible. A person living according to this world view was more likely to accumulate money.
The new religions (in particular, Calvinism and other more austere Protestant sects) effectively forbade wastefully using hard earned money and identified the purchase of luxuries as a sin. Donations to an individual's church or congregation were limited due to the rejection by certain Protestant sects of icons. Finally, donation of money to the poor or to charity was generally frowned on as it was seen as furthering beggary. This social condition was perceived as laziness, burdening their fellow man, and an affront to God; by not working, one failed to glorify God.
Wikipedia“We are a company professing ourselves fellow members of Christ … [We] must love one another with pure heart fervently. We must bear one another’s burdens … We must be willing to abridge ourselves of our superfluities, for the supply of others’ necessities … We must delight in each other; make others’ conditions our own; rejoice together, mourn together, labor and suffer together, always having before our eyes our commission and community in the work, as members of the same body. So we will keep the unity of [God’s] spirit in the bond of peace. The Lord will be our God, and delight to dwell among us, as his own people … [And so we] must consider that we shall be as a city upon a hill. The eyes of all people are upon us. So that if we shall deal falsely with our God in this work we have undertaken, and so cause him to withdraw his present help from us, we shall be made a story and a by-word through the world.”
Max Weber traces the source of Protestant Work Ethic back to the Reformation, which dignified the spirit of work....all work regardless of kind was dignified, made in service of salvation, to which one was chosen or not, it was very much in the service of capitalism. — Cavacava
how is it that the individual must perpetuate the agenda of the institutions by having more people that will perpetuate the institutions? — schopenhauer1
If you say that evolution has created humans that have minds that want to promote survival through a certain cultural means, then this is simply restating the idea that institutions are perpetuated, you are just throwing in the word survival which is essentially the same thing at the species level, but not addressing the fact that it is still begging-the-question as to why keep the institutions going. — schopenhauer1
There is also the question of the trade-off between biological survival and intellectual survival. The latter has a longer reach. Socrates' suicide for example, certainly led to his immortalization, and of millions of others seeking to become like him. So spiritually - or better said intellectually - he begot more children than he could ever have begotten physically and biologically.(Of course if this subcontract involves a quick suicide or a conscious failure to breed, then it will soon be a forgotten trope - defined by its production of the generically incapable.) — apokrisis
But an individual doesn't agree with many institutions from his society. Take me for example. There's many institutions, cultural trends, etc. which are very dominant, and yet I don't agree with, and I don't want to see perpetuated.But if the institutions do shape the individual, then why wouldn't the individual - in at least a general way - not want that to continue? In wanting that from the institution, the individual is simply saying, if we are to have more, let them be like me. What would or could possess the individual to have a different desire. — apokrisis
But an individual doesn't agree with many institutions from his society. Take me for example. There's many institutions, cultural trends, etc. which are very dominant, and yet I don't agree with, and I don't want to see perpetuated. — Agustino
How does that make me any different from anyone else in the cultural sphere? Everyone else wants to propagate themselves, and obviously not propagate what is opposed to them.And so you demonstrate how entrenched an intolerance for difference can be. You really think yours should be the only institution handing out the subcontracts. You believe deeply in genericity. It just troubles you that your version has so little general hold. — apokrisis
So this is wrong, and I disagree with it. The individual doesn't want all institutions which shape the individual to continue. Some institutions which shape the individual, he doesn't want to continue. I gave myself as an example for this point.But if the institutions do shape the individual, then why wouldn't the individual - in at least a general way - not want that to continue? — apokrisis
Don't you find it logical as it ensures the longevity of your particular institution and increases thus the likelihood of ever more of you? — apokrisis
Are we the individual, here to carry out some Protestant Work Ethic ethos? In more general terms, are we here to maintain institutions? To consume, to work, to live in a country is to maintain its institutions. Are we the maintenance crew of some sort of institutional perpetuation.
Are we the maintenance crew of some sort of institutional perpetuation.
What would or could possess the individual to have a different desire. — apokrisis
However, in the West at least, we have the notion of individualism and being our own person. — schopenhauer1
Yes. So this subcontracted notion has evolved because it works and we naturally seek to perpetuate it - even if it doesn't always make us happy. — apokrisis
But evolving to challenge elements of the subcontract - a conscious creation of variety that drives human cultural complexification - is not the same as challenging the contract at the general level. That would be unnatural and maladaptive. — apokrisis
It is forced not directly, but indirectly in that not participating in these institutions is a non-starter. — schopenhauer1
er, one can argue that institutions are actually self-perpetuating and may not have the individual in mind so much as perpetuating the social contract. — schopenhauer1
...it is at the microlevel of the sub-contract that we usually live our daily lives. We give up the right to have our ideal society in the light of the fact that, institutions cannot be created from scratch at the whim of any individual who wants to set up the relations differently to suit their ideal living experience. We must deal with the culture, institutions, relations, and society already in place and work within it. — schopenhauer1
One must point to beings within life to justify life, or take the Nietzschean route and point out the contradiction inherent in rejecting the vital essence by use of the vital essence, "life's vengeance" so to speak, the way life affirms itself by denying the validity of the opposition. — darthbarracuda
We are thrown into living or Dasein — mcdoodle
We do however co-make culture, institutions, relations and society. They don't make themselves, and many idealists or pragmatists make new arrangements for themselves. — mcdoodle
I am trying to interpret this correctly. Do you mean to say Nietzsche believed that life-denying beliefs affirm life, because you have to live to deny life, and this is indirectly affirming it? — schopenhauer1
why do individual humans care about the species' survival — schopenhauer1
Why should the human not care that the institution perpetuates individual suffering any more than they should ignore their own harm to keep the institutions going? You do not seem to have a justification. — schopenhauer1
In order to argue against the vital impulse of life, you have to use a vital impulse of life. — darthbarracuda
They might say that they do, but the majority certainly don't act as they do. — apokrisis
Given you are arguing that there is a general contract as well as these subcontracts, there is no reason individuals couldn't find society generally ok but problematic in certain regards.
Of course if you now deny your own thesis... — apokrisis
In the OP, I suggest that institutions may be self-perpetuating and the individuals are simply instruments for the perpetuation of the institutions. They become a maintenance crew, but why the maintenance crew has to keep maintaining in the first place, is never really answered, especially in light of the possible harms on the maintenance crew. — schopenhauer1
So yes, if you think about this philosophically, it may seem weird. But only because you are framing the situation mechanically and not organically. You are treating humanity like a mindless maintenance crew perpetuating some giant machine that exists for no apparent purpose.
But nature is organic, not mechanical. You are applying a model of things that has the fundamental flaws I've outlined often enough. — apokrisis
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