everything we do is at its core self centered — Italy
First, a quibble, this is really psychology, not philosophy. It deals with matters of testable fact. — T Clark
If everything we do is selfish, then everything we do is immoral;
If everything we do is immoral, then everything we do is bad; — Italy
It's a characterisation based on interpretation, and so, it is definitely a philosophical statement. — Judaka
Psychological egoism main idea is that everything we do is at its core self centered, and so every good did is done not out of kindness -but out of our own interests. — Italy
No, it just says we're all self-centered. We are, but it's not an all-or-nothing condition. There may be a whiff of automatonism as well: the implication that we act in predetermined ways - that, too, may be true, but as long as we are unaware of it, we make decisions.The disagreement that I have though is that this branch of philosophy, and this theory in particular, are mainly used for the argument "we human beings are immoral. Innately evil". — Italy
But first to understand it, I feel we need to ask "Why do we think selfishness is immoral?". — Italy
Nothing is innately immoral; since morality is a social convention, it is subject to consrant, ongoing change.The thing is that Unconscious/ Evolutionary selfishness is not innately immoral; — Italy
No, it just says we're all self-centered. We are, but it's not an all-or-nothing condition — Vera Mont
Indeed, such actions are impulsory; And as you said, these people didn't calculate the costs or benefits of such action.Not this again!
Think about the soldier who throws himself on a grenade to save his platoon. The firefighter who charges into a burning building to rescue a stranger's child. The casual stroller who sees someone fall into a river and jumps in to rescue him. The passer-by who burns his hands pulling an accident victim out out of a burning car. All these things have happened. All these people could as easily have died - and two of them did - as become badly injured heroes. Thing is, they didn't think. They acted on an impulse which doesn't calculate cost/benefit ratios; it just impels a social animal to react in the interest of its species. — Vera Mont
I am sorry, but I literally stated that;No, it just says we're all self-centered. We are, but it's not an all-or-nothing condition. There may be a whiff of automatonism as well: the implication that we act in predetermined ways - that, too, may be true, but as long as we are unaware of it, we make decisions. — Vera Mont
Excuse me.. what? What does this.. Okey! Alright, as you sayAyn Rand certainly didn't. We're taught by the Christian-based cultural mores that we ought to be selfless; abnegation of the self and of worldly desire is a touchstone of spirituality. I suppose the reason Jesus - or whatever real and/or fictional and/or composite person(s) - made up that doctrine is as a counterbalance to a money- and advantage-driven culture, not unlike our present one. — Vera Mont
I have stated that I find morality to be: Part taught, and part ingrained; To say more on that, I believe that we are born with some innate ideas of morality, and/or that we are obligated by the circumstances of our existance for some moral ideas to exist (For example, to understand the possibility of other beings existing than yourself; Or self morality, as "I think therefore I am" - Ideas which are impossible to get rid of as long as we exist) and we build over them with our interpretation. But I feel that's more semantics than anything.Nothing is innately immoral; since morality is a social convention, it is subject to consrant, ongoing change. — Vera Mont
I do neighter; The idea of self-interest and selfishness in Psychological egoism is that they are usually seen as one and the same; I know this idea is pretty debated, so I did acknowledge it through the concept of "Moral selfishness" - Though I haven't indulged into it more because that argument is already pretty used, I usually use the argument from this post when I disagree with any idea of "Pshychological Egoism", I don't really see the argument that I use elsewhere so +points on that,", I literally made the argument in question, and finally it works in both of the situation, where self-interest and selfishness are or not one and the same;While I don't subscribe to the views of psychological egoism, I don't think that selfishness is the same as self-interest, and this conflation might undermine your argument for me. — Judaka
There would exist/ exist some other arguments too, but I wanted to use this one as this one is what I usually use! — Italy
Haha!Whoops I accidently pressed "Post Discussion" rather than "Preview" againn — Italy
What if we define ‘self’ in terms of self-consistency as a primary motive of behavior? — Joshs
Though, as one does not calculate the costs or benefits, such action is neighter moral or immoral, it is in a gray area. — Italy
but it would still be fun.. soo-Whoops I accidently pressed "Post Discussion" rather than "Preview" againn — Italy
A couple of thoughts. First, a quibble, this is really psychology, not philosophy. It deals with matters of testable fact. — T Clark
Again, as i said to @Judaka even if this is a totally valid argument; I felt it was better to use the one from my post!At some abstract level, I guess you could say that, since it's a factor that provides evolutionary benefit that makes it selfish. That doesn't make any sense. It would be as though I said "Boy, you have a fast car," and you responded "No, it's not fast, they just built it with a big engine so it could win races." — T Clark
Well .. If you actively think of what you'll do; I don't think it really isSo's most human behaviour. — Vera Mont
I am a firm believer that human psychology is strongly bonded with philosophy itself — Italy
The important part for me is that, in this case, unless you get the science right, the philosophy is meaningless. The discussion is not about what is right and what is wrong, it's about human motivation. That's a question that can't be answered with philosophy alone. — T Clark
cognitive able crow — Italy
It is not just about "human motivation", it is about characterising human motivation, and that makes it philosophical. How could science provide a definitive answer to whether our motivations were "self-centred" or not? What makes something "self-centred" is subjective, the logic used is subjective, and the verdict reached in each and every case involves making choices about how to interpret, what to interpret, how to characterise and the construction of a highly subjective narrative. There's nothing testable about it, how do you propose any scientific approach could definitively answer such a question? — Judaka
That's awesome! For me it was how people work; And well, how the whole world works; From that it got to the same premise as yours somehow. Guess there's something which drags one to such path lol.For me, philosophy is how I become aware of how my mind works. I guess that makes it a psychological tool. As I told Judaka — T Clark
Usually I just get all the big things about one's character, and then try to combine them;I am working on a clever name for you, but nothing I've come up with works. All I've got so far is "anime urchin," which doesn't work for me, in spite of the semi-alliteration. — T Clark
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