Well, you're half right there...The Question wrote:[
And according to mine, you're a moral cannibal.
By the way, do you drink a lot? It's just that I don't like the taste of alcohol, you see.
Moderator: Alyrium Denryle
Altruism = cannibalism? That's rich; notice how he tries to interpret altruism as total disregard for individual rights; as I predicted, he is incapable of extricating himself from a mindset of false dilemmas between "100% society, 0% individual" and "0% society, 100% individual".The Question wrote:[Altruism] is the ethical system of cannibals and Aztec virgin sacrificers.
See above (BTW, beer is an example of a food product which is actually toxic; your own analogy backfires on you, and yes, it is still a false dilemma).In the choice between poison and food, there can be no balance sought.
Wrong. At no point was a mixture of societal and individual welfare promoted BECAUSE it is in the middle. It was promoted because examples were provided in which a disregard for societal concerns led to people being hurt (unless, of course, your ethical system does not concern itself with people being hurt).The fallacy of the golden mean applies here more than anywhere.
A two-way value of altruism is not a master/servant servant relationship.The Question wrote:Altruism is immoral because it forces a man to sacrifice his higher values for lesser ones, and allows society through the agency of the state to make individuals eternal servants of their fellow men.
Neither of those ethical systems you mention involve actual altruism.The Question wrote:It states that no man's life is his own - that his life is the means to a larger group's end. It is the ethical system of cannibals and Aztec virgin sacrificers.
This argument is based on an irrational Americanese obsession with applying the rights model of morality to everything. What, you think rights are irrational? I completely agree! But as for the rest... this is no different than if the common creationist inference "evolution is wrong, hence creationism is right."The Question wrote:It is based on the irrational idea that rights are additive, or that two individuals can have just claims on conflicting rights. It is based on the idea that society has rights. Rights are a function of individuals only.
Adopting an ethical system like altruism is voluntary, dumbass.The Question wrote:Altruism is immoral because it forces a man to sacrifice his higher values for lesser ones, and allows society through the agency of the state to make individuals eternal servants of their fellow men.
It states that no man's life is his own - that his life is the means to a larger group's end. It is the ethical system of cannibals and Aztec virgin sacrificers.
Although that is not the case for ethical objectivism.Andrew J. wrote:Adopting an ethical system like altruism is voluntary, dumbass.
Either that, or it simply says that it's good to help others, even at cost to yourself. The dictionary definition of the word agrees with me, not your wild exaggeration.The Question wrote:Wrong, Wong.
Altruism says that man has no right to exist for his own sake, that service to others is the only justification for an individual's existence, and that self-sacrifice is his highest moral duty and value.
Yes it is, since that is the definition of altruism: a desire to help others. Cannibals are not being altruistic when they kill someone and eat him, dumb-ass.It's a superficiality to ask whether one should help the downtrodden. That ain't the issue.
Nowhere in the definition of altruism is it stated that you have no right to exist unless you help people. Your penchant for wildly exaggerating a position in order to attack it remains unchanged.The issue is whether you do or do not have the right to exist without making those sacrifices.
That bum on the street would not be altruistic, and you are still distorting voluntary concern for the welfare of others into "others having total control over me".The issue is whether you must keep buying your life from every bum on the street who cites his need as a moral blank check on your life and existence.
No, the issue is whether you will EVER be able to stop distorting altruism in order to attack it.The issue is whether man is a sacrificial animal.
What's the difference?Charity is moral - altruism ain't.
Darth Wong wrote: The dictionary definition of the word agrees with me, not your wild exaggeration.
They are violating the rights of their victim for the good of the larger group.Cannibals are not being altruistic when they kill someone and eat him, dumb-ass.
That bum on the street would not be altruistic, and you are still distorting voluntary concern for the welfare of others into "others having total control over me".
Hmmmm, nothing in there to support your exaggeration, I'm afraid. Altruism is the opposite of selfishness; it is a behaviour trait. A society of largely altruistic people would be much more pleasant to live in than a society of largely selfish people. Your problem is that you distort altruism into "no existence and no life and no rights apart from altruism" in order to attack it.altruism:
1 : unselfish regard for or devotion to the welfare of others
2 : behavior by an animal that is not beneficial to or may be harmful to itself but that benefits others of its species
Since altruism is about helping others, and says NOTHING about subsuming individuals to the group, that is a red herring and you have failed to support your assertion. How is it altruistic to kill someone and eat him?The Question wrote:They are violating the rights of their victim for the good of the larger group.Cannibals are not being altruistic when they kill someone and eat him, dumb-ass.
And where did you get this definition from? Since you think that a dictionary definition is worthless, what is your basis? Atlas Shrugged?The Question wrote:Charity is giving because you want to - altruism is giving because that's the only way you can be good and that's the purpose of your existence; giving to others at the expense of self.
Darth Wong wrote: Since altruism is about helping others, and says NOTHING about subsuming individuals to the group, that is a red herring and you have failed to support your assertion. How is it altruistic to kill someone and eat him?
Are you really this dense? The victim of the cannibalism might arguably be an altruist (albeit probably an unwilling one), but the cannibals are most certainly not.The Question wrote:You're helping the majority at the expense of the minority.Darth Wong wrote: Since altruism is about helping others, and says NOTHING about subsuming individuals to the group, that is a red herring and you have failed to support your assertion. How is it altruistic to kill someone and eat him?
"Balancing the needs of the many against the rights of the few" as you put it earlier.
I see so in using the Zoological answer...you believe that somehow overrides the common one?The Question wrote:CaptainChewbacca wrote:What's the difference?Charity is moral - altruism ain't.
Charity is giving because you want to - altruism is giving because that's the only way you can be good and that's the purpose of your existence; giving to others at the expense of self.