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Look out for

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Ayn Rand Institute in Marina del Rey. 7/12/09 (c) Lawrence M. ... Ayn Rand, The Virtue of Selfishness. May appeal to psychological egoism as a foundation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Look out for


1
Look out for 1and there is no 2Ethical
Egoism
2
Be My Valentine?
  • Love, we are repeatedly taught, consists of
    self-sacrifice. Love based on self-interest, we
    are admonished, is cheap and sordid. True love,
    we are told, is altruistic. But is it?
  • Genuine love is the exact opposite. It is the
    most selfish experience possible, in the true
    sense of the term it benefits your life in a way
    that involves no sacrifice of others to yourself
    nor of yourself to others.
  • --Gary Hull
  • Valentines Day, 1998
  • Ayn Rand Institute in Marina del Rey

3
Ethical Egoism
  • Selfishness is extolled as a virtue
  • Ayn Rand, The Virtue of Selfishness
  • May appeal to psychological egoism as a
    foundation
  • Often very compelling for high school students

4
Versions of Ethical Egoism
  • Personal Ethical Egoism
  • I am going to act only in my own interest, and
    everyone else can do whatever they want.
  • Individual Ethical Egoism
  • Everyone should act in my own interest.
  • Universal Ethical Egoism
  • Each individual should act in his or her own
    self interest.

5
Arguments for Ethical Egoism
  • There are at least three principal arguments in
    support of ethical egoism
  • Altruism is demeaning.
  • Acting selfishly creates a better world.
  • It doesnt result in such a different world after
    all.

6
Altruism Is Demeaning
  • Friedrich Nietzsche and other philosophers argued
    that altruism was demeaning because it meant that
    an individual was saying that some other person
    was more important than that individual.
    Nietzsche saw this as denigrating oneself,
    putting oneself down by valuing oneself less than
    the other. This, the heart of altruism, is
    demeaning in Nietzsches eyes.

7
Acting Selfishly Creates a Better World
  • Ethical egoists sometimes maintain that if each
    person took care of himself/herself, the overall
    effect would be to make the world a better place
    for everyone.
  • Epistemological Each person is best suited to
    know his or her own best interests.
  • Moral Helping others makes them dependent, which
    ultimately harms them.
  • Reply this justification ultimately appeals to
    utilitarian principles, not the principles of
    ethical egoism.

8
Ethical egoism doesnt result in such a different
world after all.
  • This argument presupposes the people in fact
    already act selfishly (i.e, psychological egoism)
    and are just pretending to be altruistic.
  • If psychological egoism is true, then we should
    admit its truth and get rid of our hypocrisy.
  • Reply it may not make a big difference in a
    world of independent adults, but in a world with
    children and people at risk or in need, they
    would be put in further jeopardy.

9
Criticisms of Ethical Egoism
  • Cannot be consistently universalized
  • But see Kalin This works in sports.
  • Presupposes a world of strangers indifferent to
    one another.
  • Difficult to imagine love or even friendship from
    the altruists standpoint.
  • Seems to be morally insensitive

10
Universalizing Ethical Egoism
  • Can the ethical egoist consistently will that
    everyone else follow the tenets of ethical
    egoism?
  • It seems to be in ones self-interest to be
    selfish oneself and yet get everyone else to act
    altruistically (especially if they act for your
    benefit). This leads to individual ethical
    egoism.
  • Some philosophers such as Jesse Kalin have argued
    that in sports we consistently universalize
    ethical egoism we intend to win, but we want our
    opponents to try as hard as they can!

11
Ethical Egoism a philosophy for a world of
strangers
  • Some philosophers have argued that ethical egoism
    is, at best, appropriate to living in a world of
    strangers that you do not care about.

12
Ethical Egoism and Friendship
  • Can ethical egoists be good friends?
  • If friendship involves (among other things) being
    concerned about other people for their own sake,
    then this seems something beyond the reach of the
    egoist.
  • Ethical egoists can help their friends if they
    believe there is a long-term payoff for doing so.

13
Ethical Egoism and Moral Sensitivity
  • Can the ethical egoist be sensitive to the
    suffering of others?
  • Such sensitivity seems to presuppose caring about
    other people for their own sake.
  • Moral sensitivity presupposes that the suffering
    of others exerts a moral pull on the
    individualsomething that the ethical egoist does
    not recognize.

14
The Truths in Ethical Egoism
  • Sometimes self-interest masquerades as altruism
  • Ethics should not deny the importance of
    self-interest
  • Self-love is a virtue, but it is not the only
    virtue Ethical egoism mistakes a part of the
    picture for the whole picture

15
Egoism, Altruism, and the Ideal World
AristotleTocquevilles Self-interest rightly
understood
  • Ideally, we seek a society in which self-interest
    and regard for others convergethe green zone.
  • Egoism at the expense of others and altruism at
    the expense of self-interest both create worlds
    in which goodness and self-regard are mutually
    exclusivethe yellow zone.
  • No one want the red zone, which is against both
    self-interest and regard for others.
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