Inept At Normal
New member
It is the choice between egoism and altruism, a choice between benefiting those who follow the system and benefiting those who do not.
The way my way benefits those such as me who follow it is pretty obvious. The way altruism (the opposite) does not benefit its followers is that it says they should sacrifice themselves.
But, see, the point of altruistic theories is that if it makes the world a heck of a lot safer. If we imagine a double blind scenario between you and I where one of us has to decide to either save our life or the other's, the egoist philosophy works fine.
However, if we add another person into the mix - say, Crazy Linoone, and we all are forced to decide whether to save ourselves or the two others, the egoist philosophy stands short because you have a 2/3 chance of dying. If we are all altruistic, we all only have a 1/3 chance of dying. In this case, the altruistic choice does the best for the individual, which as you proceed to say, is of course the goal of any ethical theory.
(I remember reading something about birds in The Selfish Gene, but whatever.)
I look forward to your reply as I am enjoying this.
Me too! It's always great to hear other perspectives on things; even if we don't necessarily agree with each other on something as important as this, it's cool to see that we can get along. It really is beautiful, isn't it?