Quote:
Originally Posted by Izzy
Sure it might be better than some alternatives, but I would still rank being nice because it makes you feel good higher than being nice out of fear.
|
Being nice out of fear was never the question here. The UNIVERSAL objection to "Aren't selfless acts wonderful?" is "HURF DURF EVEN IF YOU ONLY DO IT BECAUSE IT MAKES YOU FEEL GOOD ITS SELFISH NOW HURR DURR" which is just (coming from me even!) overly literal and redundant in any sort of actual thought on moral philosophy.
You'll notice that I said legitimately religious people. People who obey God for fear of Hell aren't really what I'd call legitimately religious, as those are the same kind of people who condemn others as -going- to hell for "breaking" the "rules" of God. The legitimately religious are people who admire Christ or the Buddha as being generous and kind, and seek to live up to their compassion and love by doing so themselves.
Thank goodness doing nice things for other people makes us feel good, or shit would never get done around here. If the only reason you do a nice thing is because you enjoy the feeling of doing a nice thing, that's still selfless.
Even if you only do a nice thing because you feel like it will gain you social capital to use later, I'd still argue that is pretty selfless, because chances are, the reason the person you were nice to got treated nicely in the first place, was cashing in a bit of social capital they had earned. Keeping the cycle going is also pretty selfless.
When -I- say a position is too pedantic, you know something's up.