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originally posted by: Semicollegiate
originally posted by: FyreByrd
originally posted by: greencmp
originally posted by: FyreByrd
a reply to: greencmp
Interesting how I don't see the 'logic' and 'reason' in her arguments. After learning a little bit of her background, I can understand her 'anger' and 'fear' but it goes unacknowledged and she 'justifies' her position with non-reality based suppositions.
Her premise that 'we are all greedy and selfish and looking out only for number 1' and that idea is a sound basis for the ordering of society is a fallacy.
Most 'progress', in fact any society whatsoever, has been made possible by people working together for the 'common' good which ultimately benefits everyone in the long term.
Another premise of hers, that of the 'self-made man' is absurd. If you exist in this world it is only because of society and the beneficence of her members.
You can certainly be forgiven for deriving that somewhat disingenuous paraphrase. As I said, she chose a wholly confrontational and derisive method of communicating her opposition to socialism. Much more than even I have.
(IBAPIRTT)
Do you deny that her basic philosophy is one of 'looking out for number 1, regardless of damage done to others'?
Do you find her arguments sound?
Philosophy should have true axioms as its starting point.
Self interest is true, Altruism is false. Reference Evolution.
Feeling good by helping other people is not altruism.
Altruism is saying that your life belongs to all of humanity and that the individual has no right to what he produces or to his own life.
Full Definition of AXIOM
1
: a maxim widely accepted on its intrinsic merit
2
: a statement accepted as true as the basis for argument or inference : postulate 1
3
: an established rule or principle or a self-evident truth
originally posted by: TheSubversiveOne
a reply to: FyreByrd
Do you deny that her basic philosophy is one of 'looking out for number 1, regardless of damage done to others'?
Do you find her arguments sound?
Her arguments for rational self-interest are laid out in more length and detail in her collection of essays "The Virtue of Selfishness". It would be impossible to lay out these arguments in an interview.
Her philosophy is a throwback to Aristotle. She named the chapters of Atlas Shrugged after Aristotle's laws.
Full Price equation
The simple Price equation was based on the assumption that the characters zi do not change over one generation. If it is assumed that they do change, with zi being the value of the character in the child population, then the full Price equation must be used. A change in character can come about in a number of ways. The following two examples illustrate two such possibilities, each of which introduces new insight into the Price equation.
Example: Evolution of altruism
To study the evolution of a genetic predisposition to altruism, altruism will be defined as the genetic predisposition to behavior which decreases individual fitness while increasing the average fitness of the group to which the individual belongs. First specifying a simple model, which will only require the simple Price equation. Specify a fitness wi by a model equation:
where zi is a measure of altruism, the azi term is the decrease in fitness of an individual due to altruism towards the group and bz is the increase in fitness of an individual due to the altruism of the group towards an individual. Assume that a and b are both greater than zero. From the Price equation:
where var(zi) is the variance of zi which is just the covariance of zi with itself:
It can be seen that, by this model, in order for altruism to persist it must be uniform throughout the group. If there are two altruist types the average altruism of the group will decrease, the more altruistic will lose out to the less altruistic.
Now assuming a hierarchy of groups which will require the full Price equation. The population will be divided into groups, labelled with index i and then each group will have a set of subgroups labelled by index j. Individuals will thus be identified by two indices, i and j, specifying which group and subgroup they belong to. nij will specify the number of individuals of type ij. Let zij be the degree of altruism expressed by individual j of group i towards the members of group i. Let's specify the fitness wij by a model equation:
The a zij term is the fitness the organism loses by being altruistic and is proportional to the degree of altruism zij that it expresses towards members of its own group. The b zi term is the fitness that the organism gains from the altruism of the members of its group, and is proportional to the average altruism zi expressed by the group towards its members. Again, in studying altruistic (rather than spiteful) behavior, it is expected that a and b are positive numbers. Note that the above behavior is altruistic only when azij >bzi. Defining the group averages:
and global averages:
It can be seen that since the zi and zi are now averages over a particular group, and since these groups are subject to selection, the value of Δzi = z′i−zi will not necessarily be zero, and the full Price equation will be needed.
In this case, the first term isolates the advantage to each group conferred by having altruistic members. The second term isolates the loss of altruistic members from their group due to their altruistic behavior. The second term will be negative. In other words there will be an average loss of altruism due to the in-group loss of altruists, assuming that the altruism is not uniform across the group. The first term is:
In other words, for b>a there may be a positive contribution to the average altruism as a result of a group growing due to its high number of altruists and this growth can offset in-group losses, especially if the variance of the in-group altruism is low. In order for this effect to be significant, there must be a spread in the average altruism of the groups.
An axiom or postulate is a premise or starting point of reasoning. As classically conceived, an axiom is a premise so evident as to be accepted as true without controversy. The word comes from the Greek axíōma (ἀξίωμα) 'that which is thought worthy or fit' or 'that which commends itself as evident.'
originally posted by: FyreByrd
originally posted by: Semicollegiate
originally posted by: FyreByrd
originally posted by: greencmp
originally posted by: FyreByrd
a reply to: greencmp
Interesting how I don't see the 'logic' and 'reason' in her arguments. After learning a little bit of her background, I can understand her 'anger' and 'fear' but it goes unacknowledged and she 'justifies' her position with non-reality based suppositions.
Her premise that 'we are all greedy and selfish and looking out only for number 1' and that idea is a sound basis for the ordering of society is a fallacy.
Most 'progress', in fact any society whatsoever, has been made possible by people working together for the 'common' good which ultimately benefits everyone in the long term.
Another premise of hers, that of the 'self-made man' is absurd. If you exist in this world it is only because of society and the beneficence of her members.
You can certainly be forgiven for deriving that somewhat disingenuous paraphrase. As I said, she chose a wholly confrontational and derisive method of communicating her opposition to socialism. Much more than even I have.
(IBAPIRTT)
Do you deny that her basic philosophy is one of 'looking out for number 1, regardless of damage done to others'?
Do you find her arguments sound?
Philosophy should have true axioms as its starting point.
Self interest is true, Altruism is false. Reference Evolution.
Feeling good by helping other people is not altruism.
Altruism is saying that your life belongs to all of humanity and that the individual has no right to what he produces or to his own life.
the actual definition of axiom:
Full Definition of AXIOM
1
: a maxim widely accepted on its intrinsic merit
2
: a statement accepted as true as the basis for argument or inference : postulate 1
3
: an established rule or principle or a self-evident truth
as to 'self-interest' being true and 'altrusim' false - that is just an opinion.
There are arguments to support the supremecy of either characteristic being of more value to evolution of a species.
Cells had to cooperate to form molecules - if self-interest was the true evolutionary truth - we'd just have a lot of warring cells. In fact, we wouldn't even have proper cells, with membranes and mitochrondria and all that other biologocial stuf.
You really shouldn't shout truth without knowing what you are about.
Say after me; "just because it sounds good to me doesn't make it true." and "Just because I read it somewhere, doesn't make it true."