Ayn Rand - The Morality of Altruism

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 6 ม.ค. 2025

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  • @charliehooper8679
    @charliehooper8679 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Ayn Rand changed my life. once I learned about objectivism and that altruism, selfishness and self interest and what what they really are I was so much happier adn became better. I love her thoughts on philosophy. her mind is truly a gift

  • @chasen6151
    @chasen6151 9 ปีที่แล้ว +119

    This is the most misunderstood philosopher I have seen. Many choose to attack her simply because she is a thought-provoking contrarian.

    • @Aristoteles83
      @Aristoteles83 9 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      ***** Certainly not the most misunderstood philosopher. That'd be Max Stirner or in paticular Friedrich Nietzsche. Americans should start reading them and not believe anything was original by Ayn Rand, Sigmund Freud or Jean-Paul Sartre.

    • @chasen6151
      @chasen6151 9 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Socrates ofAthens Elaborate.

    • @sdelano9098
      @sdelano9098 7 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      She is misunderstood by people who think she is "great" or "original". Made up name, made up personality, 100% cigarette addict, adolescent's view of the world as black and white. Real cool to read her when I was a teen. Quickly outgrown and regretted when I became a working adult. Don't waste your time. Gary Cooper is good in The Fountainhead, but it is really a fantasy movie.

    • @joekarr4595
      @joekarr4595 7 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      S Delano Excuse me, I would love to hear your statements on why Ayn Rand isn't a feasible source of good arguments for a mature person

    • @tomservo75
      @tomservo75 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      Because she believes in capitalism, which is associated with Republican conservatives, which is "obviously" evil, even though Rand herself would probably not even consider herself a conservative.

  • @nirpatel6842
    @nirpatel6842 6 ปีที่แล้ว +41

    you play bioshock once and then you feeling philosophy

    • @SpacemanSpiff17
      @SpacemanSpiff17 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Goddamn it, you're def not wrong. :)

  • @sangeetadasappa1947
    @sangeetadasappa1947 11 ปีที่แล้ว +40

    Rational selfishness is what she believed in...meaning,if you want to help a cause or situation,from your own free will then its fine. And she was right!....why should any one be forced to do something they actually don't want to do?...

    • @leerman22
      @leerman22 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      I see altruism as immoral and altruists as evil because if one good man destroys his life with altruism then he cannot continue helping others. Helping people help themselves solves this problem. In Cancun there are opportunities for the poor in the tourist business, they are not fleeing the country, but in the rest of Mexico you see they begin to lack opportunity.

    • @Starnerdz
      @Starnerdz 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@leerman22 I would love to know how doing a kind thing as opening a door for someone without the need of a reward for doing so is self harmful. I think this is the entire problem is how people are defining altruism, elephant's are naturally altruist's and we don't see them going extinct due to slitting their throat's in order for another to live if that is how you define altruism. Human's are naturally selfish because we are smaller animals which lived as prey for a time, bigger animals such as elephant's that live in a safer world are naturally altruist's. There has been more harm in the world because of human selfishness than there has ever been done in human altruism, as selfishness is where the evil of man comes from. However those that are still wired to our natural selfish surviving trait would see altruism as evil and immoral, that's why they are not altruist's and are selfish, however like it or not, altruism is the result of a more wiser species, because fear is a very primitive and immature emotion.

    • @leerman22
      @leerman22 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Starnerdz Opening a door for someone doesn't destroy your wealth, no self-harm doing something of simple decency.; no self-destruction. In fact it may be more profitable to your public image, not to mention ego.

    • @Starnerdz
      @Starnerdz 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@leerman22 Sure, it can make someone feel good for doing so, but this is the problem is definition and how people define it. When we talk about existential reward's, it show's a completely different story and that is what people define as altruism. I will grant you that doing altruist act's causes a emotional reward for doing so, but that's not really existential as there is no personal benefit they have gained, or lost. Narcissist's do good to benefit their image, and so by your logic you assume everyone is a narcissist, and everybody lack's empathy since empathy is a altruistic emotion while fear is a selfish one.

    • @leerman22
      @leerman22 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Starnerdz I don't mean everyone is egotistical. There are some rich bastards out there that actually care about the people who work for them. The best thing to give the impoverished is jobs and skills, not petty handouts. That's because they can become something more than a taker or a burden on society, and most importantly they can become a future customer. Help people help themselves, and treat them like decent people. Lots of homeless people would love to have a simple job and live in a simple home with cellphone service and an internet connection. Teach a man to build a fire.

  • @rulerss
    @rulerss 8 ปีที่แล้ว +101

    andrew ryan brought me here.

    • @BlueCadet3_
      @BlueCadet3_ 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      i was about to comment the same thing

  • @the21herald
    @the21herald 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    No gods, no kings, only men.

  • @zupergozer
    @zupergozer 10 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    I don't agree with her views but these points need to be made, they do encourage a bit of thought. Nothing should be free of criticism

    • @cptndunsel8088
      @cptndunsel8088 9 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      zupergozer I agree with her in the regard, that men are stronger if they are prepared to do for themselves, instead of feeding on the efforts of others, but I do not believe compassion is evil, or a weakness.

    • @a7c777
      @a7c777 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      This is just speculation as I don’t want to put words in her mouth, but I think she may have got caught in either her eureka moment or lost in translation when describing altruism as an “evil”. I think she much more meant to call direct altruism a “polarizing force” for productivity of an individual. But she does later iterate that altruistic activities are often motivated by the self in the end. So performing an altruistic activity to make oneself feel better or isn’t necessarily taxing on the self, but performing an altruistic behavior at the expense of doing things that you know won’t be fulfilling for you would be an evil/negative force towards your conviction. Hopefully her interpretation was more on a personal motivation for determining her own morality that she thinks is best for her productivity rather than a belief in an objective moral structure oriented around self-preservation or self-fulfillment. If this was the case, I’d probably mostly agree if this is the case

  • @SuperSoverein
    @SuperSoverein 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    That is what she is saying, problem is altruists don't force people to do that, that is what collectivists do, she seems to mistake altruists for collectivists, true altruists don't give a damn if others don't help, they just help, collectivists attempt to force assimilation on all others, forcing them to help the thing they are helping (typically the group).
    If she just stuck to debunking collectivism, she would have been fine, but the second she attacks altruism, there is a problem.

  • @spencersteinbrecher6511
    @spencersteinbrecher6511 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Altruism holds back human progress and innovation. If every human being prioritized becoming there best possible selves, the world would be a better place.

  • @Success0527
    @Success0527 11 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Rand was right, it really is "much earlier than you think." Collectivism and leftism, far from representing "progress", is the same-old tribalism; altruism is the morality of existential cowards and slaves. Altruism does not allow men to regard themselves as sovereign, independent entities, but as a mere component of some kind of amorphous collective non-entity, "others". That's the Big Lie of altruism: everybody regarding himself as a beast to be sacrificed on the altar of others, and as a parasite whose moral value and meaning is derived from "others".

    • @urdisturbing
      @urdisturbing 11 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Environmentalism requires altruism. Environmentalists MUST be willing to sacrifice their own wealth for the sake of future generations which they will never meet. Without environmentalism the human species could easily go extinct.

    • @omedolf
      @omedolf 11 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      urdisturbing
      Environmentalism is a scam.

    • @urdisturbing
      @urdisturbing 11 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      libertarianfreedom8 There are two basic reasons why people don't believe in environmentalism: they either don't believe in science or they don't believe in morality. Randriods believe in neither.

    • @sammywilson1417
      @sammywilson1417 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      +urdisturbing Very true.

    • @Letrus100
      @Letrus100 9 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      +urdisturbing Do you know the best means to combat Climate Change? It isn't government regulation, that will only very very slightly slow it down. The only means to combat climate change is technological innovation which regulation stagnates. Poverty is the natural state when born and need is not a claim on the productive. A man's mind is his means to survive, literally to be or to not to be. And stop generalizing people by calling them randroids. Faith and belief won't grow your food.

  • @whatscreenname
    @whatscreenname 7 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    She makes perfect sense to me

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    Altruism is the sacrificing of higher value for a lower one. Giving because it feels good is simply selfishness. Feeling good is the highest value.

  • @PantherFaceJones
    @PantherFaceJones 10 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    What Rand did not consider, and that i will insist you consider, is that, based upon the findings of psychologist who specialize in social-cognition and humanism, helping others is in fact in your own selfish personal interest. Not for reasons such as social status and social reward, but because higher order thinking mammals who can consider concepts of self worth and self-identity need to contribute to their species well being inorder to feel personally well. Help others to help yourself, and do as rand suggests as well, help yourself to help others. Truth is often found in the duality between collectivism and objectivism.

    • @Artificial-Insanity
      @Artificial-Insanity 10 ปีที่แล้ว

      The crux is though that it's in your self-interest to help your in-group. To help your out-group, however, is counterproductive. You could try to define your in-group as the entire human race, and in some contexts, that would apply (say alien invasion or crazy people like PETA placing animal welfare above human welfare). However, generally speaking, it's natural to concern yourself with your own welfare first and foremost and that depends, if at all, only on the welfare of those close to you.To go against that is, imho, unnatural and undermines the very principles that made us what we are today. Our ancestors rose from primitive single-cell organisms to the incredibly complex beings that we are today on those precepts. All animals place their own interests and that of their family or group above those of anything else.

    • @thelol77
      @thelol77 10 ปีที่แล้ว

      NewFormofSilence So...appeal to nature?

    • @Artificial-Insanity
      @Artificial-Insanity 10 ปีที่แล้ว

      thelol77 Yup. Ayn Rand would probably disapprove. ;) That said, it's not a baseless "it's good because it's natural" deal. Improvement through competition between individuals, groups, businesses etc. has happened without fail. I think it's rational to accept it as the premier model for improvement of the human race, especially since attempts to deviate (à la communism) have always failed.

    • @PantherFaceJones
      @PantherFaceJones 10 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      NewForm, considered that maintaining an efficienct united cooperative human race would practically be the most singularly beneficial thing that could happen to an individual. As in, using government to successfully create situations where your in group is the entire human race would be the result of the most substantial cultural and technological Renaissance the world has ever seen, and with it corresponding decreses in world strife would be inevitable*. In addition to what i said about self-concept. I urge you to consider not promoting isolationism, the only thing scarier than the human ingenuity when it is in full competition two human ingenuity working together. Real communism has never really been tried, nor is the world anywhere near ready for her, but things as simple as global postal systems cant start working at peak efficiency until isreal lets palestine lay rail (or drive trucks or whatever things relevent to postage that makes my example work) though their nation. Cooperation, assimilation of culture, and sharing of resources is a necessary component for a more perfect world. Nessecary, not just incredibly helpful. We cannot have rougue people and nations not complying to reasonable international standards, and i genuinely and whole heatedly believe, that that can be done without violating a single civil liberty or diminishing a single spark of individuality. Any rational man would chose his most rational best option, which is socialism.

    • @PantherFaceJones
      @PantherFaceJones 10 ปีที่แล้ว

      And definitely not without fail

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    I think you would be surprised to find how many lifeguards and firefighter do so because of the combination of pay, benefits, job satisfaction and the realistic options that exist elsewhere in the job market. If you offered no pay for these jobs, you would see the number of altruists.

  • @GordonGarvey
    @GordonGarvey 9 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    5:35 did they really need to show video of a blond girl when she started to talk about nazism?

    • @josephward5436
      @josephward5436 7 ปีที่แล้ว

      It wasn't their intention to link the two.

  • @q0rra
    @q0rra 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    If you're doing it for your own reputation then you expect to get something in return for helping someone and as such you aren't sacrificing anything, i.e. it is not altruism at all.

  • @whos1st
    @whos1st 6 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    She is still here. Her words - her thoughts - her WILL. Thank you Miss Rand

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    As long as YOU are the one to sacrifice themselves, YOUR altruism is all good with me.

  • @feliciacovington699
    @feliciacovington699 8 ปีที่แล้ว +26

    I like her view on life. Screw others, think about you and yours

    • @thefirefactory4969
      @thefirefactory4969 7 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      felicia Covington I agree.. and think. ...if we all took care of ourselves we would be much more fit and in better position to help others. when we please.

    • @SuperBigdude77
      @SuperBigdude77 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Shit that what everyone else is doing any way.

  • @jaranarm
    @jaranarm 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    Perhaps if those firefighters or lifeguards were not doing their job to be paid or for their own self-satisfaction for helping others, then yes they would be altruist.

  • @PaulTheSkeptic
    @PaulTheSkeptic 11 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Why would you want human freedom, wealth etc.? Altruism. Social security was enacted because old people were literally freezing and starving to death in the street. What loss of freedom? South Korea went from one of the poorest countries in the world to one of the richest in such a short time because of a government regulated economy and government involvement in commerce. Are corporations evil because they do what they do? If they didn't, their competitors would. Ayn is a psychopath.

  • @stephanieyacomes8036
    @stephanieyacomes8036 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Ayn Rand points out how people believe they should be given and are not grateful

  • @6komodo6
    @6komodo6 10 ปีที่แล้ว +35

    Andrew Ryan brought me here!

    • @Letrus100
      @Letrus100 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      +Erich Richter Most just don't understand Ayn Rand's reasoning. One must read through all here stuff to understand it.
      This is a good starter point since it quotes from her writings and some of Leonard Peikoff's writings.
      aynrandlexicon.com/

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    @som9one the lesson here is that video games may not be the best place to learn economics. being in denial of objective reality may have short term benefits, but it always has long range consequences.

  • @fede2
    @fede2 6 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    She doesn't identify a theoretically mapped-out doctrine that carries the name "altruism". Nor does she describe an actual behavioral phenomenon in which the self is never considered. She essentially made up a boogy man in her mind on the basis of some root signifier in the word without any regard how it is actually understood.

    • @libertariantranslator1929
      @libertariantranslator1929 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      Read the Sermon on the Mount. German National Socialists certainly read it.

  • @colepeltier8472
    @colepeltier8472 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    A man chooses, a slave obeys.

  • @e21big
    @e21big 10 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    to sacrifices your mother for the sake of our neighbour - is evil. Doesn't sound so insane to me.

  • @ALLmasked
    @ALLmasked 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    blind altruism is different than the responsible kind. her words are being used as reinforcement for selfishness as a moral choice. which can then be interpreted that taking advantage of people is not morally wrong. but i think her true message is that imposing altruism which demands sacrifice for the sake of an entity is wrong and can lead to great acts of suffering.

  • @miamivlad
    @miamivlad 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    She is absolutely brilliant. Self care, self preservation, and self reliability and responsibility MUST come first or else you might as well give yourself to cannibals. I was initially shocked when I saw the title “Altruism is evil”, but after having listened to her reasoning, it makes perfect sense.

  • @NilSatis1983
    @NilSatis1983 11 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I think she read Nietzsche, liked it and ripped it off with a Capitalism twist.

  • @TheChatterbox1991
    @TheChatterbox1991 10 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I think the main lessen here is that caring and being beneficial to others is not inherently evil, but to do so to the point of damaging yourself, to whatever physical, emotional or spiritual extent, in the process is in itself evil. I believe she saw the concept of Altruism as the opposite extrema of complete selfishness. That is to say that neglecting or exploiting yourself in favor of helping others is, in her perception, just as evil as neglecting or exploiting others too benefit yourself.
    I personally don't see self-sacrifice as inherently bad, but considering the type of toll that being a self-sacrificing individual can, and in most cases, will have on themselves, i can see people like Rand considering such a thing as evil.

    • @jeviosoorishas181
      @jeviosoorishas181 9 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      TheChatterbox1991 Actually no.
      Ayn Rand's argument against Altruism is far more well thought out than that and far more important than simply talking in extremes of selfishness vs. altruism, I'll try to break it down for you, since her criticism against altruism, is why she's so hated, and also why her philosophy is so important.
      To understand Rand and her critique of Altruism, you have to go back to the Enlightenment. In Europe at the time: when the enlightenment was occurring, Christianity was under attack, and many people were rejecting religion. Since science was showing that man could understand nature primarily through reason, there was a revolution against the authority of church and supernatural powers of every kind.
      This led to a moral crisis, because if Christianity is B.S., whether it's protestant or catholic, why should anyone abide by it or it's rules? Certain people started taking this to heart, and it lead to a ton of debauchery in Europe, where a lot of people took advantage of this moral relativism (kind of like in the new age movement in the 60's and 70's). Many of the top figures in religion and philosophy saw this, and believed in some way shape or form, the morality of Christianity had to be defended, even if Science contradicted the theology, and it was the French Revolution and all the craziness that was the Reign of Terror, that made this become a far greater emergency.
      The philosopher, who provided the rationale, the path, and the way to dealing with this problem was Immanuel Kant. He basically convinced people that reason was limited, and that there were certain things that could only be understood by our emotions alone i.e. morality. After the horrors of the french revolution, which were blamed on the enlightenment, reason lost it's appeal, and there was a great surge in religion all through out the West including America. His philosophy, set the grounds not for just a resurgence of religion (that wasn't his ultimate goal), but the intellectual defense for emotionalism as a form of higher thought, where it was in Romanticism, Transcendentalism or even the modern day Evangelical Christians.
      You see Christianity is Altruism, and nowhere is this made more so obvious than in the example of Jesus Christ. He is the greatest of all the great moral people, and he is great because he sacrificed himself for all sinners. He is also the one who told us that it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God. He is also the same one in the bible who praised a woman who was poor, but still insisted of giving half her wealth away as an offering, as being the prime example of an ideal Christian. Implicit in Christianity, and the love of Jesus is a love of altruism. This way of viewing morality, is incompatible with Capitalism - one has to eventually give and bow out to the other.
      When Ayn Rand came to the U.S., she could see that Socialism was gaining prominence over American Culture, just as it had in the Soviet Union, and she saw how it was coming through, by the class of intellectuals, like many of the Conservatives of the times saw it too. The Conservatives, thought it was due to a conspiracy or some kind or a desire for a New World Order, Ayn Rand saw it differently: she saw the Socialists taking the ideas of Jesus far more seriously than the Christians did. After all, America is the richest country in the world, and over half of the 1% live in America (you are in the global 1% if you make over 30K a year), and she realized that the conservatives could uphold their love for capitalism and maintain their moral foundation of Christianity only by evading the contradiction, which to her meant there was very little hope for them. This is why Ayn Rand initially appealed to the left, but the leftist intellectuals rejected her, so she ended up pretty much by herself. The libertarians liked her, but had problems with her philosophy, because they were way more into moral relativism and didn't want to deal with her rejection of the supernatural and the primacy of philosophy over economics.
      Ayn Rand understood that morality is the driving force of where men decide to go in life despite their flaws (as America, in the pursuit of the ideal of liberty for all, was able to show from it's inception); that behind every ideal is the motivation of self-improvement towards moral perfection, whether it is achieved or not. If the ideal was Jesus, and that was the measure of perfection, then socialism would eventually win out, regardless of how many times it failed in practice, since it always had the moral high ground: "Why not build heaven on Earth, if all the technology and wealth created by Capitalism, makes it possible?"
      That is why Ayn Rand advocated Selfishness. Selfishness, being the working towards of one's moral perfection that has been built and worked towards to by reason. You could help others, but the desire to make yourself into the best person you could ever be is to be the measure of morality, not how much you do it in the name of other people. This is also why Ayn Rand relied heavily on Aristotle as the foundation of her philosophy: he was the first to attempt to establish a moral system based on reason; Ayn Rand's built her philosophy to make adjustments to it, and take out any reference to the supernatural, which she believed Aristotle received from Plato. Before arriving at Aristotle, and not understanding their could be a morality defended on the grounds of reason, she had embraced Nietzsche, who basically advocated for the Will to Power, as replacing the morality of Christianity. Once she discovered Aristotle, she rejected Nietzsche (Gail Wynand in the Fountainhead symbolizes him, he commits suicide in the end, by shooting himself in the head...so yeah), and was able to systematize her philosophy.
      If you can understand this insight by Ayn Rand, you'll probably be able to understand everything else she says, regardless of what the critics say or those who simply memorized and spit out her ideas but don't really understand the context in which they were developed.

    • @djr5995
      @djr5995 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      Jevioso Orishas Wow, very informative and well thought out comment rather than reactionary vitriol. I learned something. It's a refreshing change from the kind of stuff you usually see in TH-cam comments, y'know the ones that make you question your faith in humanity.. keep up the good work!!

    • @djr5995
      @djr5995 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      TheChatterbox1991 well put, your final sentence makes it very clear for me, I think this is a good way to see the concept

    • @sammywilson1417
      @sammywilson1417 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      +Jevioso Orishas Hello, I have a question. I've been getting into these kinds of things and it seems extremely interesting.
      In fact, I first truly started to understand the term altruism....from an anime I watched (haha... I'm still young). Although it might seem a little childish, the anime (called Parasyte) talked about altruism and animosity and things like that, and it was extremely interesting to me.
      By defining altruism as "selfishness in disguise", isn't it possible to have altruistic behavior even without realizing and not for your own benefit? Or does it not matter, because it might be an unconscious realization that it could benefit you in a selfish way. Like someone taking a risk and trying to fight a man with knife just to protect some random strangers. What if that someone did it on instinct, not even realizing his deed could make him a hero? Or is it all one decision, even person isn't aware of it?
      Could altruism completely be applied to a mother and her child? And how often, a mother would take risk her whole life for her child, even though ( in a very cold-hearted thought) she could just make a new one? I think this is found in not only humans, but almost every animal. In the anime (called Parasyte; I actually recommend watching it), it even showed a parasite monster protecting it's child (which wasn't of the same species. It was a human baby).
      And one more thing: Isn't altruistic behavior when you know that you will benefit from the deed, and know it will not hurt you much in any way considered extremely selfish? Like a man fighting a guy to protect a girl, when the man is 10x stronger and faster?
      I, personally, have no problem with these actions. Us humans are a bit selfish in some ways, and maybe we do things that are extremely hard to comprehend. But that's why we're human. And I'm okay with that.
      Hopefully you can read all of this. Thanks (and sorry for any typos).

    • @jeviosoorishas181
      @jeviosoorishas181 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      Sammy Wilson The essence of altruism is self-sacrifice. You're doing it because you are sacrificing yourself, the results don't matter. The guy who fights the man 10X his strength doesn't care if he wins or not, he just cares that he's sacrificing his life under altruism. Like Jesus, he wants to die.
      The essence of Rand's criticism of Altruism, is that it obscures a blatantly obvious part of what it means to survive and be human: producing more than we consume. If humans don't produce more than they consume, they die quickly...and if we're all dead, of what significance is altruism? Eventually, you run out of bodies to sacrifice.
      In Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand explores this pretty thoroughly. It's a book that explores what happens when productive people stop producing, and those who constantly seek to redistribute wealth and organize others in the name of the common good don't have any more fuel to run their plans.

  • @diosdadoapias
    @diosdadoapias 7 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I think the qualifying word for altruism is sacrifice. when one self sacrifice his being, life, limb, safety, or property for another who is not even blood related to him, he is committing altruism. But one who is just helping somebody which is not a sacrifice to the self of the one doing the help, there is no altruism.

    • @markjohnson8260
      @markjohnson8260 7 ปีที่แล้ว

      This is contrary to the common understanding of the word. Rand in my opinion is wrong wrong wrong to take a word and apply an odd definition to it.

    • @mikeblain9973
      @mikeblain9973 7 ปีที่แล้ว

      She always uses the original strict definition. Remember her ideas were formed early last century.
      Today we use the word "altruism" with a more vague meaning of "kindness". So it is us who have applied an odd new definition to the word, but that is just the evolution of language. To understand her point you have to think a bit deeper to understand what she meant back then, not what someone would mean when using the same words today.

  • @RaduOleniuc
    @RaduOleniuc 8 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    0:36 "Alturism" = I dyslexia love. :D

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    @AnDizine Ayn opposed altruism or sacrifice, trading a higher value for a lower one. Caring for others is not a sacrifice if you believe its in your self-interest to do so. I choose to respect the rights of others and care for those I value. Why? Their existence makes my life better. And, if I were to believe that my selfless good deeds result in a heavenly reward, it may well be in my self-interest to do so. But that is not sacrifice because it is a high value in itself.

  • @horeballa
    @horeballa 9 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    It is really strange to have something you view as an absolute truth be challenged like this. I have always thought of self sacrifice for the benefit of others as one of the greatest virtues a man or woman could achieve. We applaud when someone with little material currency gives away much of it to others, we cheer the names of those who have given their lives so that others may live, we even fantasize about doing it ourselves.
    I still believe these things to be important, an almost subconscious part of mankind. but somehow through Rand's reasoning I have begun to question them a bit.

    • @fzqlcs
      @fzqlcs 9 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      +horeballa you maybe on the threshold of an amazing, but counter-intuitive insight. Keep following your nose.

    • @mrgetrealpeople
      @mrgetrealpeople 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      +fzqlcs Using your logic there is no objective reason any person should try to save your two year old child from a Burning Car is it?

    • @fzqlcs
      @fzqlcs 9 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      +mrgetrealpeople There would be an objective reason for me, the child's mother or anyone who valued the child so highly they would risk their own lives to save the two year old. Others may have reasons as well, such as wanting credit for being the rescuer or avoiding discredit for having done nothing while witnessing an avoidable death. Beyond that, there are few objective reasons to put one's own life at risk to save a stranger. It is a question of value. Few people value a stranger's life above their own.

    • @mrgetrealpeople
      @mrgetrealpeople 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      You don't understand Rand do you?

    • @ryandirkyoung6270
      @ryandirkyoung6270 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      +horeballa the thing is that, in that instance, you're not being totally selfless, but partially selfless. To act selflessly is to hold no regard for your own welfare. Now, personally I don't think that's evil, I think that's stupid. Then again, I believe Rand has a different definition of evil because she has different values. I may hold some contempt for altruism as the secular remnant of religiosity, but I haven't totally adopted the Objectivist ethic because I haven't done enough research. The question I still have is: is it altruistic to be charitable under any circumstances, even if you gain happiness from it? Personally I like to help people close to me and I even gain some happiness from helping those that don't know me as well, but is that altruism? Is the definition of altruism dependent on what we gain happiness from?

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 11 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    She understands that altruism is the sacrifice of a higher value for a lower one. Or put differently, it is the sacrifice of your rational self-interest for someone else's benefit.

  • @MentePrimitiva
    @MentePrimitiva 9 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    "Philosophy" of the cynicism...

  • @Novasky2007
    @Novasky2007 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    Mankind is entitled to individual happiness. Senseless?
    The world is in a terrible state and needs rebuilding by individuals. Senseless?
    We should pro-actively destroy irrational thinking. Senseless?
    Odd definition of senseless.

  • @volcom7sk8er
    @volcom7sk8er 9 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    THIS VIDEO SAVED ME ON ONE OF MY FINALS. THANK YOU SO MUCH

    • @manuelaraujo2764
      @manuelaraujo2764 8 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      +Zac How?? What course were you taking?

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    Oh, I get it. Individuals are basically the property of the collective to spent however the oligarchy desires. Kinda the opposite of the concept of individual rights. Is that what you favor?

  • @TimothyMatias
    @TimothyMatias 11 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Ayn Rand is wrong, because she doesn't realize that the greatest selfishness is selflessness.

    • @TeaParty-qh1py
      @TeaParty-qh1py 10 ปีที่แล้ว

      and you are not you

    • @bma051000
      @bma051000 10 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That's a total contradiction. Selfishness requires the achievement of values. Selflessness demands the sacrifice of values. Check your premises.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 10 ปีที่แล้ว

      >selfishness is selflessness.
      In your imagination but not in the concrete, material universe as known by man's mind. Man is a living organism, facing the constant alternative of life and death. Man's actions either further or threaten his life. Selflessness is a rationalization of the desire to be self-destructive without being destroyed, to be consciousness without existence. This is mysticism.

    • @TimothyMatias
      @TimothyMatias 10 ปีที่แล้ว

      What a pessimistic and irrational way of looking at the world :v

  • @PaulTheSkeptic
    @PaulTheSkeptic 11 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I wasn't really talking politics but ok. Those things aren't altruistic. They're government programs. The government belongs to us. It exists to serve us. Is a hammer being altruistic to the carpenter? Those things help the overall health and security of our nation. Which one's and to what extent we support them I agree is up for debate but surely you wouldn't do away with social security would you?

  • @6c121
    @6c121 9 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Most dislikes here are because they misunderstood what she is saying, and do not realize that what they call 'altruism' is in most cases 'selfishness in disguise', as Dawkins put it in "The Selfish Gene"
    I can however imagine a hypothetical situation in which a true altruist (who gets nor emotional pleasure, nor any "God points", nor any secondary gains for their action) would through acts of 'mass-altruism' produce a positive net effect in which people would be less inclined to practice true altruism, thereby helping humanity in some sense. So in this sense 'true altruism' is not necessarily bad.

    • @cptndunsel8088
      @cptndunsel8088 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      6C1 Perhaps, but I do not believe that such a truly selfless being could exist. At least not a normal human being. which I think negates this argument. It reminds me of an argument I have often used against communism, which is that I do not believe true communism could exist, except for in a hive mind community. That said, I do not necessarily entirely agree with Ayn Rand either. I do not think it is a bad thing for the strong to pull up the weak. It is when those who you are pulling up, have no intention of giving anything to society in return, that there is an issue. When they refuse to do for them self, because they feel they are entitled to a free ride.

    • @djr5995
      @djr5995 9 ปีที่แล้ว

      david boell I think you have made a very good point there, inequity in society causes greater harm the bigger it is, this is obvious when you consider few in power with immense wealth while the masses are in abject poverty. We all benefit when we are not so strongly stratified, when there is not such a gap between the haves and have-nots, and so with the strong and the weak, it is good to help those who cannot help themselves, to rehabilitate, to help them be strong again. And, with support and education, I'm sure that those who would otherwise refuse or feel entitled will, instead, be willing and able to give back and help rehabilitate the remaining weak

    • @6c121
      @6c121 9 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      david boell hello there.
      Yes, I very much agree with you. The way I see it is that Ayn used the word "altruism" instead of "self-sacrifice", and it's partially a play of words which causes disagreements, and confuses a commoner.
      But I also believe she used "altruism" in her speeches to gain a greater response in public, and perhaps also in attempt to warn of the detremental commoner definition of "altruism = self sacrifice + act of benevolence"
      (so from my viewpoint, we can either remove "self-sacrifice" from the equation, or remove "benevolence" from the equation, and she removed the latter, hence defining "altruism = self sacrifice")
      So... having taken this confusion of definitions into consideration, I choose to avoid the word 'altruism' in non-philosophical conversations, and instead use the word 'benevolence' or 'welfare'.
      But more importantly, the word 'selfishness' causes more confusion!
      The way I see it is common people define selfishiness it as
      "Selfishness = 0% Self sacrifice + 100% inconsideration",
      IMHO, Ayn tried to remove the "100% inconsideration" from the equation,
      and therefore she called it "Selfishiness = 0% Self sacrifice".
      Instead, I use my personal definition as "Selfishness = Being Inconsiderate", such as when doing something at others' expense, and I'm not an advocate for this kind of selfshiness.
      Instead, I do advocate (in most cases) and am willing to 'publicly' stand up for what I personally call "mindful selfishness", meaning that I take others into consideration, but am not necessarily willing to self-sacrifice or be a "true altruist" which Ayn desribes.
      (therefore "Mindful selfishness = No True Altruism + Being Considerate")
      By the way, from her responses in some vids I sensed that Ayn is perhaps overthinking altruism, as in "hmm If I do this, would I then be an altruist?" whereas a common person would be more spontaneous, which I find is more true to your self.. Like I'm not gonna overthink some things and strictly not do it coz it disagrees with my philosophy ; instead I'll follow my heart and intuition at that moment (but followin ur intuition isnt infallable, and I think she desperately tried to avoid the fallacies, but I also think the price she had to pay in life with that attitude might have been greater than if she hadn't been overthinking it).
      Maybe that was her defense mode, because she felt in the past that people wanted her to be self sacrificial, then later she avoided it at all cost? Who knows, life is complex, we're all just want some loving affection and assurance not be hurt.
      Side (half-)joke: writing this long text down wasnt an act of altruism or to alter the mind of others who reads, but instead a mindfully selfish act, which allows me to restructure my thoughts, share ideas, be challenged by the other, and grow. Very selifsh, jst like Ayn would approve of :)

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 7 ปีที่แล้ว

      > We all benefit when we are not so strongly stratified,
      Oil firms need vastly more wealth than average people to provide gasoline to them. Even a socialist govt which owns oil firms would need that.

  • @177SCmaro
    @177SCmaro 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    "who thinks giving ones self &/or possessions to others is the greatest achievement one can achieve??"
    Adof Hitler for one, pretty sure Mao was into it too, just a two examples off the top of my head, though I doubt either of THEM would actually do as such, but they sure encourage among the people. Obama is another to a lesser degree, (not equating them), we've all got to make some sacrifices, right Barry?
    Look up Altruist ethics, it's the ethical basis for Socialism.
    See also: collectivism.

  • @MentePrimitiva
    @MentePrimitiva 9 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    She is just a product of the environment she was raised.

    • @Letrus100
      @Letrus100 9 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      +Jump Jump By your reasoning so are you.

    • @MightyForSure
      @MightyForSure 8 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      +Jump Jump Great argument. You just rebutted everything she said. Good job!

    • @NodDisciple1
      @NodDisciple1 8 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      +Jump Jump You mean the Soviet Union that she fled? The petty dictatorship that made her early years horrible? In the sense that she stood against it, then yes. Yes she is.

    • @trequor
      @trequor 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Oh so like literally everyone and everything else? How the fuck else do you get where you are?

  • @kakacech
    @kakacech 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Sacrificing yourself blindly for others is what created wars.. and she got hated for that. What a great thinker she was

  • @TheDennyAblack
    @TheDennyAblack 9 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Pitting selfishness vs altruism is based on the assumption that you cannot balance the two, and you have to go extreme all the way into one direction - this of course is not true - you can make others happy and make yourself happy at the same time ... ayn rand probably cant though

    • @mikeblain9973
      @mikeblain9973 9 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      You are talking about altruism in the casual way the word is used today. Rand was talking about "the philosophy of" altruism, which uses its original meaning of holding others as higher value than yourself. Thats very different to simply making others happy.

    • @TheDennyAblack
      @TheDennyAblack 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Altruism IS a survival trait, you are overtaken by dogma... How do you think the cycle of birth, life death is replenished? Selfishness is also a survival trait. Neither can be fully extended they need to be balanced. It is hypocritical to discount your entire first 16 years of life during which you were a beneficiary of altruism. Even basic laws you rely on for survival are based on altruism, for example, why is robbery illegal, or mugging.. any person who is physically stronger than you can overpower you and take everything you have including your life... however you rely on societal altruistic rules to save your life... and the list goes on

    • @TheDennyAblack
      @TheDennyAblack 8 ปีที่แล้ว

      Granting of individual rights IS altruism - why the hell should society grant you individual rights which you have not fought for, and if you fight you would lose to a stronger person.. you guys are not thinking holistically.. also you're benefitting from altruism while lashing out at that thing you rely on for survival

    • @TheDennyAblack
      @TheDennyAblack 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      the human race is not built on individual selfishness, in fact individuals enter life and are nurtured using the altruistic urges - whe they leave this life they cease to exist and their worth is measured by what they left behing for others, whether useful items, wealth or even inventions and art etc from their creative minds - measuring a person's worth from what they personally gain is not their value to society, that's what they are able to TAKE from society.. you measure a person's worth by what they GIVE to society...

    • @TheDennyAblack
      @TheDennyAblack 8 ปีที่แล้ว

      in fact, even the financial system is designed to reward you when you SHARE or GIVE a product or service to the customer which is beneficial to them...ie selfishness is used to serve altruism in a holistic sense - the net effect is humans all doing things for each other using financial hypnotism (money has no real intrinsic value, its value is derived from YOUR value added to the process)

  • @PaulTheSkeptic
    @PaulTheSkeptic 11 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Yes I only have 500 words. It's not name calling. I'm not a psychologist but I've read about it a lot and I think she really is a psychopath. Psychopathy is characterized by a lack of empathy. You will find many psychopaths in positions of power, just like the characters in her book. The idea that the more productive humans on the planet will lead to some kind of utopia is laughable and I don't think she even thought so. As for exhibit A, what loss of freedom?

  • @177SCmaro
    @177SCmaro 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    I didn't say it was taboo, I said it was evading actually answering my question.
    And you're right, it is quite common.
    I asked several very specific questions.
    1. That if paying taxes = helping poor people, like you said, then,have you ever payed more into taxes than required and/or deliberately not taken every deduction you could?
    2. So on what basis does the state stake a claim on a man's values (i.e. his property, labor, etc).
    3. Are you a greedy person? You meet your own definition for it.

  • @177SCmaro
    @177SCmaro 11 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I had a similar experience, even argued certain Altruist and collectivist ideals when I was a kid, but as I grew up I started learning more and more about how people and the world actually works (as opposed to certain utopian theories) and started waking up to Individualism, reason, logic, and self-interest as the basis for how a society operates, as opposed to collectivism, emotion (particularly fear and envy) and subjective "fairness".
    Although, I still can't call myself an Objectivist.

  • @Mwaterfall
    @Mwaterfall 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    If your mother became crippled and had to move about in a wheelchair, but there was no nurse to take care of her for one years time, would you sacrifice for one year and be that nurse for your mother until a real one comes? You see... your mother is a "value" to you. People can be a value to you. What would you do without them if you were in a wheelchair like your mother? So here is where certain sacrifice becomes a noble thing. Never forget that

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    @AnDizine If you choose to spend your life trading higher values for lower ones, you have simply made irrationality your supreme value. Yes, as long as you can support yourself despite such a philosophy and not make claims on your fellow man to subsidize your irresponsibility, I agree you have a human right to behave as you wish. There are two lessons here. Liberty is a wonderful thing and teenagers have no monopoly on foolishness.

  • @Jay8691x
    @Jay8691x 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    Q: What is the place of compassion in your philosophical system?
    A: I regard compassion as proper only toward those who are innocent victims, but not toward those who are morally guilty. If one feels compassion for the victims of a concentration camp, one cannot feel it for the torturers. If one does feel compassion for the torturers, it is an act of moral treason toward the victims.

  • @LintRiggs_
    @LintRiggs_ 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    The interviewer at the end tried to catch her out as if to say that giving to a loved one is an altruist act. No, it's a selfish act. You love someone selfishly for their values, as Rand said a million times. The confusion lies in the terms of altruism and especially selfishness. The term selfish has deliberately been obfuscated by the powers that be. When you hear Rand use the term selfish, think individuality. You don't owe it to everyone to love them. You don't reward a murderer with love. You love those that deserve it. YOU see value in a person that corresponds with YOUR OWN. This is what she means by the word selfish. You don't go around dishing love out and rewarding, and therefore encouraging, bad people.

  • @unfad1ng
    @unfad1ng 14 ปีที่แล้ว

    @dreadrocksean
    i dont think not caring about your won well being is immoral neither is not caring about others.
    Mans only moral responsibility is to not interfere with someone elses freedom

  • @KCN8er
    @KCN8er 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    Altruism ultimately creates better, not worse society. Locking people up
    for crimes of poverty costs the tax payer 35 grand a head. Not
    educating kids, makes the country less competitive and destroys our
    future as the top country (also reduces crime.) Maintaining and allowing massive monopolies ultimately undercuts competition and make the success of starting new SMEs nearly impossible. Seeing that every American has access to healthcare ensure that all workers are the most productive they can be and that they aren't spreading the plague around.

    • @rjlundholm89
      @rjlundholm89 8 ปีที่แล้ว

      one of the necessary qualifications to work for the Military Industry is to Sacrifice your-self for the 'greater good'.

    • @KCN8er
      @KCN8er 8 ปีที่แล้ว

      rjlundholm89 False equivalency, but that same drive compells men to be good soldiers.

    • @KCN8er
      @KCN8er 8 ปีที่แล้ว

      Joining the military isn't an altruistic act at the supranational level.

    • @rjlundholm89
      @rjlundholm89 8 ปีที่แล้ว

      well they don't try to recruit you through the fact that you will be sent to dangerous territory and shot others. Nor do they tell you that you will be metally scared for ever

    • @KCN8er
      @KCN8er 8 ปีที่แล้ว

      rjlundholm89​ Scarred. Well that's why people study advertising psychology. The military is a commoditized product to be bought and sold just like everything else in an unregulated capitalist market.

  • @gdh6200
    @gdh6200 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    She's not against that too because that's not what she believes to be "real" sacrifice, because the parent'd be actually helping one of his own instead of sacrificing something really valuable to help someone unknown, like a neighbour.
    It'd be altruism if the parent gave up food for helping, let's say, someone who was just walking by the street and is hungry.

  • @SwordOfApollo
    @SwordOfApollo 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    I find that most who dismiss Ayn Rand’s morality don’t really understand it. Her “selfishness” is long-term, principled self-interest. People are a combination of the physical and mental, and your self-interest includes psychological values. Self-interest is not to be reduced to only the physical, such as money. Other people can be of tremendous psychological value (i.e. friends, lovers, children.) Rand recognized that benevolence toward strangers is in one’s own interest, in a free country.

  • @177SCmaro
    @177SCmaro 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is a common misunderstanding of Rand. She says right here in this clip there is nothing wrong with giving to another person if you value that person i.e. giving to a spouse, or in mutual exchange, were both parties are gaining in some way.
    If there is value to you in being charitable then do it. But don't force other to or hold that charity, i.e. sacrifice, is a virtue or duty. I believe that's what she saying. I could be wrong, I'm still a bit new to Rand's ideas.

  • @177SCmaro
    @177SCmaro 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    The choice to eat or not eat dirt is a choice just as choosing to buy a Ferrari or a Rolls is a choice, the only thing that changes is what's being deliberated upon, i.e. chosen between.
    What you apparently still don't understand is that the act of choosing is not dependent on what's being decided between.
    And you most certainly can given away everything you own, work for money to buy new stuff, then give it all away again.

  • @Minarchist088
    @Minarchist088 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    @Minarchist088 I meant to say: "and it is this consideration that makes rational self-interest actions “rational.”"

  • @Onelove-Oneheart-h4c
    @Onelove-Oneheart-h4c 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    For someone who was a people pleaser, she helped me

  • @Mwaterfall
    @Mwaterfall 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    The right way is to "Love others as well as love yourself." Not altruism: "Love others and sacrifice yourself in the process of loving others." Ayn Rand simply teaches that we should both VALUE ourselves and others; however, the primary value one should have is the value of his or her self. Think of it this way: How can you truly love others if you can not truly love yourself.

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    That tailchasing exercise makes my point. Objectivity is not in conflict with change. Change is reality and objectivity takes that in to account. Objectivity cannot be at variance with reality, otherwise it is not Objectivity. Objectivity is reality. Things have a fixed nature even when the circumstances around them change.

  • @JohnEusebioToronto
    @JohnEusebioToronto 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    If you steal from others for the purpose of giving to charity while avoiding your own expense, it is not altruistic.
    If you've stolen the money, for whatever reason are unable to return it, and decide to donate it because you do not feel like it should be yours, you are being altruistic.

  • @JohnEusebioToronto
    @JohnEusebioToronto 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    "How can you truly love others if you can not truly love yourself."
    Altruism does not negate loving yourself. But let's ignore that obvious hole in your argument. Why is loving yourself a requirement for loving others?

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    Dude, even a bird has to feed itself.

  • @StoryHealer
    @StoryHealer 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    They key to this is to understand the perception of what help, morality and sacrifice are. For example, many people mistake holding someone's hand as helping, whereas the "tough love" that teaches people to stand on their own to feet is surely true help.

  • @JohnEusebioToronto
    @JohnEusebioToronto 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    If you force it on people, it is not altruistic because altruism is largely defined by motivations. The motivations behind altruism must be voluntary. If you donate 1000 bucks, it's charity. If someone robs you of 1000 bucks and then donates it, it is not altruism. It is theft.
    This is not hard to understand.

  • @george77772moons
    @george77772moons 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    True altruism is giving because you want to give; because you want to bring good, not because you are being forced to. When forced to, it is beet known as theft.

  • @ex-muslimlibertarianatheis9008
    @ex-muslimlibertarianatheis9008 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is the most logical stance. What's evil about it? You mean to tell me that reality is evil? Everything she's said on here is 100% logical and practical.

  • @eilam42
    @eilam42 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    You're right, if Ayn Rand wants to speak against altruism she can't say it's evil. What she can do is say it's stupid.

  • @ElectricChaplain
    @ElectricChaplain 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    Oops, it's too late. I meant to talk about the Economic Miracle, or the Wirtschaftswunder.

  • @32peartree
    @32peartree 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    No - property developers can sit on thousands of empty homes - while homelessness increases. Then there's like selling Glocks, cigarettes, junk food, violent video games, sub-prime mortgages. Giving people what they want is not always a good idea.

  • @NilSatis1983
    @NilSatis1983 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    A bird acts on unconscious libido, while a human is in the unfortunate position of being conscious not only of his lusts but also of is surroundings. A bird is at the mercy of nature. Humans can bend nature to their will. Anyone who compares us to other animals is dealing in pure sophistry.

  • @esca8652
    @esca8652 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    "to help someone you don't know while those you do are forced to go without help because of it, that's when it becomes most evil." Maybe so. There's many cases where you can help someone and still take care of your immediate family or friends.

  • @ventricity
    @ventricity 14 ปีที่แล้ว

    the problem is her definition of altruism. she says that it's altruism only if you don't like helping others, and that it is not if you like doing it. but the problem is that for a person watching it, he would define it as altruism because he can not know if the act of helping is from self interest. meaning, the definition of altruism is in reality impossible to define.furthermore the "want" of helping is hard to express and can change in the moment and in the future looking back.

  • @Horrorangell
    @Horrorangell 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    I wish these recordings were higher quality (which i know is impossible due to when these were recorded) because I can't understand Ayn very well due to her accent.

    • @mioszradomski1825
      @mioszradomski1825 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Lucky Slavic me who speaks English with the same one and understands her perfectly

  • @Moontouchofficial
    @Moontouchofficial 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    It is now becoming an increasingly known fact among evolutionary biologists that kindness, and likely altruism, is dependent on both our happiness as a species and our actual survival. This is my personal intellectual case for morality. This is because morality is reciprocative.If you only cared about your self to the most extreme degree, you may not be able to find somebody to help you with things in life if you've rejected them before. Increasing the reciprocation on a global scale is top goal

  • @libertariantranslator1929
    @libertariantranslator1929 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Ayn's work was approximated in the 1940s and 1950s by professional philosophers teaching at American universities. Prof Tara Smith of UTexas at Austin has put those ideas to the test of modern rigor in philosophical and ethical analysis. Rand's ideas pass the tests.

  • @capoman1
    @capoman1 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    If you haven't taken the TIME TO READ a single Ayn Rand book... Don't TAKE THE TIME to post a comment in opposition to one of her philosophies. Read and learn before you draw a conclusion. You might be surprised what you learn,

  • @daPlumber702
    @daPlumber702 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    I loved Hitch so much. The guy was so smart and just from listening to him talk about her I feel half confident in saying that Hitch, who read books a day, never actually cracked open a rand book. He always talked about her with such cynicism, which was odd for him.. I'd be interested in knowing what his opinion was of her toward the end, it might have changed.

  • @EdgemanLL2
    @EdgemanLL2 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    Its history. No govt runs on altruism. It allways run on, and to the benefit of, the power of the political class.

  • @jmambilly
    @jmambilly 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    One major point Ayn Rand missed out was, the entire altruistic theory was proposed only for the ruled(the people). The rulers were always selfish to the core and fulfilled even their craziness by use of state force.
    Ten commandments says to value Only Cod your creator more than you , and to love your neighbor AS you love yourself, self sacrifice, like Ayn Rand says is suicide, a crime against your creator, any one proposing self sacrifice (or suicide ) is defying the creator.

  • @EdgemanLL2
    @EdgemanLL2 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    "All the figures say the Soviet Union out-performed the present Russia"
    Until the part where it collapsed.
    At that point, all the figures say its a proven failure.

  • @daPlumber702
    @daPlumber702 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    The salvation army puts a santa clause outside of stores, they ring a bell and if you have extra change you contribute... they never mention sacrifice and santa isn't even allowed to ask you to give.
    You're completely caught up on the definitions schoolteachers gave your parents to give to you for these words. I'll say again voluntary assistance is morally fine, forcing someone to help is wrong.

  • @177SCmaro
    @177SCmaro 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    @itz4kix
    And, by the way, this freedom to exchange the value any one individual places on his/her property, etc, is the basis for the Free Market system and why it's a rational system (as opposed to the irrational collectivist systems, i.e. Socialism, Communism, etc.).

  • @jathanator
    @jathanator 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    That's called simple sharing. mutual benefit. Rand didn't like feeling compelled to help others or share. She felt that sharing is only justified if you like them. Rand's viewpoints were far more extreme then you're describing. Her logic: "I'm in the desert with one loaf of bread, I have a long way to go, its only enough bread for me. Tough luck buddy, youre on your own. It would be immoral for me to share with you, because that could prove detrimental to me in the long run."

  • @SuperSoverein
    @SuperSoverein 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    For some reason she and the followers of her philosophy seem to think it is outright evil if it adversely affects the person giving in the slightest way, no matter how much good it does for the person you help, and also disregard (Or just don't have) any feeling of satisfaction that you get when you are kind and charitable.

  • @32peartree
    @32peartree 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    An under reported aspect of Japan's lost decade - was the fact that the US and Britain reneged on their sweetheart trade deals. Most Brits and Americans don't realize that in the post-war period, Japan had almost free access to American and British markets whilst placing tariffs on imports. Similar deals were struck with S Korea and Taiwan. Which was due to the fight against communism - demonstrating the superiority of capitalism. Shame American and British workers paid the price.

  • @daPlumber702
    @daPlumber702 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    People don't seem to actually listen to Rand. They find one or two key phrases lock on and ignore everything else. She didn't say that helping another person was bad. Your question is the VERY FIRST QUESTION Donahue asked. If you have the means, and YOU wish to do it, not someone else telling you to do it, then helping others is a beautiful thing. But when you don't have the means... when you give the homeless guy on the side of the street $20 even though it means your child will starve...

  • @177SCmaro
    @177SCmaro 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    "In someone that acts so' is it the selflessness or the selfishness that comes first or could it be that said selfishness & selflessness co-exist..."
    To modify something Rand once said, before you can say, "I will sacrifice for you." You must first be able to say "I". So the "self" is at the center of acting for another (assuming it's by choice) but the person who is acting for another is getting more value in doing so than he/she is sacrificing, otherwise it would be irrational to do so.

  • @sg-qr7rd
    @sg-qr7rd 9 ปีที่แล้ว

    Isn't all altruism, by some stretch of logic, a selfish act because it makes some people feel good? People see altruism as a moral virtue (perhaps mistakenly), thus being altruistic raises their opinion about themselves in their own eyes, this gives them happiness, and this makes it a selfish act, thus justifiable according to objectivism, isn't it? Be it justifying their philosophy of life or vying for some 'fairness' (whatever that means to a person), all persons have reasons which can justify their otherwise painful voluntary acts (e.g expectation of reward in afterlife). Even if those reasons are not sound, as long as a person believes in them, don't they make all acts 'selfish' at some level? (And thus justifiable according to Ayn Rand)

    • @mikeblain9973
      @mikeblain9973 9 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      All "voluntary acts" (such as helping people) Rand would agree with you, as she does here near the beginning. But that is not altruism.
      Today the word is used in a more relaxed way, but its literal meaning (which Rand uses) is placing others at higher value than yourself.
      Charity and other acts of helping people are done because the others are _worse off_ than you, not _higher value._ It is almost opposite mentality.

    • @Letrus100
      @Letrus100 9 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      +John Doe That is why altruism is evil. It requires the feelings of other people to feel happiness. If you tried to help someone but then they were angered you would have no right to be angry at them for not being grateful. Altruism is the traditional selfish evil most people talk about were you give some to others and expect a lot back as payment for your help.

  • @koyunbaba73
    @koyunbaba73 10 ปีที่แล้ว

    LibertyPen, you have perhaps the most important channel on the internet. If high school students spent three weeks watching and discussing the ideas presented in your videos, we would heal as a nation. If Senators and Congressmen (and yes, even Presidents) just watched all your Tom Sowell videos, we would be out of debt, unemployment would all but vanish, people would get off of welfare (because they would recognize that it is infinitely better to work for minimum wage than to be a parasite.) America and eventually the rest of the world would experience an unimaginably high level of prosperity. But we don't follow these precepts. Instead, one political party (I'm not going to say which) has a vested interest in keeping minorities down and having them believe that they are victims. It's a tragedy beyond comprehension.

  • @177SCmaro
    @177SCmaro 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    Oh, and also, I'm not arguing for or promising a utopia, that's what Socialist, Communist, etc. promise it'd be THIS time.
    The Free Market system is not, NOT a utopian idea. It's simply the best system so far devised by man for man to deal with his fellow man (as opposed to force and control, i.e. Socialism).
    Even people who would ordinary kill each other, who may live on opposite sides of the planet, can and do cooperate with each other, usually without even realizing it, to make a product.

  • @TheSBarbarar
    @TheSBarbarar 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    In the face of Statism, Communism and Fascism she definitely has a point. Americans were more individualistic when we were creating our national identity, building. In my understanding of Rand we've allowed ourselves to convolute our charitability and altruism to the point of meaningless ness. Hence our decline, or at least our loss of purpose

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    Did she get an exemption from forced payment into FICA, yet still had the audacity to collect? Is that what you mean? If one opposes the healthcare mandate, should they only pay in but never collect to avoid being considered a hypocrite by you? Is this your thought process (or lack thereof)?

  • @LoganTO87
    @LoganTO87 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    That would not be an altruistic action then. As she stated with the husband case, you are not sacrificing, because you are gaining value in the process. The pessimist argues that man (or woman) only gives to charity because it gives him (or her) a feeling of empowerment. This person has a better life because of me, therefore I feel good. Ayn Rand would argue (and has argued) that you are acting for the feeling you get, not to help others; therefore, it is not altruism.

  • @Kavetrol
    @Kavetrol 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    Your criticism shattered me into pieces ... I feel so small ...

  • @Rodriguez8611
    @Rodriguez8611 14 ปีที่แล้ว

    She either misunderstand altruism, or redefines it for her convenience so she can be consistent with her philosophy. She doesn't know, or understands, that humans are a 'herd' species, and altruism is a force of cooperation for the interest of the group, which ultimately, is the interest of the individual; thus, altruism comes out of self interest.