| | Let met state here that while I strongly disagree with Ted and Jon here, I generally value their contributions. As owner of this site, I try not to get too personal and insulting because I don't want the position of power to be seen as a threat. Also, I would like to encourage benevolence and civility in this forum. So it might be useful for me to point out why I find this particular debate so offensive.
Rand said, standing on one leg, that Objectivism is: 1. Metaphysics: Objective Reality 2. Epistemology: Reason 3. Ethics: Self-interest 4. Politics: Capitalism
What I see in this argument is: 2.) Epistemology: Emotionalism. 3.) Ethics: Altruism 4.) Politics: Welfare state
Is need a claim on our lives? Certainly it appears to be here. The child is in need, therefore we must help the child! This is altruism. Sure, you allow people to live their own lives for the most part. But as soon as 'need' comes around, our lives no longer belong to ourselves.
Capitalism is a system that respects individual rights. But the premise here is that individual rights are contingent on helping those in needs. If you don't help the poor child, you don't "deserve" rights. (This is the same premise as the welfare state) You're too irrational (read immoral) for them. Your rights end where others' needs begin. This is the convergence of altruism with politics.
And how is it all justified? Through emotions. I feel very strongly that he doesn't deserve rights! I feel very strongly that he is dangerous! I feel very strongly that I'd like to kill him! And despite my very, very weak arguments, I have so much certainly of my position that I'm willing to take a human life!
This is why I don't feel like pulling punches in this debate is acceptable. Here we have a complete sacrifice of three of the most major principles of Objectivism. These principles are not just significant because they're part of Objectivism. They're major principles because of their philosophical and life-affecting importance.
What we see is, when the stakes are high, Objectivist ideas are thrown out in favor of a person's traditional beliefs or feelings. All you need is one starving child, and people surrender the philosophical battle to the altruists. All you need is a strong emotional incentive, and principles are discarded. And not simply discarded. Discarded with pride. As if people with principles are just dogmatic, reciting their mantras, worshipping their abstract ideas. This is just romanticizing emotionalism and lack of principles.
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