| | A parallel discussion of this topic is taking place on the thread, "What is the Common Good," in which I quoted the following statement from Nathaniel Branden's article, "Isn't Everyone Selfishness" (The Virtue of Selfishness): Obviously, in order to act, one has to be moved by some personal motive; one has to "want," in some sense, to perform the action. The issue of an action's selfishness or unselfishness depends, not on whether or not one wants to perform it, but on why one wants to perform it. By what standard was the action chosen? To achieve what goal? I think this is the essence of the distinction between selfish and unselfish actions. Obviously, by this criterion, not everyone is selfish.
Bob Bidinotto appears to be making the same point in Post #3. (Also thanks, Bob, for your excellent Post #5.)
There is, however, a distinction here that needs to clarified and one which was glossed over in Branden's article. In that article, he appears to be making two different points:
One is the point he made in the passage I quoted, namely that whether an action is selfish or unselfish is determined by the purpose for which the action is taken. Is the (primary) purpose of the action to benefit oneself or to achieve some other goal, such as the welfare of others? If it is to benefit oneself, then the action is selfish; if it is to benefit others, then the action is altruistic.
But Branden also appears to argue that what determines the selfishness of an action is not simply the standard by which the action is chosen or the goal that it is intended to achieve, but the objective consequences of the action itself. In the paragraph immediately following the one I quoted, he writes: If a man proclaimed that he felt he would best benefit others by robbing and murdering them, men would not be willing to grant that his actions were altruistic. By the same logic and for the same reasons, it a man pursues a course of blind self-destruction, his feeling that he has something to gain by it does not establish his action as selfish. He also states: The selfishness or unselfishness of an action is to be determined objectively: it is not determined by the feelings of the person who acts. It’s not clear what Branden means by “feelings” here. If he means “beliefs,” then the question is: Does a person’s belief that he has something to gain by an action establish his action as selfish, independently of whether or not the action is in his objective self-interest? For example, suppose a person believes that smoking two packs a day is in his self-interest, when in fact it is self-destructive. Does his action qualify as selfish, simply because it is intended for his own benefit? Or must it be in his objective self-interest, in order to qualify as selfish? If I read him correctly in Post #6, Bob Bidinotto holds the latter view, whereas in Post #3, he appeared to be endorsing the former.
As has already been pointed out by Tommy Phantom (Is that your real name? ;-)), Rand defines "selfishness" as "concern with one's own interests," and adds, "This concept does not include a moral evaluation . . . nor does it tell us what constitutes man's actual interests." (VOS, p. vii.) Similarly, the Dictionary of Philosophy (Dagobert D. Runes) defines ethical egoism as "The view that each individual should seek as an end only his own welfare." (My emphasis) Observe that neither of these definitions requires that a person's action achieve his own welfare in order to qualify as egoistic; only that it be taken for the sake of achieving it.
If in order for an action to qualify as egoistic, it must not only be intended to achieve one's welfare, but in fact achieve it, then if two Objectivists disagree on whether or not an action is in fact selfish, one of them must not be an advocate of the virtue of selfishness. But this cannot be correct. They are still ethical egoists, if only because they still believe that the goal of a person's action should be his self-interest.
Rand was a smoker and was diagnosed with lung cancer in 1974. Since smoking was against her objective self-interest (even though she didn't recognize it as such), did that disqualify her as an ethical egoist? Did it mean that she did not uphold the virtue of selfishness, because she believed in doing something that was against her objective self-interest? No, of course not. The fact that she recognized that the goal of a person's action should be his own interest was enough to make an ethical egoist.
So I would say that all that is required for one to qualify as an ethical egoist is that one believe that the proper goal of a person's action is the person's own welfare, not that what the person believes in doing must actually be in his objective self-interest. Obviously, by this criterion, not everyone is selfish, because not everyone holds his own interest as the ultimate goal of his action.
- Bill
(Edited by William Dwyer on 9/09, 12:49pm)
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