|
|
|
|
|
by golergka
2561 days ago
|
|
> It is their duty and responsibility to give back You cannot decide what other people's legal duty or responsibility is if they hadn't entered a voluntarily agreement with you. And moral duty should never be imposed by violence - it's always up to individual moral choice. > To say otherwise is, effectively, to say that it's OK to want everyone beyond the walls of your castle to starve. No. To say otherwise is to value individual choice and responsibility over the dictate of the masses. |
|
You appear to be one of those who worship at the altar of inviolable individual self-determination.
That concept is antithetical to a functioning society.
I understand its allure—it seems to be a logical and empowering thing. But it's fatally flawed, because humans are not individual creatures, evolved to live out solitary lives creating our own path. We are social creatures. Thus, any philosophy that puts the will of the individual above all else will inevitably fail.
In my experience in practice, people espousing such a philosophy generally either are or believe they will be in a position to impose their will on others, and want a philosophical basis for claiming that as moral and just.
Note, please, that I'm not saying that individual self-determination must always bow to the will of the majority. That's also deeply problematic. Instead, I'm saying that no absolutist philosophy will provide you with the tools you need to create a world that's worth living in for everyone.