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Yes I'm talking about the former, as I don't distinguish between "philosopher" and "political philosopher." There are 5 branches of philosophy and Objectivism deals with them all in a hierarchical manner (meaning each builds from the level below). Politics is the 4th branch and, therefore, one of the least fundamental. It's also treated a bit more nuanced in philosophy vs how people tend to treat it colloquially. In philosophy, politics is the subject of how individuals interact socially. Colloquially people tend to think of politics as pertaining to government and policy, but those are practical implementation details; consequences of much more fundamental considerations. "and I think you can make the case that raising a child can be substituted in for "designing a building" like in the Fountainhead as a responsibility someone chooses," No, I don't think you can make that case at all. Unfortunately you proceeded to refute that case and, in doing so, were refuting a straw-man of your own construction. There's nothing really to comment on because all of your conclusions were drawn from a false premise that you established yourself. Raising a child is nothing like designing a building. They are completely distinct endeavours with their own requirements, challenges, rewards, levels of commitment and so forth. An architect, such as Howard Roark in The Fountainhead, may metaphorically equate one of his creations as being "like my child" but it would only be a loose comparison made to illustrate the level of attachment and care that he directs to the pursuit of that value. "This dynamic is pretty hard to navigate with purely objectivist principles imo" What, in your opinion, are "the objectivist principles?" You're starting with a lot of false premises so if you'd like to give me your nutshell overview of what you think objectivism is then maybe I can understand why you think Objectvsm is ill-suited to parents. Objectvism positions itself as a philosophy for human beings living on this earth. It exists to provide you with a world view and a framework for living and getting the most out of life. Having and raising children is definitely an important part of being a human being. Many, perhaps most, humans value family and having a family and so if Objectivism can not guide parents then it would be unfit for its own stated purpose. I happen to think otherwise, having raised two children through to adult-hood as an Objectivist, following my understanding of "objectivist principles" and teaching them objectivist values. So please, tell me what you consider to be "objectivist principles" so I can help clarify because in my opinion you don't seem to understand what Objectivism is all that well. But you do seem want to have an honest discussion and so I'm happy to provide clarification if you seek it. |
* You should choose to live based on your individual desire / choices
* You should adhere to your own standards given these choices
* You owe other people nothing, and you are free to enter and leave relationships with other individuals freely
now internet searching:
https://theobjectivestandard.com/what-is-objectivism/
> In sum, the key principles of Objectivism are: Reality is an absolute, reason is man’s only means of knowledge, man has free will (the choice to think or not), self-interest is moral, individual rights are absolute, capitalism is moral, and good art is crucial to good living.
Hard to argue with any of that except self-interest is moral / capitalism is moral. The 2nd is the "political philosphy" I mention which you don't care about really, and the first is well I guess where you can get into a discussion vis a vis children and development, and if my paraphrasing was fair / a straw man.
I'm pretty tired of this conversation, and I think we both agree the OP was lame. I'll give you the last word and leave this conversation.