The old adage "The road to Hell is paved with good intentions" springs to mind.Originally Posted by Omnius Deus
Your question is very loaded, though, and no one perspective can ultimately be accredited as "right." But, to me, values are important because I believe that they are, fundamentally, essential to our survival as a species (among other reasons).
If we were truly a species of "me me me!" creatures, the human race would likely be 1000x worse off than it is at this moment. Imagine if the majority of human families didn't give a shit about one another? Imagine if doctors, nurses and teachers didn't take their jobs to heart? If none of them actually cared about the patients and students they are helping. What if all children were raised by hoodlums, neo-nazis, pedophiles, rapists, serial killers? If you have children, and you are a person that doesn't treat others with mutual respect, do you want your children growing up in a world where everyone treats them the way you treat others? Would you really want to live in a savage land where no one valued anything, and everyone did (and destroyed) whatever they pleased?
There are few conceptual glues that work to counter-act that kind of self-destructive society. Empathy and respect for others are not the least of them.
I believe that nothing is cut and dry, though. Your means are still to be taken into consideration, even if your intention is purely to do "good." Everything should be weighed and looked at in context. (Do you do [this], because your intention is to do good, or is [that] the most responsible option, and why?) Everyone has their own ideas about what separates good from evil, but I think a good person is a person that probably wouldn't let their own desires negatively impact the lives of those around them. Many people just don't care about others, but (ironically?) are usually the most agitated or furious if someone else imposes their own will against that person.
But I still think it is right for someone to take their own interests into consideration, of course. It doesn't have to be a "give all unto another" philosophy, to the letter. People are still individuals, and it's only in our nature to progress ourselves (whatever it is we perceive "progression" to be). But there is an equilibrium between being selfish and being completely altruistic that works pretty well, I think. The whole thing really has to do with the old "golden rule:" Treating others the way you want to be treated. Some might try to find a loophole in the logic by saying "Well what about masochists? They like to be hurt. Aren't they excused to hurt other people??1?!" No. Because masochists want to be hurt. If they hurt someone else, that person never asked for it.




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