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Ethics



Success, If You Please

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Daily Dose of Reason - Ethics
  
Friday, 20 August 2010 00:00
question2Success does not primarily consist of figuring out what others want. Success doesn't come from a compulsion to please others. Success comes from a higher than usual desire to please oneself -- one's own highest standards. In the process of always striving to please himself, the successful person ends up pleasing a lot of other people in the process.
 

All I Ask From Others

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Daily Dose of Reason - Ethics
  
Tuesday, 10 August 2010 00:00

individualismAll I ask from others is their own self-interest. I want them to be rational and self-interested when they drive on the highway, so they don't hurt me or another. I want them to pay their bills and be productive, so they don't drag down society morally and psychologically (as well as economically, in a welfare state). I want them to develop all their talents and skills, being as fulfilled as they possibly can be, so that the best and brightest among them will create and produce things of great value to me. I want to live in a culture where creativity and productivity rule, even when it doesn't always affect me directly. I don't want others (especially strangers) to do anything for me. All I want is for them to live their own lives in freedom and with self-responsible attention to their own needs, requirements, wants and desires. I don't want to be forced to finance their ambitions and would never dream of asking anyone to be forced to finance mine. Self-interest means self-responsibility. The rest will follow.

For more on this subject check out GROW UP AMERICA! ... click here

 

I'm So Sorry!

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Daily Dose of Reason - Ethics
  
Friday, 09 July 2010 00:00

sorryWhen somebody -- a celebrity, or someone you know -- says, "I'm sorry for what I did. It was totally wrong. But I was emotionally upset at the time," they're in essence telling you: "I cannot control my emotions, and I'm not even promising to do so in the future." What does it mean to control your emotions? Not to repress or deny their existence, as is commonly thought. To control your emotions means to manage them, think about them and apply reason, facts and logic to them at all times. For example, "My feelings are very strong right now. I very much want to do such-and-such. But it might not be right and I might later regret it. I'm going to think about this first. I'm going to weigh the pros and cons of the action I want to take, and I'm going to evaluate whether my emotions are completely valid, or only partially valid -- or even groundless." This is what people who "apologize" for wrongdoing don't get. The premise of controlling and managing your emotions is that reason trumps feelings. This doesn't mean feelings are always bad and wrong, while reason is always valid and correct. People can engage in flawed or faulty reasoning, and emotions are particularly guilty of encouraging this. But reason, facts and logic are the means thorough which you decide to either engage and indulge your emotions, or refute them.

 

Dr. Hurd has written a lot on human relationships, ethics and communication -- all in plain English ... imagine that! CLICK HERE for information.

 

Why Arrogance is Not Self-Esteem

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Daily Dose of Reason - Ethics
  
Tuesday, 01 June 2010 00:00

qaArrogance does not refer to self-esteem. Arrogance is a mental and emotional attitude best expressed by the statement, "I'm incapable of error or wrongdoing. If I do, think or say something, it's automatically right." Isn't this an indication of "too much" self-esteem? No. It's an indication of no self-esteem at all. Why? Because self-esteem is not possible without an orientation to external reality. Even the most minimal orientation to objective reality involves a rational belief that human beings live by reason, and while reason (when mistaken) is ultimately self-correcting -- and in the long-run gets the job done -- reason is subject to error. Human beings, who use reason to survive and thrive -- and have nothing else to go with, if they evade its use -- is fallible. Arrogant people are perfectly aware of this fact. But the arrogant individual believes that somehow, it doesn't apply to him or her.

 

What Happened to the "Good Old Days"?

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Daily Dose of Reason - Ethics
  
Wednesday, 19 May 2010 00:00
goodolddaysAn older person recently told me: "America turned out so rotten. It wasn't always this way, you know." I don't doubt this is true. However, we have to understand how America became so rotten. The spectacle of a "President Obama" could not have happened in a society filled with self-responsible, happy and rational people. What went wrong? The answer is: the ethics of sacrifice. In the old days, the days to which this older person referred, sacrifice was (like today) the dominant ideal. The only difference was that most people sucked it up and sacrificed for others, rather than expecting or demanding that others sacrifice for them. Today -- and it took many decades to reach this point -- the trend is just the opposite. Most people today demand and expect that others sacrifice for them. This is sometimes called "selfishness," but it's not really self-interest or self-esteem in any sense of the term. It's just the same old ethical standard we have adhered to for too long: Self-sacrifice. I wrote in my book "Grow Up America!" that there are two types of sacrificers: Self-sacrificers and other-sacrificers. Yes, in the "good old days" people engaged in self-sacrifice, which on the phony surface makes for a better and more pleasant society. But it's fake, and it's just as wrong as a society filled with people who demand and expect sacrifices of others. Today's situation was the logical and inevitable outcome of the old days. A society of self-sacrificers must inevitably become a society of other-sacrificers. Modern America is rotten because yesterday's ethical code was rotten.
 
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