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Single Idea 88

[filed under theme 23. Ethics / A. Egoism / 1. Ethical Egoism ]

Full Idea

Nobody would choose to have all the good things in the world at the price of becoming somebody else.

Gist of Idea

Nobody would choose all the good things in world, if the price was loss of identity

Source

Aristotle (Nicomachean Ethics [c.334 BCE], 1166a23)

Book Ref

Aristotle: 'Ethics (Nicomachean)', ed/tr. ThomsonJ A K/TredennickH [Penguin 1976], p.294


A Reaction

This now looks like a particularly good objection to utilitarianism, which aims to promote pleasure, no matter what the cost.

Related Idea

Idea 3764 Actions are right if they promote pleasure, wrong if they promote pain [Mill]


The 26 ideas with the same theme [view that people should put themselves first]:

We should behave well even if invisible, for the health of the mind [Plato]
Wickedness is an illness of the soul [Plato]
For a Cyrenaic no one is of equal importance to himself [Aristippus young, by Diog. Laertius]
Nobody would choose all the good things in world, if the price was loss of identity [Aristotle]
A man is his own best friend; therefore he ought to love himself best [Aristotle]
Self-interest is a relative good, but nobility an absolute good [Aristotle]
The greatest good is not the achievement of desire, but to desire what is proper [Menedemus, by Diog. Laertius]
Cynics believe that when a man wishes for nothing he is like the gods [Diog. Laertius]
Reason demands nothing contrary to nature, and so it demands self-love [Spinoza]
Self-satisfaction is the highest thing for which we can hope [Spinoza]
Self-interest is not intrinsically good, but its absence is evil, as public good needs it [Shaftesbury]
No moral theory is of any use if it doesn't serve the interests of the individual concerned [Hume]
Self-interest is not rational, if the self is just a succession of memories and behaviour [Sidgwick, by Gray]
The noble soul has reverence for itself [Nietzsche]
People do nothing for their real ego, but only for a phantom ego created by other people [Nietzsche]
Nietzsche rejects impersonal morality, and asserts the idea of living well [Nietzsche, by Nagel]
Only the decline of aristocratic morality led to concerns about "egoism" [Nietzsche]
A wholly altruistic morality, with no egoism, is a thoroughly bad thing [Nietzsche]
Egoism is inescapable, and when it grows weak, the power of love also grows weak [Nietzsche]
The question about egoism is: what kind of ego? since not all egos are equal [Nietzsche]
The ego is only a fiction, and doesn't exist at all [Nietzsche]
Morality would improve if people could pursue private interests [Weil]
Good actions can never be justified by the good they brings to their agent [Foot]
Loving oneself is not a failing, but is essential to a successful life [Frankfurt]
Egoism submits to desires, but cannot help form them [Graham]
Personal concern for one's own self widens out into concern for the impersonal [Korsgaard]