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Old 04-12-2003, 06:26 AM   #21
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Tyler Durden,

I have several questions about your use of some words.

You said,
Quote:
The word 'sacrifice' has been misused in about 99 percent of the time. If it is to mean a loss, and its antonym is gain, then one never truly sacrifices anything in acts of supposedly altruistic nature.

One does not sacrifice his life to save his family unless he values his life more than his family's.

If i thought my life is more important than my entire family's then killing myself to save theirs is accurately a "sacrifice."

As it stands, there are no such altruistic actions.
Why do you think that one does not sacrifice one's life to save one's family unless he/she values his life more than his family's. The dictionaries that I have checked do not support such a view. For example,

from Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary/Thesaurus

1sac•ri•fice \"sa-kre-'fs, also -fes or -'fz\ noun [ME, fr. OF, fr. L sacrificium, fr. sacr-, sacer + facere to make ó more at do] (13c)
1 : an act of offering to a deity something precious; esp : the killing of a victim on an altar
2 : something offered in sacrifice
3 a : destruction or surrender of something for the sake of something else
b : something given up or lost <the sacrifices made by parents>

Nothing here supports your view of "sacrifice", does it?

From the OED- "To surrender or give up (something) for the attainment of some higher advantage or some dearer object." This seems to be just the opposite of the qualification you would attach to "sacrifice".

Beyond these two observations, even if it were the case that in order to sacrifice my life for another, I had to value my life more, and even if it were the case that in order to act altruistically I had to sacrifice (your notion of "sacrifice") something, it doesn't seem to follow that there are no altruistic actions. If I gave up my life, which I valued more than my son's, in order to save my son, that would be an altruistic act, by your definition, wouldn't it?

I know there is more to say beyond this, but I don't want to go beyond this without soe response-- I might be misunderstanding your point.

Bob Stewart
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Old 04-12-2003, 08:34 AM   #22
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Hi Tyler:

Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
Keyword is "appears." Which is something i have no interest in exploring...........analytic constituents (in the form of propositions, whether Russellian or Wittgensteinan, i don't care) you will locate the unexamined assumption..........For example those people who attempt at humility are very cognizant of the fact that their humble acts will produce praise and raise their status in the opinions of others.
Screaming inconsistencies here:

1. Apparently you do have an interest in exploring appearances. Seems for you that one needs to know a perpetrator's motive before determining whether altruism has occured. Correct?
2. Some people may fake humility but it doesn't follow that all humble people act in that way for the reasons you suggest.
3. I believe #2 exemplifies one of your unexamined assumptions, (Aristotelian or Fregian, I don't care ).

Finally, are you suggesting the human mind can know anything more than appearances?

Cheers, John
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Old 04-12-2003, 09:56 AM   #23
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Thumbs down Bob quickly overstates himself

Quote:
Why do you think that one does not sacrifice one's life to save one's family unless he/she values his life more than his family's.
Because of the intrinsic value of the action i have explained above.

Quote:
The dictionaries that I have checked do not support such a view.
Au contraire. Listing dictionary definitions that do not spell out the intrinsic valuation of the action does not necessarily mean there isn't any support.

Quote:
For example, from Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary/Thesaurus

1sac•ri•fice \"sa-kre-'fs, also -fes or -'fz\ noun [ME, fr. OF, fr. L sacrificium, fr. sacr-, sacer + facere to make ó more at do] (13c)
1 : an act of offering to a deity something precious; esp : the killing of a victim on an altar
This definition does not deviate or differ from mine quite in the slightest. If i sacrificed "something" to offer to a deity, it must be precious - not cheap or trivial. And if i sacrificed my life to save another, then it must be "something precious."

Quote:
2 : something offered in sacrifice
Nothing here disagrees with my definition. Were you too prematurely happy to post before you read it carefully?

Quote:
3 a : destruction or surrender of something for the sake of something else
Still consistent. I destroy my life for another's - provided that that person's life is more valuable than mine.

Quote:
b : something given up or lost <the sacrifices made by parents>
Ding ding we have a winner.
Given up/lost is my definition. An act of sacrifice cannot be a gain, can it?

Quote:
Nothing here supports your view of "sacrifice", does it?
Wrong. If you meant that my definition is not quite spelled out in so much words, true. However, if you meant to piss in the well and say that my definition is alien, you have obviously not succeeded.

Furthermore, i checked the definition in merriam webster. You failed to list the 4th definition: Loss. Slightly disingenuous of you not to.

Quote:
From the OED- "To surrender or give up (something) for the attainment of some higher advantage or some dearer object."
Yes this is not quite the definition of sacrifice - it is "gain" in the theistic sense. I gain eternal life by sacrificing my current one in an altruistic action. The remaining vestiges of Christian morality infects even the most devout atheists. The irony is almost too much!

Quote:
This seems to be just the opposite of the qualification you would attach to "sacrifice".
Yup. However, it is not the only definition of sacrifice - and one you have overlooked/surpressed for some reason.

Quote:
Beyond these two observations, even if it were the case that in order to sacrifice my life for another, I had to value my life more, and even if it were the case that in order to act altruistically I had to sacrifice (your notion of "sacrifice") something, it doesn't seem to follow that there are no altruistic actions. If I gave up my life, which I valued more than my son's, in order to save my son, that would be an altruistic act, by your definition, wouldn't it?
Yes. Do you value your life more than your son's? Now, don't be shy.

Quote:
I know there is more to say beyond this, but I don't want to go beyond this without soe response-- I might be misunderstanding your point.
You either misunderstood completely (by denying the intrinsic value of sacrificing something in order to "gain" something else) or you were not being honest.
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Old 04-12-2003, 10:07 AM   #24
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Wink paging all Pages

Quote:
John Page 1. Apparently you do have an interest in exploring appearances. Seems for you that one needs to know a perpetrator's motive before determining whether altruism has occured. Correct?
True, and one has to look beyond appearances (lip service) in order to get at the true motives. Correct?

Quote:
2. Some people may fake humility but it doesn't follow that all humble people act in that way for the reasons you suggest.
Oh why not? If people learn of the prescriptive norm declared in the biblical phrase of Luke 14/18, then they will evaluate being exalted as an end to the means of being humble. It's called psychology.

Quote:
3. I believe #2 exemplifies one of your unexamined assumptions, (Aristotelian or Fregian, I don't care ).
And what would these "unexamined assumption" be, precisely, if not a refusal to take any human action at face value? What does Aristotle or Frege have to do with assumptions, if i am to take you seriously?

Quote:
Finally, are you suggesting the human mind can know anything more than appearances?
Ah, the relativist speaks. I am saying that there are potential frameworks to assess the underlying mechanism of human behavior that does not lend itself to pure appearances.

So, where are those "screaming inconsistencies?" Or are you prone to overstatements like Bob is?
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Old 04-12-2003, 10:27 AM   #25
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Default more appeals to authority...

...this time, the thesarus:

Quote:
Entry Word: sacrifice
Function: verb
Text: 1 to offer as a victim in sacrifice <Abraham about to sacrifice Isaac>
Synonyms immolate, victimize
Related Word offer (up); consecrate, dedicate, devote; donate, give, yield
This is the religious use of the term - to sacrifice an object to curry favors from a deity. However, this is not what i am adressing as an act of sacrifice in the day to day life in a modern secular society.

Quote:
2
Synonyms LOSE 1, drop, forfeit
Idioms kiss good-bye
An action that "loses," "drops" or "forfeit" is a loss, not a gain.

Quote:
3
Synonyms FORGO, eschew, forbear
Related Word cede, yield
Idioms part with
To forgo is to give up the enjoyment of, or do without - obviously a loss. To eschew is to shun to avoid on moral grounds. To forbear is to hold back and abstain. To cede is to yeild...

These words all dovetails with my definition of sacrifice as a loss.
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Old 04-12-2003, 11:51 AM   #26
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Two issues:

1) Is the "morality" of an act judged by the intention or the end result? That is, must an altrusitic act be pre-meditated or - if an action unintentionally yields an undesirable consequence for the perpetrator and others benefit from this detriment - can an altruistic act be perpetrated accidentally?

2) If we were to presume that one only acts "selflessly" due to the potentiality for "instrinsic enrichment" from such an act, where does this enrichment come from if not from some tanglible degree of empathy? If we act out of "empathetic understanding" for the plight of others, and the acting out of our empathy towards others makes us feel "good", then the question must be asked: do we help others because it makes us feel good or does it make us feel good because we help others? There's an important causality distinction here.

For the record, I believe that egosim is partly necessitated by the very facticity of our epistemic foundations (whose perspective can we see things from if not our own?) but that this in no way eliminates the possibility of an altruistic act. Nonetheless, I think that the questions I raised above need to be answered (by Godot, Tyler and anyone else espousing this position) before any meaningful debate can continue.
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Old 04-12-2003, 05:58 PM   #27
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Default Tyling all Durdies

Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
True, and one has to look beyond appearances (lip service) in order to get at the true motives. Correct?
Yes, but this is not the sense in which I started using the word appearances. All we have is appearances, even the "true motive" is what appears so to the observer.
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
Oh why not?
(This in response to my suggesting that not all humble people acts that way because it produces praise and raises their status - your claim).
...Because your claim excludes people that appear humble, not because they wish to do so but because they all p[eople as equal and see their place in the world less egotistically than you seem to assume.
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
And what would these "unexamined assumption" be, precisely....
See immediately above.
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
What does Aristotle or Frege have to do with assumptions, if i am to take you seriously?
Just as much as Russell and Witty.
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
Ah, the relativist speaks. I am saying that there are potential frameworks to assess the underlying mechanism of human behavior that does not lend itself to pure appearances.
I don't understand. Please provide an example of an impure appearance.
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
So, where are those "screaming inconsistencies?"
See above.
Quote:
Originally posted by Tyler Durden
Or are you prone to overstatements like Bob is?
No, but I am prone to bob when accused of overstatements.

Cheers, John
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Old 04-12-2003, 06:43 PM   #28
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Quote:
Originally posted by JP2
Two issues:

1) Is the "morality" of an act judged by the intention or the end result? That is, must an altrusitic act be pre-meditated or - if an action unintentionally yields an undesirable consequence for the perpetrator and others benefit from this detriment - can an altruistic act be perpetrated accidentally?
Premeditation infers some forethought prior to action being taken. Weighing up of the pro's & con's prevent an act from being altruistic. As to accidental perpetration.... I had only considered actionable items. Let me think about it.

Quote:
2) If we were to presume that one only acts "selflessly" due to the potentiality for "instrinsic enrichment" from such an act, where does this enrichment come from if not from some tanglible degree of empathy? If we act out of "empathetic understanding" for the plight of others, and the acting out of our empathy towards others makes us feel "good", then the question must be asked: do we help others because it makes us feel good or does it make us feel good because we help others? There's an important causality distinction here.
It is an important distinction to make, but I would think that neither makes an altruistic act. Whether helping out makes you feel better or you feel better from acting out, you still benefit from the action. IMO, that precludes altruism.

Quote:
For the record, I believe that egosim is partly necessitated by the very facticity of our epistemic foundations (whose perspective can we see things from if not our own?) but that this in no way eliminates the possibility of an altruistic act.
I would mildly disagree given my contentions in previous posts. But you're welcome to make up your own mind on the subject.
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Old 04-12-2003, 07:19 PM   #29
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Default altruism

I think most of the discussion has assumed that to be altruistic, an act has to be perfectly altruistic. I think that if some one does something to help some one else and gets a "10% satisfaction" out of his awareness that he has done a praiseworthy act, then the "90% altruistic" act is still altruistic
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Old 04-13-2003, 03:44 AM   #30
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Tyler Durden,

An acknowledgement--

Main Entry: 1sac·ri·fice
Pronunciation: 'sa-kr&-"fIs, also -f&s or -"fIz
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Old French, from Latin sacrificium, from sacr-, sacer + facere to make -- more at DO
Date: 13th century
1 : an act of offering to a deity something precious; especially : the killing of a victim on an altar
2 : something offered in sacrifice
3 a : destruction or surrender of something for the sake of something else b : something given up or lost <the sacrifices made by parents>
4 : LOSS <goods sold at a sacrifice>
5 : SACRIFICE HIT

You are right! When I cut and pasted the definition of "sacrifice" the last two entries (4 and 5) were omitted. I cut and pasted from a dictionary application that I own and, oddly enough, though it is a Merriam-Webster Dictionary, it doesn't include the last two entries. (I checked a few other entries in this application and they are short as well-- so much for this application). I went to an on-line M-W dictionary and it is as appears above. So, now we are looking at the same dictionary entry (aren't we)? I don't see what difference it makes, but maybe that is because I am still not clear about your use of "sacrifice". So, indulge my questions, if you please.

Is it your view, as you have been stating it from the point at which you entered this thread, that in order for a sacrifice to occur there must be a net loss on the part of the individual making the sacrifice. This seems to fit with your contention that in order for me to sacrifice my life for the life of another, I have to value my own life over his/hers. I don't want to misattribute, so I await your response.

Bob Stewart
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