Phyzzle said:
Aristotle-style:
If values that exist can be identified,
And anything can exist as a value (to someone out there)
Then anything can be identified as a value.
I wanna emphasize that I AGREE with Objectivist morality. There's nothing silly or contradictory about it. But I called it "fuzzy" because it's not as specific as it sounds.
Values take years of work to simply discover and identify (as you say in post 78), and values can vary dramatically from person to person.
So the Objectivist instruction to pursue one's own values, is just not all that instructive. Pursuing one's own values can involve doing darn near anything, depending on your individual character.
Y'know, I was thinking on my way home tonight (I do that every once in a while), and I though of a theory and this very reply helps substantiate it. Understand that this is just an observation.
While Nocturnal and myself have been offering real world examples and occasionally citing the works of Rand. On the other hand, all of your input has been based on text substantiated by someone else. This lends itself to an explanation why you feel Objectivism is "fuzzy" and we (at least I) feel that you won't "get it" completely (its essence).
Here's the explanation, the world in which you exist personally is based on empirical evidence AND "instructions"
which you can follow extrinsically. An example is when I asked how
you personally define your values and you cited "Aristotle-style." I wanted to know about Phyzzle, not Aristotle.
This in itself leads me to believe that your persona, your existence is not of your own but that of a combination of ideas, theories, philosophies and the like of other people. Don't get me wrong, we all "get something" from others but we typically make those ideas our own by instilling our personal objectivity to those things. I'm not seeing that of you.
SO in a nutshell, what I'm seeing is that Objectivism in its nature of NOT being specific other than its own doctrine cited earlier does not fit into your norm of operation (very specific and fully defined). Your locus of control is not congruent with the concept of Objectivism (square peg, round hole).
Someone in another thread made the correlation of Objectivism as being a cheap rip off of Buddhism. There is a slight similarity of the two in that both believe that man onto himself is (or can be) a heroic being; that about the only true similarity. Buddhism states that anyone can be Buddha, that all it takes is "enlightenment" and such enlightenment is based on the
individual's concept of enlightenment, not one based on the perception of someone else....
Alright, I'm rambling her; does this make sense or do I need to go back on my medication?