Q
Qoeleth
Guest
It would seem that there is no rational or objective grounds for selfishness. Why should my mind care about what happens to person A (myself) more than what happens to person B (not-myself, i.e. someone else)?
Let’s imagine winning a million dollars in the lottery. Now, if that event is ‘good’ in itself (whatever that means), it is equally good if it happens to person A (myself) or person B (not-myself). So, what conceivable grounds are there for prefering one over the other? Or the same with pain. If pain is bad, it is just as bad whether one person (me) or another experiences it.
If the mind is not ‘localized’ (in the sensed of being physically located), why should ‘my’ mind care particularly about what happens to this one chunk of matter which I call ‘my’ body?
And if my mind receives one set of messages it calls ‘pain’, and another set called ‘pleasure’, surely both are of equal indifference to the observing agent, the mind? It is my body which experiences pleasure or pain. Why should the mind care? Of what interest to my mind is the continuity or destruction of my body, more so than any other body, animate or inanimate? Indeed, since I know that the elements of my body will continue after death (due to the principle of conservation of matter), why should I care if they are arranged differently? Then, of what interest to my mind can its own continuitry be? Does a computer care if it gets turned off?
It seems as if any form of selfishness is inherently illogical…
Let’s imagine winning a million dollars in the lottery. Now, if that event is ‘good’ in itself (whatever that means), it is equally good if it happens to person A (myself) or person B (not-myself). So, what conceivable grounds are there for prefering one over the other? Or the same with pain. If pain is bad, it is just as bad whether one person (me) or another experiences it.
If the mind is not ‘localized’ (in the sensed of being physically located), why should ‘my’ mind care particularly about what happens to this one chunk of matter which I call ‘my’ body?
And if my mind receives one set of messages it calls ‘pain’, and another set called ‘pleasure’, surely both are of equal indifference to the observing agent, the mind? It is my body which experiences pleasure or pain. Why should the mind care? Of what interest to my mind is the continuity or destruction of my body, more so than any other body, animate or inanimate? Indeed, since I know that the elements of my body will continue after death (due to the principle of conservation of matter), why should I care if they are arranged differently? Then, of what interest to my mind can its own continuitry be? Does a computer care if it gets turned off?
It seems as if any form of selfishness is inherently illogical…