{"id":69212,"date":"2016-07-10T17:57:15","date_gmt":"2016-07-10T21:57:15","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/egoism-new-world-encyclopedia\/"},"modified":"2016-07-10T17:57:15","modified_gmt":"2016-07-10T21:57:15","slug":"egoism-new-world-encyclopedia","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/ethical-egoism\/egoism-new-world-encyclopedia\/","title":{"rendered":"Egoism &#8211; New World Encyclopedia"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Egoism is the concept of acting in ones own    self-interest, and can be either a descriptive or a normative    position. Psychological egoism, the most well-known    descriptive position, holds that we always act in our own    self-interest. In contrast to this, ethical egoism is a    normative position: it claims that one should act in ones    self-interest as this makes an action morally right, such that    the claims of others should never have weight for oneself    unless their good can serve ones own good. Similarly,    rational egoism maintains that, in order to act    rationally, one must act in ones self-interest, and the fact    that an action helps another person does not alone provide a    reason for performing it, unless helping the other person in    some way furthers ones own interests.  <\/p>\n<p>    All these positions deserve to be critiqued: psychological    egoism in that people find the greatest happiness and meaning    in states where they are self-giving, for example when in love,    parenting a child, or contributing to society; and ethical    egoism by the challenge of numerous philosophical and religious    ethical systems that place self-interest within the context of    contributing to the greater good.  <\/p>\n<p>    Psychological egoism holds that every human has only one    ultimate goal: his or her own good (where this good can    variously be defined as welfare, happiness or pleasure). This description    is verified by widespread and frequent observations of    self-interested behavior. For instance, we often motivate    people to act in certain ways by appealing to their    self-interest in the form of rewards and punishments, while    acts which appear altruistic are often shown to be motivated by    self-interest. Likewise, one can find a non-altruistic    explanation for the apparently altruistic behavior of organisms    in general. Worker bees    are an interesting case in point: although they seem to act    solely for the sake of their hive with no concern for their own    welfare, sociobiologists offer an account of this behavior in    terms of their genes survival. They hypothesize that natural    selection favors altruistic behavior in either cooperative    relations in which all members benefit (reciprocal altruism) or    familial relations (kin altruism). Both forms of altruism are    concerned with the survival of ones genes: acts of reciprocal    altruism increase ones chances of survival, and therefore    ones genes chances of survival, while ensuring the survival    of ones relations ensures the survival of a percentage of    ones genes. For a worker bee, ensuring the survival of her    sister worker means that she has ensured the survival of half    of her genes. Thus, sociobiologists typically claim that, on a    genetic level, altruism cannot exist. However, psychological    egoism is a stronger position, as it claims that, regardless of    what happens on a genetic level, the individual him or herself    is motivated by thoughts of self-interest. Thus, while it    allows for action that does not accomplish its goal of    maximizing self-interest, as well as action that is at odds    with ones intentions (a weak will), most forms of    psychological egoism rule out both altruistic behavior and    acting solely out of respect for ones duty. Importantly,    psychological egoism allows for goals other than ones own self    interest, but claims that these goals are then means to    realizing ones own well-being.  <\/p>\n<p>    There are in turn two forms of psychological egoism. Exclusive    egoism makes the strong claim that people act exclusively out    of self-interest, and therefore altruistic behavior does not,    in fact, exist. On the other hand, predominant egoism makes the    weaker claim that people seldom act unselfishly, and when they    do so, it is typically only because their sacrifice is small    and the beneficiaries gain is much larger, or when they are    partial to the beneficiary in some way: when the beneficiaries    are, for example, friends, lovers or family.  <\/p>\n<p>    Exclusive egoism allows for no exceptions; this means that one    instance of someone who does not act exclusively out of    self-interest is sufficient to show that exclusive egoisms    thesis is empirically false. Imagine a soldier throws himself    on a grenade in order to prevent other people from being    killed. His motivation for this act of self-sacrifice might    quite plausibly be his desire to do his duty or to save the    other peoples lives, while attempting to explain his action in    terms of self-interest would appear to be a wholly implausible    move. The exclusive egoist may want to defend her position by    arguing for some kind of ulterior self-interested motive, such    as pleasure. Perhaps our soldier believes in an afterlife in    which he will be rewarded ten-fold for his apparently selfless    act on earth, or perhaps, if he had not hurled himself on the    grenade, he would be overcome by guilt and a concomitant sense    of self-loathing. In both cases then, he is, at least from his    perspective, acting in his self-interest by acting in this    apparently selfless manner. There are two problems with this    response. The first is that, while it might explain many    instances of apparent self-sacrifice as motivated by egoistic    concerns, it does not necessarily cover all cases. The    psychological egoist must argue that all instances of    ostensible altruistic behavior are in fact motivated by    self-interested desires. If, for instance, our soldier    disagrees with this, and claims that his action was truly    altruistic in motivation, the exclusive egoist must respond    that he is lying or is deceiving himself. At this point,    however, exclusive egoism turns out to be trivially true, which    means that it is unfalsifiable, since there is no empirical    instance that could in principle disprove the hypothesis. As    with the trivially true statement all ostriches that live on    Mars have gold and purple polka dotted wings, this version of    psychological egoism provides no useful information and    therefore fails as an empirical theory. It does not allow us to    distinguish, for instance, between our soldier and the soldier    who thrusts a child onto the grenade in order to save himself.    Whereas we generally think that the latter is behaving    selfishly, while our soldier is acting in a selfless manner,    exclusive egoism maintains that both soldiers are equally    selfish, because both are acting in their self-interest.  <\/p>\n<p>    Alternatively, the psychological egoist might opt for a    non-trivial response to the soldier counter-example. She could    argue that, as infants, we have only self-regarding desires;    desires for our own well-being, for instance. However, as we    grow older, we find that desiring things for their own sake    eventually satisfies our self-regarding desires. We then come    to desire these things for their own sake. For example, I might    detest exercise, but also find that exercising results in    physical well-being; after a while, I will begin to desire    exercise for its own sake. This would preclude the common    objection to psychological egoism, that one must desire things    other than ones welfare in order to realize ones welfare.    However, then the psychological egoist will have moved away    from exclusive egoism. It may be true that our soldier would    not have had a present desire to save others, unless saving    others was connected in the past with increasing his welfare,    but this does not mean that his present desire is selfish. At    this point, the psychological egoist could adopt the weaker    stance of predominant egoism which allows for exceptions, and    thereby forestall counter-examples like our heroic soldier;    moreover, predominant egoism is both an empirically plausible    and non-trivial position.  <\/p>\n<p>    In her novel, Atlas Shrugged, Russian emigre Ayn Rand sketches the    portrait of a man who feels responsible for himself and no one    else. John Galt is the archetype of the individual who    practices what Rand calls the virtue of selfishness: a man    for whom true morality consists in resisting the temptations of    self-sacrifice, sympathy and generosity. In the fictional    figure of John Galt we find the embodiment of egoism as an    ideal. Similarly, the move from psychological egoism to ethical    egoism is a move from a descriptive to a normative position.    Ethical egoism claims that for ones action to count as morally    right it is both necessary and sufficient that one act in ones    self-interest. Precisely how one acts in ones self-interest is    a matter of some divergence among ethical egoists. As with    psychological egoism, ethical egoism comes in both a maximizing    and a non-maximizing flavor: the former holds that    self-interest must be maximized for an action to count as    ethical, while the latter simply claims that one should act in    ones self-interest and thus leaves the possibility for acting    in others interest open. There is also a distinction between    short-term and long-term interests: I might gain a short-term    benefit by stealing from my friends, but experience a long-term    loss when they discover the theft and I lose those friends. In    addition, ethical egoism can also apply to rules or character    traits, as well as acts. Finally, acting in ones self-interest    means acting for ones own good, but this good can variously be    defined as ones happiness, pleasure or well-being. There are    various permutations of these conceptions, but considering that    the arguments for and against them are generally relevantly    similar, I will very broadly define ethical egoism as the    thesis which states that in order for ones actions to count as    ethical, one should act to promote ones self-interest, where    self-interest is taken to mean ones own good.  <\/p>\n<p>    There are several arguments in support of ethical egoism.    Ethical egoists occasionally appeal to the findings of    psychological egoism as support for their normative claims;    however, regardless of whether psychological egoism is true or    not, the jump from a descriptive to a normative position is    fallacious, as one cannot use supposed existing conditions as    justification for how one ought to behave. A more valid move is    to argue that, as psychological egoism is true, it is    impossible to motivate people on non-egoistic grounds. Thus,    ethical egoism is the most practical moral theory, or the most    capable of motivating people to act ethically. However, as we    have seen, exclusive egoism just seems false, and substituting    it with predominant egoism loses the crucial claim that it is    impossible to motivate people to behave altruistically. On the    other hand, if psychological egoism is true, it follows from    psychological egoism that I cannot intend to perform an action    which I believe is not in my self-interest. However, if I am    wrong, and this action is in my self-interest, then ethical    egoism stipulates that I should perform an action that I cannot    intend. The appeal to psychological egoism therefore fails to    ensure its practicality.  <\/p>\n<p>    However, this is not necessarily a shortcoming of an ethical    theory, as part of the value of an ethical theory may lie in    its offering us an ideal for us to live up to. Setting aside    the appeal to its supposed practicality, ethical egoists might    alternatively claim that ethical egoism best fits our    commonsense moral judgements. For instance, it captures the    intuition that I should not let others exploit me, and unlike    consequentialism, allows me to keep some good for myself, like    a house, even though giving this house to someone else might    benefit him slightly more. Moreover, it stipulates that it is    often in ones best interests to ostensibly take other peoples    interests into account so as to secure their cooperation. I    derive a much larger long-term benefit if I act generously and    compassionately towards my friends, for example, than if I    steal from them, even though theft might provide the greatest    short-term benefit to me. Nevertheless, it appears that ethical    egoism is also at odds with some of our most deeply held    ethical beliefs. It mandates that one should only ever help    someone else if doing so benefits oneself, which means that one    is not morally obligated to help those who cannot help or    hinder one. Imagine I can easily save a drowning child, but    none of the players in this scenario can offer me any    beneficial cooperation in return for saving the child (like    praise) or negative retaliation for failing to help (like    scorn). Further, say that I am indifferent to the situation    presented to me, and regardless of what I do, I will feel no    sense of guilt or pleasure, then ethical egoism will remain    silent as to whether I should save the child. Moreover, if    there is some slight uncompensated sacrifice I will have to    make, like getting my shoes wet, then ethical egoism will tell    me to refrain from saving the drowning child. However, we    generally think that, in this case, there is a moral obligation    to save the child, and ethical egoism can neither explain how    such a duty might (validly) arise, nor generate such a duty.    Ethical egoism therefore appears to be morally insensitive to    situations which we ordinarily think demand great moral    sensitivity. We can further see that ethical egoism will    potentially generate counter-intuitive duties in situations    where the individual in need of help cannot reciprocate (like    physically or mentally disabled people) or where the sacrifice    one might need to make is not compensatable. Ethical egoism    will, for instance, condemn the action of the soldier who    throws himself on the grenade as ethically reprehensible,    precisely because it entails an irreversible sacrifice (loss of    life) for the soldier, while we ordinarily think it is an    ethically admirable action, or at the very least, not a morally    repugnant one.  <\/p>\n<p>    Furthermore, a number of critics have argued that egoism yields    contradictory moral imperatives. There are generally two    inconsistency charges against ethical egoism. The weaker of the    two lays this charge: say ethical egoism recommends that X and    Y buy a particular item of clothing on sale, since buying this    item is, for some reason, in the self-interest of each. But    there is only one remaining article; hence, ethical egoism    recommends an impossible situation. However, the ethical egoist    can reply that ethical egoism does not provide neutral    criteria: it advocates to X buying the article of clothing for    X, and advocates to Y that Y buy the article for Y, but ethical    egoism has nothing to say on the value of X and Y buying the    same article of clothing.  <\/p>\n<p>    The second inconsistency argument claims that, in any given    situation, the ethical egoist must aim to promote her own    self-interest, but if her brand of egoism is to count as an    ethical theory, she must simultaneously will that everyone else    also act to promote their own self-interest, for one of the    formal constraints on an ethical theory is that it be    universalisable. Say I am a shopkeeper, and it is in my best    interest to sell my products at the highest practically    possible profit, it will generally not be in my clients best    interests to buy my products at these high prices. Then if I am    an ethical egoist, I am committed to recommending a    contradictory state of affairs: that I both sell the products    at the highest possible price and that my customers pay less    than the highest possible price. The ethical theorist, however,    can respond that, although she morally recommends that the    customers pay less than the highest possible price, this does    not necessarily mean that she desires it. Jesse Kalin provides    an analogy with competitive sports: in a game of chess, I will    be trying my utmost to win, but I will also expect my opponent    to do the same, and I may even desire that he play as good a    game as possible, because then the game will be of a far higher    standard. If the analogy with competitive gaming holds, it is    therefore not inconsistent for me to recommend both that I    attempt to sell my products at the highest possible price and    that my customers attempt to buy them at lower than the highest    possible price.  <\/p>\n<p>    However, this move to making an analogy with competitive games    cannot preclude the worry that ethical egoism is not    sufficiently public for it to count as an ethical theory. What    is meant by this is that ethical egoism is at odds with public    morality (which generally appears to value altruism) and one    can therefore imagine many cases in which the ethical egoist    might find it in her interests not to profess ethical egoism.    Imagine I am an ethical egoist and I donate a large sum to a    charity because it gives my company a good image and I receive    a large tax deduction for doing so. Then it is most definitely    not in my best interests to reveal these reasons; rather, it is    to my advantage that I pretend to have done so out of a spirit    of generosity and kindness. Leaving aside worries of    duplicitous and unreliable behavior, it does not seem as if    ethical egoism can truly be made public without the ethical    egoists interests being compromised. Yet it seems as if an    ethical theory requires precisely this ability to be made    public. Moreover, although it meets the formal constraints of    an ethical theory  it must be normative and universalisable     as noted above, it also fails to provide a single neutral    ranking that each agent must follow in cases where there is a    conflict of interests. Just what makes for a moral theory,    however, is contentious, and the ethical theorist can    subsequently respond to any argument against ethical egoisms    status as an ethical theory by claiming that the failed    criteria are not really constraints that an ethical theory must    adhere to. A more elegant solution, however, is to move to    rational egoism, which might provide the ethical egoist with    non-ethical reasons for adhering to ethical egoism.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rational egoism maintains that it is both necessary and    sufficient for an action to be rational that it promotes ones    self-interest. As with ethical egoism, rational egoism comes in    varying flavors. It can be maximizing or non-maximizing, or can    apply to rules or character traits instead of actions. Certain    versions might claim that acting in ones self-interest is    either sufficient but not necessary, or necessary but not    sufficient for an action to count as rational. However, as with    ethical egoism, relevantly similar objections to and defenses    for the various species of ethical egoism can be made. The    salient common feature amongst all variants is that all claim    that the fact that an action helps another person does not    alone provide a reason for performing it, unless helping the    other person in some way furthers ones own interests. Stronger    versions might also hold that the only underived reason for    action is self-interest.  <\/p>\n<p>    In support of their thesis, rational egoists most commonly    appeal to the way in which rational egoism best fits our    ordinary judgements about what makes action rational. However,    as we saw with the soldier counter-example, both psychological    and ethical egoism fail to make sense of his action, and    rational egoism will similarly generate a counter-intuitive    response to this example. It will classify his action as    fundamentally non-rational because it has permanently violated    his self-interest. However, we would ordinarily characterize    his action as rational, because it realizes his strong    non-self-interested preference to save the lives of others. In    other words, we take the safety of others to be a legitimate    motivation for his action, whereas his hurling himself on a    grenade in order to save a chocolate cake would ordinarily be    seen as non-rational. Yet rational egoism would not allow us to    distinguish between these two cases, because it does not    recognize the demands of others as alone providing one with    reason to act in a certain way.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rational egoism furthermore appears to make an unjustified    weighted distinction between ones own self-interest and the    good of others. Imagine I decide that I should act to increase    the good of brown-eyed people over that of others. Justifying    this preferential treatment on the grounds that brown-eyed    people just are more deserving of preferential treatment is not    rational. James Rachels argues that ethical (and here,    rational) egoism, makes a similarly unwarranted or arbitrary    move, because it claims that I ought to act in one persons    interest (myself). The rational egoist might want to respond    that non-arbitrary distinctions can be made by ones    preferences. The fact that I like oranges and not apples makes    my decision to buy apples rather than oranges non-arbitrary,    and similarly, my preference for my own good makes my    commitment to achieving my own good non-arbitrary. However, as    we have seen, there are cases (as with the soldier example)    where I might lack a preference for my own welfare. In these    instances, rational egoism cannot give me a reason to pursue my    self-interest over that of others. Nevertheless, rational    egoism might hold that, in these cases I am wrong, simply    because we must take it as a ground assumption that our own    good comes before that of others. In other words, the    preference for ones own good needs no further justification    than the fact it is ones own good that one is pursuing. When    it comes to the preferential treatment of brown-eyed people, we    generally do not accept their being brown-eyed as a good reason    for their preferential treatment, but when it comes to acting    for our own good, we seem to take the fact that it is our own    good as a reasonable justification for doing so; we do not ask    why acting in ones own good is pertinent.  <\/p>\n<p>    However, although this may be so, this argument does not    demonstrate that acting to promote ones own good is always    sufficient or necessary for an action to count as rational.    There are instances where we take an action to be rational, but    where the agent makes no reference to pursuing his own good as    justification for performing the action. The villagers of Le    Chambon provide us with a real-life example of this. Le Chambon    was a pacifist French village responsible for saving the lives    of several thousand Jews from the Nazis, often at a great risk to    the inhabitants. The reason they gave for this altruistic    behavior was that it was simply their duty to help anybody in    need. Here, no reference is made to their own good (and indeed,    their own welfare was often severely jeopardized by their    actions), and we generally take their concern for the others    welfare as a good reason for their actions.  <\/p>\n<p>    At present, there seems to be no good reason to accept the    theses of psychological, ethical or rational egoism.    Nevertheless, egoism in general presents us with a useful    insight into the moral life by pointing out that, contra what    many of us might suppose, morality and self-interest do not    necessarily conflict. Indeed, there may be many cases in which    there are good self-regarding reasons for acting ethically and    egoism forces us to question whether we pay sufficient    attention to legitimate self-interest when assessing moral    situations.  <\/p>\n<p>    A small selection of literature in popular culture dealing with    ethical egoism and altruism.  <\/p>\n<p>    All links retrieved September 14, 2013.  <\/p>\n<p>      This article began as an original work prepared for New      World Encyclopedia and is provided to the public      according to the terms of the New      World Encyclopedia:Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License      (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper      attribution. Any changes made to the original text since then      create a derivative work which is also CC-by-sa licensed. To      cite this article       click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.    <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>More:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.newworldencyclopedia.org\/entry\/Egoism\" title=\"Egoism - New World Encyclopedia\">Egoism - New World Encyclopedia<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Egoism is the concept of acting in ones own self-interest, and can be either a descriptive or a normative position. Psychological egoism, the most well-known descriptive position, holds that we always act in our own self-interest.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/ethical-egoism\/egoism-new-world-encyclopedia\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187718],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-69212","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-ethical-egoism"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/69212"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=69212"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/69212\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=69212"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=69212"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=69212"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}