Are Objectivists happy?
http://experts.umich.edu/pubDetail.as...
R. David Hayward has developed a survey that attempts to define happiness and correlate it with many factors (nationality, religious affiliation or lack thereof, income, wealth, etc.). The goal is to predict future health and well-being.
From Hayward's abstract:
"Religious non-affiliates did not differ overall from affiliates in terms of physical health outcomes (although atheists and agnostics did have better health on some individual measures including BMI, number of chronic conditions, and physical limitations), but had worse positive psychological functioning characteristics, social support relationships, and health behaviors. On dimensions related to psychological well-being, atheists and agnostics tended to have worse outcomes than either those with religious affiliation or those with no religious preference."
My purpose in posting this is not to say anything derogatory about atheists or Objectivists, but it is part of my personal self-assessment of whether I would be happier if I did decide to become an Objectivist. At this point, I am not an Objectivist. One question that is an entirely logical counterargument to the possibility that Objectivists might not be happier than the general population would be, "Are people who are happier than the general population delusional about their reality"? I am sure that many Gulchers would presume that most Christians are happily delusional in their mysticism, for instance.
R. David Hayward has developed a survey that attempts to define happiness and correlate it with many factors (nationality, religious affiliation or lack thereof, income, wealth, etc.). The goal is to predict future health and well-being.
From Hayward's abstract:
"Religious non-affiliates did not differ overall from affiliates in terms of physical health outcomes (although atheists and agnostics did have better health on some individual measures including BMI, number of chronic conditions, and physical limitations), but had worse positive psychological functioning characteristics, social support relationships, and health behaviors. On dimensions related to psychological well-being, atheists and agnostics tended to have worse outcomes than either those with religious affiliation or those with no religious preference."
My purpose in posting this is not to say anything derogatory about atheists or Objectivists, but it is part of my personal self-assessment of whether I would be happier if I did decide to become an Objectivist. At this point, I am not an Objectivist. One question that is an entirely logical counterargument to the possibility that Objectivists might not be happier than the general population would be, "Are people who are happier than the general population delusional about their reality"? I am sure that many Gulchers would presume that most Christians are happily delusional in their mysticism, for instance.
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11,000 US Troops.
U.S. Army, American North Russia Expeditionary Force (also known as Polar Bear Expedition, 310th Engineers, 339th Infantry, 337th Field Hospital, and 337th Ambulance Company)
U.S. Army, 167th and 168th Railroad Companies (sent to Murmansk to operate the Murmansk to Petrograd line) 1918 to 1920
Pursuit of understanding the nature of these questions does not require or allow adopting the religious mentality. To understand with self-honesty that mentality is to reject it.
The question of how the universe as it is now evolved is a scientific question, not for "philosophy to answer" as speculation -- which is the religious mindset, not objectivity. In particular, JB's speculations, previously pushed on this forum and claiming that to account for the complexity of the physical universe space aliens created it, are a bizarre Creationism through Space Aliens invoking the fallacy of the religious "Argument from Design". It is not science, not rational philosophy, and has nothing to do with NASA and whether or not there is other life in the universe.
JB has done this several times in the past, talking about "deciding" to "become" something without first understanding first what it is, let alone if it is true. Objectivism isn't joining, or adherence to, a competing religious sect. You don't decide to "commit" and then begin rationalistically thinking in terms of it. You understand principles and why they are true or you don't, and you don't believe more than you know at any stage of learning and knowledge.
He has also described Objectivism as an abstract "structure" and "deductive system" as its big virtue, as if it were a free floating mental construct. That is pure Rationalism. Ayn Rand's philosophy has a hierarchical structure because of what it is, based on facts that give rise to the concepts and principles. It is not "deduced" from First Principles.
Ayn Rand's ethics is based on the nature of human requirements to use one's mind in order to live. The standard is human nature; the goal is happiness. She did not make pronouncements which, if dutifully followed in accordance with a subjective "worldview", result in success. That is the religious approach. Whether or not one achieves happiness as a state of mind depends on rational choices and effort, correctly, consistently and habitually applied across time. Happiness, as depicted in the heroes of Ayn Rand's novels, is the state of consciousness resulting from achieving one's goals in reality across the course of your life and despite setbacks, not a result of belief in "worldview" or temporary pleasures turning on and off in the range of the moment,
The spectacle of someone who thinks of himself as a scientist and admirer of Ayn Rand proceeding to rationalistically decide in advance whether to "become an Objectivist" -- by deciding on a commitment to a "worldview", in advance of understanding and without regard to what is true, in order to attain inexplicable happy consequences -- is not intriguing, it's sad. No one can understand Ayn Rand's philosophy, let alone become a person who lives by rational principles, with such a subjectivist, Rationalistic approach.
How could Ayn Rand leave before the anti-church communist party fully took over but could see the results first hand?
I've read and heard conservative commentators state that some, not all, atheists practice their disbelief like a religion, especially those bent on intimidating and suing the very sight of religion, especially the Christian one, out of sight and mind.
Thank you so much. Your discussion is the one I enjoyed the most ever since I joined the Gulch. These kind of questions are the ones I was hoping to see discussed and so frequently disappointed with missing them.
The things I am going to write here may not be as crystal clear as those you addressed, but the issues are happiness and the nature of human life in the existence which, obviously, exists. Look at them as an attempt to contribute, however modestly, to your discussion.
1. Each human being is a unique instance of humanity. Nobody ever existed that was "carbon copy" (i.e. completely identical) of any one of us and no such identical copy will ever exist.. That is an inevitable consequence of the nature of the phenomenon we call life (living matter). Thus happiness is a very complex (and not quantifiable) concept pertaining to each and only one individual. To talk about atheists or objectivists as being happy or happier is nonsense to me. As we have, sadly, observed recently, too many times, some people are happy to blow themselves up.
2. We know that it is in the nature of our solar system to have arisen and that it will result eventually in the sun exploding and engulfing our planet. Recently there was news about people being able to measure the tremor from the gravitational waves caused the collision of two black holes. That collision occurred some billions of years ago. What I am proposing for your consideration is the non-simultaneity of possible occurrences of life in this existence.
3. I consider myself an objectivist rookie. And to the best of my ability to understand this is consistent with everything I ever learned (during my 80+ years), but I accept readily that there is an infinite supply of concepts that I never formed. To many questions I am willing to answer I don't know.
4. Not so long ago I went to a whole day lecture about Augustine of Hippo. At one point in the afternoon the lecturer, a known authority on the subject went, step by step, through Augustine's proof that God created man. It occurred to me while listening to that and I told the lecturer at the following questions period. "This is only a glimpse from what I just heard you say. But it seems to me clear that I could turn over 180 degrees that set of argument steps and prove that man invented God." I was thrilled to see him pose for a few seconds and then say: "Yes." I am too lazy to search anywhere (quick attempts did not work) in writing that series of steps. I have known for long time that God is a human invention. That is good enough for me.
Again, thank you for the thoughtful and very interesting discussion.
Atheism most certainly will not be your ticket by definition.
'a' - implying not, negation, nul, nada : while 'theism' would mean a belief in a deity or altruistic power.
To identify yourself as an atheist would identify you as someone who believes in nothing, an empty soul, vessel-"pair of shoes" - empty and would include you in the 'a'moral category. A set of morals of course every one on this site has for sure - so why don't they declare it precisely? I'll give them the benefit of the doubt (although it has a volitional component) and chalk it up to innocence. Which implies something needs to be learned to get to the next stage. So here it is schematically for those 'whom it does concern and who're making an effort to know':
Taking it step by step(or more correctly, 'ledge to ledge' as Galt says in his speech):
1) I
Indivisible, (Integrated) and Perfect - kind of the pinnacle -and every loneliness is one.
2) Egoïst
('ego' being something rather than that nothing - whether you know it to be the mind, soul, spirit ...whatever, you have to acknowledge that it is something, that it does exist and that it is an integral part of you.
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protective ray screen
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3) Atheist (no god ... but what then? - identify it.) Not ready to recognize the what at the core of existence? hmm, not good candidates for Mulligan's Valley I'm afraid - recall what happens to Eddie Willers.
4) Theist (be it mono-, poly-, multi-,etc.
3) & 4) wallow the rest of their and their students' lives in that mystic/altruist/collectivist cesspool - masoscism? - I don't care to know and you don't either because you now know that you and the future that you've created(your kids) are no longer beholden to 'the rule of the productive accorded by the looter/moochers.' Find out more here:
http://www.GaltsGulchPortal.blogspot.can
Moral code:MotivePower:MotorUnit
all done and well done
Ayn Rand would be proud and here is where pride is a virtue.
Bring your kids too - its why you had them after all - right?!
And I mean it.
JohnGalt Iamoura
BULLSEYE
Big Grin (can't find emoticons)
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