How to know if you're being selfish (and whether or not that's bad) - Mark Hopwood

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2024-01-23 ・ TED-Ed


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How to know if you're being selfish (and whether or not that's bad) - Mark Hopwood

553,401 views ・ 2024-01-23

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
In the kitchen at a friend's party,
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you're in the midst of a profound moral conundrum.
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Famous philosophers whisper advice in your ear.
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Utilitarian John Stuart Mill tells you that one should always strive
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to bring about the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people.
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Aristotle reminds you of the importance of the virtues of generosity and justice.
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But Thomas Hobbes points out that
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"of all voluntary acts, the object is to every man his own good."
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In other words, human beings are inherently selfish anyway.
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So why shouldn't you take the last cupcake for yourself?
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This is actually one of philosophy's oldest questions.
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Not your cupcake dilemma—
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the question of whether or not human beings are inherently selfish.
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The idea that humans only act out of self-interest
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is known as psychological egoism,
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and there aren't many philosophers who endorse this extreme stance.
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There's simply too much evidence of humans sacrificing their self-interest,
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and sometimes their very lives, for the sake of others.
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And studies by psychologists have shown that even very young children
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demonstrate helpful behavior despite there being nothing in it for themselves.
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However, the idea that all humans have a deep selfish streak
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is something many more philosophers would agree with.
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German philosopher Immanuel Kant noted that while we often seem to act
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for the sake of others,
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it's impossible to be sure we're not truly motivated
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by "a secret impulse of self-love."
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02:00
For example, maybe when people make large donations to charity,
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they're actually more interested in looking good
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or benefiting from tax breaks than helping others.
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It's worth noting that not all philosophers think self-love
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is always a bad thing.
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French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau identified two kinds of self-love.
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He believed "Amour de soi," our basic need for self-preservation,
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is natural and essential.
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But he identified "amour propre,"
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our toxic desire for recognition and social status,
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as the cause of many unjust disparities.
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In a similar vein, Aristotle argued that humans are social beings
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who can only flourish when we seek the good of others as well as ourselves.
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By this logic, true self-love requires us to work against our selfish tendencies.
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For many philosophers, this is where the real problem lies—
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how do we overcome our selfishness?
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Some, like Kant, have argued that our sense of moral duty
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is what helps us rise above our narrow self-interest.
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Others, like Rousseau and Adam Smith,
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contend that emotions like pity and sympathy
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are what allow us to consider the needs of others.
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But 20th century philosopher-novelist Iris Murdoch
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believed the only true solution to human selfishness was love.
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Or at least, a certain kind of love.
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For Murdoch, selfishness isn't about trivial things
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like taking the last cupcake.
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It's about seeing the world in a way that casts yourself as a star,
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and everyone else as secondary characters.
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To explain this, Murdoch tells the story of a discontented mother-in-law.
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While the mother is always polite,
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she secretly feels her son made a mistake marrying his "vulgar"
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and "tiresomely juvenile" wife.
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To Murdoch, this mother is the picture of selfishness.
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By centering her own jealousy and insecurity,
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she's reducing the nuanced reality of her daughter-in-law to a caricature.
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But with some conscious effort,
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Murdoch believes the mother can learn to see her daughter in law as she truly is—
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not vulgar or juvenile,
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but refreshingly straightforward and delightfully youthful.
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To be clear, this doesn't mean
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the mother should simply don rose-colored glasses.
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Love, as Murdoch defines it, is "the extremely difficult realization
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that something other than oneself is real."
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As challenging as this might be,
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Murdoch believes we can all reach this realization
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by cultivating what she calls attention.
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Partially inspired by Buddhist meditation,
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this practice could include engaging with art, learning foreign languages,
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or simply taking the time to observe the natural environment.
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What's important for Murdoch is that the behavior
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helps direct your attention beyond the self.
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Because only by practicing our ability to attend to the world around us
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can we learn to see it as it truly is.
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