From objectivism-request@vix.com Mon Jan 2 04:50:04 1995 Received: from gw.home.vix.com by ponyexpress.princeton.edu (5.65c/1.7/newPE) id AA03874; Mon, 2 Jan 1995 04:50:02 -0500 Received: by gw.home.vix.com id AA02939; Mon, 2 Jan 95 01:35:42 -0800 X-Btw: vix.com is also gw.home.vix.com and vixie.sf.ca.us Received: by gw.home.vix.com id AA07659; Wed, 14 Dec 94 14:30:05 -0800 Received: from ponyexpress.Princeton.EDU by Princeton.EDU (5.65b/2.115/princeton) id AA13693; Wed, 14 Dec 94 17:24:50 -0500 Received: from flagstaff.Princeton.EDU by ponyexpress.princeton.edu (5.65c/1.7/newPE) id AA22665; Wed, 14 Dec 1994 17:24:49 -0500 From: Bryan Douglas Caplan Received: by flagstaff.Princeton.EDU (4.1/Phoenix_Cluster_Client) id AA11046; Wed, 14 Dec 94 17:24:48 EST Date: Wed, 14 Dec 94 17:24:48 EST Message-Id: <9412142224.AA11046@flagstaff.Princeton.EDU> To: objectivism@vix.com Subject: Guess Who Wrote This Reply-To: Bryan Douglas Caplan Status: RO I found the following passage in a work by a famous author who enjoys a rather bad reputation among Objectivists: We may find the clue in one of the so-called ideal standards of civilized society. It runs: 'Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.' It is world-renowned, undoubtably older than Christianity which parades it as its proudest profession, yet certainly not very old; in historical times men knew nothing of it. We will adopt a naive attitude towards it, as if we were meeting it for the first time. Thereupon we find ourselves unable to supress a feeling of astonishment, as at something unnatural. Why should we do this? What good is it to us? Above how, how can we do such a thing? How could it possibly be done? My love seems to me a valuable thing that I have no right to throw away without reflection. It imposes obligations on me which I must be prepared to make sacrifices to fulfill. If I love someone, he must be worthy of it in some way or another...He will be worthy of it if he is so like me in important respects that I can love myself in him; worthy of it if he is so much more perfect than I that I can love my ideal of myself in him; I must love him if he is the son of my friend, since the pain my friend would feel if anything untoward happened to him would be my pain - I should have to share it. But if he is a stranger to me and cannot attract me by any value he has in himself or any significance he may have already acquired in my emotional life, it will be hard for me to love him. I shall even be wrong if Ido, for my love is valued as a privilege by all those belonging to me; it is an injustice to them if I put a stranger of a level with him (with that kind of universal love) simply because he, too, is a denizen of the earth, like an insect or an earthworm or a grass-snake, then I fear that but a small modicum of love will fall to his lot and it would be impossible for me to give him as much as by all the laws of reason I am entitled to retain for myself. And this author goes on to say that: If the high-sounding ordinance had run, 'Love thy neighbor as thy enemy loves them,' I should not take objection to it. And there is a second commandment that seems to me even more incomprehensible, and arouses still stronger opposition in me. It is: 'Love thine enemies.' When I think it over, however, I am wrong in treating it as a greater imposition. It is at bottom the same thing. I imagine I hear a voice gravely adjuring me: 'Just because thy neighbor is not worthy of thy love, is probably full of enmity toward thee, thou shouldst love him as thyself.' I then perceive the case to be like that of *Credo quia absurdum*. ---- The author of this passage is Sigmund Freud, from his _Civilization and Its Discontents_. Of course I slightly take this passage out of context, especially Freud's pessimistic view of man as tortured by the conflict between his animalistic instincts and the veneer of civilization. But I still found the passage rather interesting. Indeed, the whole book so far has been interesting; valuable, I think, as an eloquent statement of how _some_ people happen to feel about modern society, rather than a scientific proof of how everyone really feels. Comments, anyone? --Bryan Caplan