So is it 'ok', or is it actually a positive effort? 'Ok' by what standards, anyway? And in a hypothetical person whose only motivation is to look good, can you argue how the presence of that one desire is causally related to the absence of all others? Or do you just feel that once they fall short of what they 'should be', whatever is left of the person is necessarily negative (rather than neutral, as vanity previously was) in moral nature?
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If a persons only motivation is to look good. As in absolute terms? then yes they're wasting their lives in my opinion. If people want to look attractive to themselves and others and have healthy bodies then there is no shame in that.
If as said above thats their only goal is to look good, then whats left of them is not necessarily negative as I do not know the person. But how much beyond 'eating, shitting, fucking" is there if your ONLY motivation is to look pretty?
The rest of what you're saying is rather convulsive and hard to understand.
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'Fame' isn't something you
do or
have. Rather, it is something that exists in
other people, measuring
their awareness of you, as well as their recognition of your status as someone many others are presumably aware of.
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If you want to dissect it down to a meaningless level that can have no concrete or even form of substance then sure.
But you can name famous people off the top of your head. And no I do not mean the artist, band or writer who is famous in a small circle. I'm using celebrity status fame for my statements.
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How can
other people's thoughts on you burden
you with moral obligations? Can
I change what's right or wrong for
you merely thinking about you a certain way?
This seems like a very unreliable and unpredictable basis for ethics, and would probably cause a lot of inequality.
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If you are in a position of power where people look up to you, listen to you, emulate and cherish you. You -should- be trying to set a good example. This is the ideal, but with our culture a serial killer, drug addict, or person like Paris Hilton can be listend to, emulated and cherished just as much as someone else.
I'm speaking of the ideal here, not what we have now.
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Personally, I like to have the best of both worlds and look at manga depictions of incredibly hot girls having their heads cut off.
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Fantastic.
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Anyway, I vehemently object to the idea that individuals have a moral obligation to be 'useful' to the rest of the world. We're responsible only for ourselves, and it is absurd for
you to declare what joy someone else presumably
isn't getting out of a hobby like enhancing their own looks.
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Well theirs your view on the matter. You don't believe people have a moral obligation to be useful to the rest of the world; while I most certainly do.
If we're responsible only for ourselves then parents should leave a $20 on their babies chest and hope for the best? Thats an extremism but you hopefully get what I mean.
Your teacher should teach whatever they want with no feelings towards the possible consequences of their ideas? In a perfect world where everything taught is useful and good sure. But we dont live in a utopia.
If people are starving in the streets, being killed by foreign armies and bandits. Does the Government not have a responsibility to step in and help their charges?
If you're a world famous musician, rockstar rich with millions of fans who look up to you and emulate you, listen to your songs. Do you not have a responsibility to leave a positive impact? You'll say no. But I'd say yes.
Everyone has a duty to someone else. Duty to your family, lovers, your job, friends, pets, etc. if you're ignore all of them then you -are- inherently useless.
A person with no duties helps no one but themselves, they drain everyone and return nothing. They're useless.
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