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Lubica's avatar

Immanuel Kant has called this sensus communis. One aspect of sensus communis is to learn about different standpoints of other people and take them into an account when thinking about our common living in the world. Hannah Arendt translated it as an enlarged mentality. What is, of course, interesting is another aspect of our Western heritage and that is the idea of the individual. There are (simplifying) two versions - one, the Anglo-Saxon, which is now the building block of the Western worldview, and that is built on the idea of an atomistic individual, traced to Hobbes and Locke. But we also have another version of the individual, and that is the social individual, which is could be argued e corporate also the idea to “embrace collective and conservative beliefs – holding that the good of the many outweighs the interest of the one”. This one can be traced to Hugo Grotius. It is not to say that these days your analysis is not correct. It is! It is to remind us that the history of ideas is not so simple and the basic plank of the so-called “Western values” was not always individualistic in the sense of a free floating atom.

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The Revolution Continues's avatar

Thanks, Kevin, for your insight into the worldviews of others. I work with immigrants, and it's by sitting down and speaking with an individual from another culture that you truly see how isolated and egocentric most Americans are. The questions that immigrants sometime ask are revealing as to where we need to start to make some drastic changes, IMO. Peace all!

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