Cilantro wrote:
Why do you need to either treat people as lower or higher than you? I agree that it sounds like an oversimplification.
Examples?
I'm especially talking about the dating scene, but actually also the "friend"-scene.
I've discovered that most people start to respect you a whole lot more if you turn much nastier socially instead of being the "nice guy". I cannot help but think of it as being evil.
For instance, if you consider a handsome guy and an overweight less attractive girl, the guy "should" socially indirectly 'bully' her enough to not "drop to her level" which might happen if he made himself available to her.
Similarly, if you take too much care of those who do less than average people are soon enough going to think you care so much about them because you have something in common with them, i.e. you are also doing less than average yourself. Your "value" is soon enough estimated through what people you befriend. If you befriend a handicapped person, people assume you are handicapped too, and your social status drops.
I begin to realize it might be true. The only reason why I have a problem with this and consider it evil is because of my own autism, which most people actually would think of as being very wrong and something to be strongly avoided. I "should" be weeded out unless I change and become more social/evil so as to prove I am fit enough for survival.
Survival rules out everything in the end. There is no moral, nothing, only survival. If there was a universal moral we likely would not need jails. It's beneficial to survival for people to not want to date overweight (or autistic) people, so the mentally healthy mind "should" think of those people as worth less.
Eventually the only worth a human has is how fit it is for survival. I find it evil, but I see that's what is basically wrong with me. I "should" not find it evil !
I'm so surprised to see that everyone seems to be fine about this.
I just don't like the whole survival construction and that mainly means the social construction including social status.
The ironic thing is, if I don't play along in this insane "social game" I really am going to die, and the assumption about autism being wrong will be confirmed.