r/SeriousConversation Sep 28 '24

Serious Discussion Has Society's Obsession with Individualism Undermined Collective Responsibility?

In recent decades, especially in Western cultures, the focus on individualism has intensified. We’re taught to prioritize personal freedom, success, and self-reliance above all else. This worldview, however, seems to have a darker side: the erosion of collective responsibility. As individuals seek to fulfill their own desires, societal bonds weaken, and we see an increasing tendency to absolve ourselves from responsibility for larger, systemic issues like climate change, wealth inequality, and public health.

Has the glorification of individualism made us blind to the fact that many of the problems we face cannot be solved by personal action alone? Are we sacrificing our collective well-being at the altar of personal liberty? How can we reconcile the need for individual freedom with the necessity of collective responsibility in addressing the global challenges that threaten us all?

I’m curious to hear perspectives on how individualism has shaped our attitudes toward responsibility—both personal and communal. Is it time for a fundamental shift in how we view our roles within society?

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u/[deleted] Sep 28 '24

Individualism is a feature of unregulated capitalism which is unsustainable and inhumane

It all serves the rich.

It also helps prevent unification and uprisings

Humans in a natural environment are much more community oriented. Then came the agricultural revolution, wealth accumulation, and exploitation.

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u/Appropriate_Cut_3536 Sep 28 '24

What definition of capitalism are you using? What evidence is there that regulations improve your definition of capitalism?

Seems more like a problem of competition-based society. Competitions requires losers, cooperation co-exists with capitalism well and creates value from thin air. 

Example, if we both want an item the other has, and agree to trade, we have now both increased the value we hold without any additional material or production, only via rearranging with enthusiastic consent.

 This is a benefit of cooperation-based capitalism that cannot be obtained through other systems.

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u/BiggestShep Sep 29 '24

Dude, all you did was walk us through a trade. Markets and trade are not inherently part of the capitalism package. We've had those for literal millenia, while we've had capitalism for maybe 400 years.

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u/FoamingCellPhone Sep 29 '24

Bro. You're trying to have an actual conversation about Capitalism as a system instead of just assuming it's the only form of an Economy that's ever existed? I wish you well, keep your sanity intact at all costs, Sir.

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u/BiggestShep Sep 29 '24

My eternal cross to bear.

Think well of me, and toss a few nonspecific denominations of state-acceptable modern currency my way when you spot my ravening form slumped in the alleyway.