worrywort
Well-known member
I don't mean worth in the sense of basic human rights that should be equal to all people. I mean more like the difference between a Mother Theresa and a Hitler. What makes one person more worthy/more valuable/better than another? What scales and standards do you use to measure this?
Where do you get your sense of self worth from? Should it be from social comparisons, or should it be something more innate or personal? i.e. if you're a big fish in a small pond you're probably gonna feel pretty good about yourself, but what if you're the small fish in a big pond? Does that mean you should feel bad about yourself? Unworthy, and worse than others?
I've been thinking maybe a persons self worth should be measured on their improvement rate throughout their lives, rather than on social comparisons. For example, person A is a dignified gentleman; polite, kind and gracious, while person B is a disfunctional young man; hateful, disrespectful and arrogant. We'd naturally consider person A to be the "better" man. But what if person A had come from an incredibly privaleged upbringing and the life he now lives is actually far behind what he could've become, while person B came from a massively under privaleged upbringing and the life he's living now is infact a vast improvement to where people expected him to end up. Wouldn't this make person B the worthier of the two?
I don't know. These are just some thoughts I've been thinking recently and I'd be curious to hear people's opinions. Maybe you don't think there should be any scales at all?! Who knows!
Where do you get your sense of self worth from? Should it be from social comparisons, or should it be something more innate or personal? i.e. if you're a big fish in a small pond you're probably gonna feel pretty good about yourself, but what if you're the small fish in a big pond? Does that mean you should feel bad about yourself? Unworthy, and worse than others?
I've been thinking maybe a persons self worth should be measured on their improvement rate throughout their lives, rather than on social comparisons. For example, person A is a dignified gentleman; polite, kind and gracious, while person B is a disfunctional young man; hateful, disrespectful and arrogant. We'd naturally consider person A to be the "better" man. But what if person A had come from an incredibly privaleged upbringing and the life he now lives is actually far behind what he could've become, while person B came from a massively under privaleged upbringing and the life he's living now is infact a vast improvement to where people expected him to end up. Wouldn't this make person B the worthier of the two?
I don't know. These are just some thoughts I've been thinking recently and I'd be curious to hear people's opinions. Maybe you don't think there should be any scales at all?! Who knows!