Chuck Yeager
Thus Spake Me
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2026
- Posts
- 47
- Reputation
- 114
Is it immoral to place love for others over yourself?
If you want to be loved, do you think you should correct your flaws (not physical) to deserve it, or do you think you inherently deserve love?
Do you help others out of virtue? Or to gain moral credit over yourself, where doing good deeds is a token, if you will, to later on use as a justification or excuse to do bad? (i.e., helping an old lady cross the street and later on insulting someone, using the good deeds as a merit, to condone what you've done)
How can someone be deserving of love if their behavior is viewed as immoral, even if their environment made them believe in the justification of their immoral behavior?
If you want to be loved, do you think you should correct your flaws (not physical) to deserve it, or do you think you inherently deserve love?
Do you help others out of virtue? Or to gain moral credit over yourself, where doing good deeds is a token, if you will, to later on use as a justification or excuse to do bad? (i.e., helping an old lady cross the street and later on insulting someone, using the good deeds as a merit, to condone what you've done)
How can someone be deserving of love if their behavior is viewed as immoral, even if their environment made them believe in the justification of their immoral behavior?



