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    Stirner celebrates the 'un-man' and the egoist as charact... — Carmelics
    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→Stirner's position is best described as anti-essentialist perfectionism

    Stirner celebrates the 'un-man' and the egoist as character ideals

    Virtue Ethics
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    Virtue Ethics

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    A perfectionism that values a character ideal without grounding it in human natu...Stirner's position is best described as anti-essentialist perfectionismThese ideals do not derive their value from realising a fixed human nature

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    The egoist's own thoughts and feelings can subjugate the egoist or mak...69%The Stirnerian egoist must cultivate emotional detachment toward their...68%Stirner nonetheless embraces a character ideal of a self-ruling indivi...68%Stirner holds that non-egoistic action has predominated historically i...68%

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    It may seem obvious that Stirner subscribes to a resolutely anti-perfectionist position here. However, this obvious reading has been challenged. Stirner certainly rejects what might be called “essentialist perfectionism”; that is, ethical theories which value certain characteristics of the individual precisely because they realise some aspect of human nature. However, he nonetheless continues to embrace a character ideal, a picture of a self-ruling individual whose perfection is valuable apart f

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