What I'm asking for is how Rand's philosophy accounts for it, not just the average person's. The debate is over her philosophy after all, yes?
I really don't know what else you're looking for here.
So basically the judgement on whether or not it's fine to punt a child onto the streets is if you, like some roman emporer, find the child amusing?
How did you come to that conclusion from what I said?
If someone realized, through pure logic, that continuing to sustain this child's life was cutting into their own spare time and if they just ditched that kid they could realize their own dreams (a realistic scenario as shown by a number of cases of child murder), would that be acceptable?
No, I clearly said the opposite of that. What part of "you have a responsibility to care for the child" don't you understand? Reading comprehension not your strong suit? Or are you just so bad at following an arguement that my statement about being legally able to cut a child off at adulthood you somehow interrepted as an endorcement of child murder?
I haven't seen much of an explanation except to say matter of factly that they are different.
Then you are being willfully ignorent, I provided one.
That sounds like a pretty terrible situation, though admittedly such a situation is very unlikely to happen.
Well, if no one on the planet wanted to help those children, it actually wouldn't be a "terrible" situation to any of those people, they'd think it was fine. I think we could come up with reasons why it's objectively bad, but that's not really an arguement against Objectivism, that's an arguement against these hypothetical sociopathic people of the future, who can't be bothered to consider the value gained from taking care of their offspring. If anything, such an arguement would be neccisarily built on a foundation of Objectivism.
If no one on the planet was able to help such children, that would indeed be a terrible situation, but it would be a terrible situation much in the same way as a drought or a flood. The solution is better technology and more resources, philosophies of altruism don't rend orphanages out of some magical pocket in space.
Still, it seems like Rand's philosophy just more or less "counts on" random people freely deciding to go against it to sustain itself.
How so?
And here's the crux of the issue. Why do I need to think further than "that person is in trouble!" to decide to help them? Seriously, screw the consequences! Those can be delt with down the road. In the long run we're all dead anyway.
Well, certainly, no one expects you to sit and ponder the epistimological implications of your actions while a house is burning down. Most of this thinking should be done beforehand, but are you seriously rejecting the notion of thinking at all about the issue? Before? After? During if the time presents itself? Is it seriously a sin in your eyes to apply logic to the idea of whether or not to risk your life for someone else's? Is it always better to sacrifice your life for the someone else because.....you declare it morally so? Speaking of non sequiturs. While it may seem noble to apply this thinking for the issue of saving someone from dying, having this as your moral foundation is obviously absurd. "In the long run we're dead" You're rejecting reason. Good job. Though if you're trying to convince me that Ayn Rand is right, you're doing well, you're making the exact arguements that she mocks but I never thought anyone would honestly present. "In the long run we're dead" is that a joke?
Morally evil to do something just to help someone? I've never understood how she can conclude this.
So you think intending to help someone morally justifies any action you take?
So it's an emotional response, but as you've said, that seems perfectly acceptable in deciding on your dreams and what art to like
When did I say that?
she's factually wrong in concluding there's some absolute standard of "art" by the way
I don't think you understand what the world "factually" means.
You can't reject logic just because you dislike the conclusions. Thus is the art of woo.
You seem to say "well then why not stuff yourelf with chocolate?" but that's really one big issue. Any moral system that equates an innate response to run and help someone who's drowning (for example) as "morally identical" to stuffing yourself with sweets has seriously got some major problems. How can you even begin to defend something like that?
I didn't equate the two, but I like how you seem to be ignoring my arguements and instead pointing to your own distaste for the conclusions as if they are somehow a counterarguement. "I hate that prepetual motion is impossible, therefore it must exist. Take that science!" I didn't even argue that stuffing yourself with sweets is morally wrong, that's kinda an important point you seem to be missing.
Under this moral code, as you just described it, though a person's life is saved both ways, it's right or wrong based entirely on what I was thinking during the process.
When did I say that what you are thinking during the proccess justifies and action?
I'm sorry, I can't live my entire life thinking the former. What a hollow and empty existance that would be if I was forcing my brain to work that way. It takes all the enjoyment out of living.
Well, your crude characterization asside, you have no idea what you're missing. It's like seeing in color when you've been restrained all your life to black and white. To save someone's life not based on a hopeless "we'll all be dead in the long run" mentality, not based on whim, not based on social programming, but to really and conciously save the life of another human being because your reason tells you that are concious just like you, that they have dreams and wishes just like you, because you want them to live.