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View Full Version : Net-worth and self-worth: what is difference?



coberst
09-05-2009, 09:36 AM
Net-worth and self-worth: what is difference?

The difference between net worth and self worth to my mind rests on that which is extrinsic and intrinsic to our humanity.

Abraham Maslow defined a hierarchy of needs to be:
1) Biological and Physiological (water, food, shelter, air, sex, etc.)
2) Safety (security, law and order, stability, etc.)
3) Belonging and love (family, affection, community, etc.)
4) Esteem (self-esteem, independence, prestige, achievement, etc.)
5) Self-Actualization (self-fulfillment, personal growth, realizing personal potential, etc.)

I think that the needs 1 thru 3 are extrinsic needs. While needs 4 and 5 are to a large degree intrinsic needs. They are intrinsic in the sense that we can survive without fulfilling such needs but they are needs that will enhance our sense of self worth.

Capitalism tends to accentuate needs 1 thru 3 with little thought to 4 and 5 because such an economic system recognizes little about anything but net worth. Net worth is valuable especially if it allows us to accomplish needs 4 and 5.

“Presupposition that the work of art, as an autonomous organism, stands beside nature on equal terms and, in its deepest essence, devoid of any connection with it, in so far as by nature is understood the visible surface of things.” Wilhelm Worringer author of Abstraction and Empathy

Petronius
09-05-2009, 10:33 AM
Capitalism tends to accentuate needs 1 thru 3 with little thought to 4 and 5 because such an economic system recognizes little about anything but net worth. Net worth is valuable especially if it allows us to accomplish needs 4 and 5.

To be honest, I think it's quite the opposite. When biological needs become commodities, there are tendencies to either dismiss quality for better prices or better marketing tactics, or consume beyond the level of your needs when you can afford it. Security and stability are only important as long as they serve the economic sector (luckyly, they usually do), and belonging to a family or a group of your choosing becomes less central than your ability to formaly adapt to a random group at the workplace for the sake of better productivity.

On the other hand, money are a symbol of esteem in most capitalist cultures, and career advancement markets itself as the very equivalent of self-actualization.