And their own happiness is insignificant, and irrelevent to the discussion when it's not even about them.
Now, their own happiness is not insignificant or irrelevent. It is everything. People care about their own happiness, not everyone's. Therefore it is valid to ask which happiness you refer to.
Since you won't acknowledge you pwnage on the equality being an end, I'd hope you'd understand that who's happiness is quite an important question if you say happiness is an end. Especially since you haven't answered my question as to whether it is better for a vast majority to be very happy (and small small minority to be slightly unhappy) or for everyone to be just barely happy.
Using your own experience only will force you to come to very ****ed up conclusions.
Well, I guess we've figured out your problems .
Using the human experience will generally allow you to make much better conclusions.
And people know every human's experience how....? You can't even begin to comprehend the experiences of every human. Just your own and you may be aware that there are the experiences of others around you (though using that experience without using your own to analyze ain't going to work).
How would you know whether they are divorced from their bias?
When you see a pattern of beliefs in conversation and posts, you can quickly discern the biases of a person. Though my biases come into effect in ascertaining it. You can see how they are divorced from their biases from how often they move away from their base position.
Using this site for analysis, I'd have to say Spiffor is prehaps the closest thing we have to unbiased, but even his biases spill through. They have to. It's how he makes sense of the world and how he knows society around him. You can't divorce him of that.
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