Camper6
Well-known Member
- Location
- Northwestern Ontario Canada
My father's most often used phrase was "all man (meaning himself) wants is a bit of piece and quiet, and a fair go".
Reread your post. Didn't you mean 'peace'
My father's most often used phrase was "all man (meaning himself) wants is a bit of piece and quiet, and a fair go".
The sage advice my father gave amounted to "if your going to fight, fight to win". I've managed to avoid physical fighting.
You described your father as very trusting. I doubt you would be able to know now what was going on in his life at the time he said, every man for himself. The advice obviously had an effect on you enough to start a thread about it. My life experiences don't have me believing it's every man for himself. Sure disappointment in someone or something happened but that doesn't mean the entire human race amounts to "every man for himself"
Think Mother Teresa or Nelson Mandela
Do you think the entire human race falls into the catagory of "every man for himself"?
.......My life experiences don't have me believing it's every man for himself. Sure disappointment in someone or something happened but that doesn't mean the entire human race amounts to "every man for himself"........Do you think the entire human race falls into the catagory of "every man for himself"?
Reread your post. Didn't you mean 'peace'
The sage advice my father gave amounted to "if your going to fight, fight to win". I've managed to avoid physical fighting.
The phrase “every man for himself” is used when people are trying to save themselves without consideration for others. It is a fragment of a larger medieval proverb from England. Dating from around the 16th century, the proverb, according to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED), said that it was “Every man for himself and the Devil take the hindmost.”
This term has come to be used in situations where there is danger, but also hope of salvation. It comes with a notion that helping other people will lead to everyone, or at least the individual, also being caught. The idea can be applied to criminals trying to escape the police, after, for example, a bank robbery. By invoking the idea, the fleeing individuals hope that someone else will be caught and they will survive. In this sense, it is akin to the joke where a person does not need to outrun a bear in the woods, he only needs to outrun his friends.
I had no brothers and if Dad and I were mock fighting and I had my fists raised, he would look me in the eye and say, "Make your first one a good one, because it will be your last."
I internalised this to mean that should I ever be in a desperate situation and under attack, I should not hold back but do my best to disable my attacker. Thankfully, I have never needed to do so.
Going back to the OP, I had some idea that the "every man for himself" might have a military origin and refer to a time of inglorious retreat or rout but it seems not. This is what I found:
"The phrase “every man for himself” is used when people are trying to save themselves without consideration for others. It is a fragment of a larger medieval proverb from England. Dating from around the 16th century, the proverb, according to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED), said that it was “Every man for himself and the Devil take the hindmost.”
This term has come to be used in situations where there is danger, but also hope of salvation. It comes with a notion that helping other people will lead to everyone, or at least the individual, also being caught. The idea can be applied to criminals trying to escape the police, after, for example, a bank robbery. By invoking the idea, the fleeing individuals hope that someone else will be caught and they will survive. In this sense, it is akin to the joke where a person does not need to outrun a bear in the woods, he only needs to outrun his friends."
I suppose there's some among us that put themselves before anyone else, regardless of the situation. If they do "so-be-it"! if they feel no remorse for overpowering those folks that are weaker than they, that's their choice. It takes all kinds to make up our society. It's left for us to choose those we wish to emulate and those we despise.
Personally, I think that life is made up of a never-ending series of choices that we encounter every day, some small, some large. I like to think that I consider how other people around me will be affected by my choice. Life isn't "all about me" nor do I think that it should be.
Herd instinct does not apply to humans. We are more predators than prey and like our cousins the chimpanzees we hunt co-operatively, not competitively. But we are more than hunters. We began as gatherers too, another co-operative activity, as is agriculture that developed later.
Our instinctual drives are still there but have been tamed by our intellect.
I may have caught you out here (though totally accidentally), quote:
"In human societies, herding often involves people using the actions of others as a guide to sensible behaviour, instead of independently seeking out high-quality information about the likely outcomes of these actions. Herding can be particularly destructive in market contexts, because blind faith in market trends by a swarm of individuals can lead to huge bubbles and devastating crashes. But if herding can lead to outcomes that are so damaging and maladaptive at the level of the society, then why did it evolve in the first place? Because herding evolved to benefit individuals, not groups or societies."
~https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/darwin-eternity/201306/human-herding-how-people-are-guppies
The sage advice my father gave amounted to "if your going to fight, fight to win". I've managed to avoid physical fighting.
You described your father as very trusting. I doubt you would be able to know now what was going on in his life at the time he said, every man for himself. The advice obviously had an effect on you enough to start a thread about it. My life experiences don't have me believing it's every man for himself. Sure disappointment in someone or something happened but that doesn't mean the entire human race amounts to "every man for himself"
Think
Mother Teresa or Nelson Mandela
Do you think the entire human race falls into the catagory of "every man for himself"?
Knight wrote:
".........Sure disappointment in someone or something happened but that doesn't mean the entire human race amounts to "every man for himself"
Think
Mother Teresa or Nelson Mandela"
Camper6 wrote:
"Those two are exceptions."
The sage advice my father gave amounted to "if your going to fight, fight to win". I've managed to avoid physical fighting.
You described your father as very trusting. I doubt you would be able to know now what was going on in his life at the time he said, every man for himself. The advice obviously had an effect on you enough to start a thread about it. My life experiences don't have me believing it's every man for himself. Sure disappointment in someone or something happened but that doesn't mean the entire human race amounts to "every man for himself"
Think
Mother Teresa or Nelson Mandela
Do you think the entire human race falls into the catagory of "every man for himself"?