But what do we mean if we say that somebody is an authentic person, or a very genuine person? Personal authenticity is often defined as being true and honest with oneself and others, having a credibility in one’s words and behavior, and an absence of pretence. Its meaning is then often clarified by contrasting it to inauthenticity, like comparing light to darkness. But in the absence of any clear criteria for judging authenticity, the boundaries between being authentic and being inauthentic are amorphous and uncertain, and often porous.
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I agree with you.Authenticity is more of a process than an established condition — Bitter Crank
It is a kind of automatic reaction when one identifies something as not natural, not usual.One has to know someone quite well to know whether they are being authentic or not. One can't even automatically assume authenticity for ones self without some self-examination. — Bitter Crank
An authentic asshole is invariably full of shit; the project is to be fake - to fake humanity. — unenlightened
So, if you do not believe in authenticity, why are you still a part of the game?I am a tremendous faker, the best faker you have ever seen, I'm so tremendously talented at faking that everyone thinks I'm authentic, except those who are pretending not to be impressed, and they really think I'm authentic, they just don't like what I authentically am, which they believe, by the way. So everyone thinks I'm authentic, and I even believe it myself. And that's what authenticity is - a convincing fake. — unenlightened
Maybe Sartre's waiter is more authentic, his reactions are not finally determined yet.I've always thought Sartre was gratuitously judgemental about that waiter. — andrewk
What about reflection? Most likely, a true authenticity lives in the thought.To the extent that authenticity means anything to me, it is relaxation, — andrewk
It is almost impossible. So-called "authenticity" is like an imperative: we must live and judge ourselvesIt is the gift that very few people have of being able to just act without constantly judging themselves or wondering what others think of them. — andrewk
I understand your position and your advice. Yet, the problem with authenticity is that it replaces possible ethics in relations with the other. Levinas founded his ethics with the exception of looking at other’s eyes, and nowadays direct (and authentic) eye contact has become a cultural norm serving the business. From one side, it is so convenient, from another it almost eliminates ethics dimensions.I'm inclined to go with Kant: treat others not as means ONLY but ALSO as ends in themselves. — gurugeorge
The jargon affirms
the reliability of the universal by means of the
distinction of having a bourgeois origin , a distinction
which is itself authorized by the universal. — Number2018
So, if you do not believe in authenticity, why are you still a part of the game?
How can we differentiate between fake and authentic? — Number2018
Absolutely! I try not to judge others, the most important for me to find out if I am authentic myself.Of course it is an important distinction to make in others. And even more important to make in oneself. — unenlightened
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