in a fruitless response to insults, I mentioned the existence of different kinds of individualism. Perhaps people will find the following list to be useful:
What is Individualism? As with most abstract terms, the meaning of "individualism" is multifaceted and sometimes contradictory. According to Mario Bunge, there are many types. Five are: 1. methodological: the proposition that the only way to understand our society (or parts of it) is to break it down to individual decisions and then try to add up individual decisions and the ways in which they interact. 2. psychological: the theory that each person in reality acts as a possessive individualist. 3. mystical: the view that there exists a basic unity (perhaps hidden) between the individual and the whole of society (or a major segment of society), so that events on a higher level of aggregation can be understood totally in terms of individual psychology and/or decision-making. Other versions of this include the assumption that all of society can be seen as one big factory. 4. political: the normative view (often called "libertarianism") that all individuals should be free of all external constraint imposed by the government. 5. ethical: another normative view, involving the respect for each individual as an individual. The differences among individuals should be acknowledged, so that no effort should be made to forced everyone to be alike (except to prevent them from hurting each other). See Mario Bunge's 2000 article, Ten Modes of Individualism – None of Which Works – And Their Alternatives, Philosophy of the Social Sciences 30; 384 available at http://pos.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/30/3/384.pdf as of July 30, 2007. My list does not correspond to his. -- Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
