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v0.1.1489
NotesPhilosophyTopic 10.7The select minority
Back to Philosophy Topics
10.7.32 min read

The select minority

IB Philosophy • Unit 10

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Contents

  • The opposite of the mass man
  • Demand, standards and service
  • Inspiring — or a put-down?
The big idea: If the mass man demands nothing of himself, what does the opposite look like?

Ortega's answer is the select minority — and, again, this is a type, not an upper class. The 'select' person is defined by one thing: they are hard on themselves. They set themselves a difficult standard and try to live up to it.

Ortega gives this striving life an old-fashioned name: he calls it the noble life. 'Noble' here has nothing to do with birth or a title — it means a life of self-demand and service, open to anyone.

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Ortega builds the noble life out of three things that all point away from the self.

Three marks of the select minority

1

Demands much of himself

He is his own hardest task-setter — never coasting, always asking whether he could do better.

2

Lives by high standards

He measures himself against something demanding — a discipline, a craft, an ideal — not against 'what everyone does'.

3

Serves something beyond himself

He gives himself to a cause, a skill, a duty larger than his own comfort — that is what he lives FOR.

Demand ▸ Standards ▸ Service

The athlete or craftsman who obeys the discipline: Picture someone devoted to a demanding craft — a musician, a surgeon, a serious athlete. Nobody forces them to practise at dawn; they impose it on themselves because the standard of the craft demands it. They obey a rule they didn't have to accept, in service of doing the thing well. For Ortega that self-imposed discipline, freely chosen, is the heart of the noble life — the exact opposite of the mass man who drifts.
Checkpoint — the select minority: In one line: the select person demands much of himself, lives by high standards, and serves something beyond himself. Hold that — next we ask whether Ortega's picture is admirable or elitist.

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As with the mass man, the select minority cuts two ways, and a fair reader holds both.

An inspiring ideal

  • Self-demand and service really are admirable
  • It's open to anyone — no birth or wealth required
  • It names something real: a life lived to a standard

A veiled put-down

  • Dividing people into 'select' and 'mass' can breed contempt
  • Who gets to judge who is 'noble'?
  • It can flatter the striving few and look down on the rest
Go further — higher-level insight: The deepest worry is that Ortega's 'select vs mass' is a flattering mirror: almost every reader quietly places themselves among the demanding 'select' and pictures other people as the complacent 'mass'. That makes the theory feel true while doing no work. A strong part (b) asks whether 'demand much of yourself' is a genuine measure of a good life, or a way of ranking people that mostly serves the person doing the ranking.

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Fill the gap with one word: the select person is defined by how much he ______ of himself. [1 mark]

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10.1.1The verification principle
10.1.2Eliminating metaphysics
10.1.3Emotivism
10.1.4Does verificationism defeat itself?
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