What is your answer?

Christians agree with radical individualists that

    { 1 } - loving one's neigbor as oneself is the ideal.
    { 2 } - each person has as his first moral duty to seek genuine self-fulfillment.
    { 3 } - selfishness is repudiated because it denies the self access to goods that can be achieved only by sharing.
    { 4 } - loving one's neighbor as oneself is unreal and sentimental.
    { 5 } - the person is called to sacrifice his self-fulfillment to the community.

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1 is wrong. Please try again.

Christians agree with radical individualists that

    { 1 } - loving one's neigbor as oneself is the ideal.
    { 2 } - each person has as his first moral duty to seek genuine self-fulfillment.
    { 3 } - selfishness is repudiated because it denies the self access to goods that can be achieved only by sharing.
    { 4 } - loving one's neighbor as oneself is unreal and sentimental.
    { 5 } - the person is called to sacrifice his self-fulfillment to the community.

Radical individualists do not believe this.

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2 is correct!

Christians agree with radical individualists that

    { 1 } - loving one's neigbor as oneself is the ideal.
    { 2 } - each person has as his first moral duty to seek genuine self-fulfillment.
    { 3 } - selfishness is repudiated because it denies the self access to goods that can be achieved only by sharing.
    { 4 } - loving one's neighbor as oneself is unreal and sentimental.
    { 5 } - the person is called to sacrifice his self-fulfillment to the community.

The difference is that Christians think they can find self-fulfillment only in sharing in community, whereas such community is not necessary for the "self-fulfillment" of radical individualists.

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3 is wrong. Please try again.

Christians agree with radical individualists that

    { 1 } - loving one's neigbor as oneself is the ideal.
    { 2 } - each person has as his first moral duty to seek genuine self-fulfillment.
    { 3 } - selfishness is repudiated because it denies the self access to goods that can be achieved only by sharing.
    { 4 } - loving one's neighbor as oneself is unreal and sentimental.
    { 5 } - the person is called to sacrifice his self-fulfillment to the community.

This is a Christian, but not radical individualist, position .

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4 is wrong. Please try again.

Christians agree with radical individualists that

    { 1 } - loving one's neigbor as oneself is the ideal.
    { 2 } - each person has as his first moral duty to seek genuine self-fulfillment.
    { 3 } - selfishness is repudiated because it denies the self access to goods that can be achieved only by sharing.
    { 4 } - loving one's neighbor as oneself is unreal and sentimental.
    { 5 } - the person is called to sacrifice his self-fulfillment to the community.

Christians do not believe this.

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5 is wrong. Please try again.

Christians agree with radical individualists that

    { 1 } - loving one's neigbor as oneself is the ideal.
    { 2 } - each person has as his first moral duty to seek genuine self-fulfillment.
    { 3 } - selfishness is repudiated because it denies the self access to goods that can be achieved only by sharing.
    { 4 } - loving one's neighbor as oneself is unreal and sentimental.
    { 5 } - the person is called to sacrifice his self-fulfillment to the community.

Neither believes this. See p. 15.

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the end