Masterclass with Sandeep Dutt
Masterclass on work, relationships, and the philosophy of “The Courage to Be Happy.”
Key Takeaways
Trust vs. Confidence: Work relationships are transactional (confidence-based), grounded in conditions like collateral. Friendships are unconditional (based on confidence) and are rooted in belief in a person’s human worth.
Work as Survival: Adler viewed work as a survival strategy—a necessary “division of labour” to compensate for human physical inferiority. This makes cooperation a non-negotiable, not a choice.
Worth is Attitude: A person’s worth is defined by their attitude toward work, not their profession. All work is honourable, as a community’s diversity of roles is its strength.
The 3 R’s are a Triangle: The relationship between Reading, Reflection, and Relationships is triangular. A strong relationship can spark reflection, which then motivates reading.
Topics
The 3 R’s & The Courage to Be Happy
The 3 R’s (Reading, Reflection, Relationship) are a core framework for personal and social development.
The masterclass series, based on Adlerian philosophy, aims to help youth “find their voice” and build identity.
Key Concepts from “The Courage to Be Disliked”:
True worth is self-reliance.
All problems and joys are interpersonal.
Happiness is an internal choice.
Problem behaviour is a “cry for help.”
Trust vs. Confidence
The book defines two distinct relationship types:
Trust: Conditional and transactional, based on collateral (e.g., a bank loan).
Confidence: Unconditional belief in a person’s human worth, without collateral.
Application to Life Tasks:
Work Relationships → Trust: Condition-based, driven by vested interest (e.g., a shared company goal).
Friend Relationships → Confidence: Unconditional, driven by intrinsic motivation (“I like this person”).
Why Work is a Life Task
Adler’s psychological view of work contrasts with economic theories.
Work as Survival: Work is a direct link to survival in a harsh natural world.
Division of Labour: Humans compensate for physical inferiority by forming groups and specialising. This is a non-negotiable survival strategy.
Societal Purpose: Society exists to facilitate this division of labour. Living, working, and building society are inseparable.
Adam Smith’s Economic View: Self-interest drives specialisation (e.g., a bow-maker trading tools for game). This creates a rational economic order where individual pursuits benefit the collective.
The Honour of All Professions
Worth is Attitude, Not Profession: A person’s value is determined by their attitude and integrity in their role, not the role itself.
Community Diversity: All professions are honourable because they are necessary for the community. A job’s continued existence proves its value.
Danger of Judgment: Upholding a “mediocre justice” that labels jobs as good or bad is dangerous. It leads to a uniform, unfree society by failing to recognise the value in diverse roles.
Next Steps
Sandeep Dutt: Meet an author at the Book Cafe/Brewing Knowledge Group.
All Participants:
Join the Book Cafe/Brewing Knowledge Group for updates.
Consider applying to Learning Forward Foundation, which is hiring for its new team.