 Okay, how does objectivism differentiate between selfishness and narcissism? How do we defend objectivism from accusations of narcissism? I mean, quite easily, really, for objectivism, selfishness means use of one's mind to identify and ultimately act on those values that lead to a successful life long-term. Now, there's nothing narcissistic about that. Use your mind. Use reason to discover and act to achieve the values that are going to promote your life long-term. It's not about instant gratification because that's not the mind. If you thought about using the cocaine, you wouldn't use it. The reason people use cocaine is because they're narcissists or hedonists and they want the instantaneous pleasure. So there's nothing even remotely similar between selfishness and narcissism. They're not even closely related concepts. So what we have to emphasize when talking about selfishness is that it's your life, life, not moment, life, over the span of your whole life. And that the only way to achieve life, life as a human being, as Ayn Rand said, life qua man, is to use one's mind to think. Thinking means to be long-term because thinking means to embody all the relevant facts, all the relevant facts that affect your life, not right now, but over a lifespan. So again, that's how you differentiate narcissism about the moment, narcissism about me looking good. It's about me appearing good. It doesn't even mean me being good. This is about being good, being good by using your mind, again, to identify and to pursue those values that are necessary to a successful life.