RE: virus: Altruism, Empathy, the Superorganism, and the Priso   ner's
Wright, James  7929 (Jwright@phelpsd.com)
Fri, 18 Apr 97 15:23:00 EDT
Reed wrote:
>Are we really going to get into an argument over definitions again?<
I hope not;
>Are you willing to accept, as a possibility that altruism, as you have   
defined it, >doesn't exist? <
Only as a possibility; I have seen many examples of such behavior, read   
about many more, and disproof of its existence would require   
documentation of the deliberate deception/malice/conspiracy of quite a   
few people. Presumably, at least ONE of them was displaying true   
altruism.
Albert Schweitzer - Mother Teresa - Mohandas Gandhi - Gotama Shakyamuni -   
Dalai Lama - etc.
>Perhaps that is a false category, or perhaps the definition ascribes an   
incorrect >"intent" to the altruist?  <
Verifying "intent" is a dubious proposition.
>Let's say that the "strong" altruism which you have defined (by this I   
mean true >both literally and in essence) turns out to be a   
misinterpretation of a lot of
>observations...a (I learned this word on this list...I love you guys)   
verisimilitude.
There are an awful lot of observations of behavior for them all to be   
misinterpreted. I can grant the possibility, but it stretches my   
credulity to the limit!
<Snip direct address to Robin>
>How about this:
>Obviously we behave in ways that appear "altruistic"...date.  Sometimes   
this >willingness to place small bets on the future evolves into a system   
of true >"altruism" where we sacrifice without expecting return, or   
sacrifice and forget about >it.  There are examples of humans behaving as   
martyrs for various causes and >these reflect a general tendency among   
humans to be more or less cooperative.<
There are yet other altruistic categories. Can you imagine the variety   
that actually views all humans as different aspects of one humanity, even   
one-self, so that to struggle against another human for food or territory   
or whatever is to struggle against oneself?
This is not as isolated a viewpoint as you might imagine.
>It is important to recognize that all the behaviors of an organism are
>overdetermined; even persisting in a state of rest is the outcome of   
myriad
>tensely balanced equilibrium, from the simplest chemical reactions to   
the
>most complex sociopolitical patterns of culture.  All organisms that
>persist and reproduce must, by definition, be "self   
interested"...although
>how "self" in defined can be variable (for instance the "self" of a   
worker
>ant is an interesting concept).  Human minds give us incredible
>plasticity...we can adopt paradigms of selfish AND selfless action.  But
>these paradigms/ideas/memes cannot remove us from the reality in which   
they
>emerged.
>We all must eat.<
Yes, but we are not compelled to eat each other.
Unfortunately, those humans who choose not to persist and reproduce   
(monks, nuns, etc.) are not universally "dis-interested"; Rasputin and   
Cardinal Richelieu come to mind.
>I believe any thinking person acknowledges the idea of pure communism as
>the most attractive, most altruistc, and most desireable system from an
>intellectual perspective.  You might say it's a good "description" of   
the
>perfect culture.  The problem, of course, is that we aren't perfect.  We
>compete, we exploit one another, we fight over resources.  We are, by   
our
>nature, self-interested; we could not persist were we not.<
Unfortunately, pure communism suffers from the same problem that many   
others do: who decides? "From each according to his abilities..." is   
fairly clear, if you rule out coercion (forced prison labor, artificial   
involuntary narcotic stimulation, etc.) but the "..to each, according to   
his needs" is rife with problems. Who decides for me what my needs truly   
are? If there is any surplus, what is to be done with it, and by whom?
>I believe that any thinking person acknowledges that however desireable,
>pure communism is not in fact a stable or even attainable system.  In   
fact,
>it's very dangerous to try to institute such economic/social systems.   
 In
>the same way that by denying "the flesh" Christianity has given birth to
>the concept of "premarital sex", exploitation of little boys by   
supposedly
>"holy" priests, and an entire Western culture both afraid of and   
mesmerized
>by sex by denying our self-interested natures we create a mechanism   
where
>people are both afraid of and mesmerized by wealth and progress.<
How do you account for family life, where near-communistic ideals can be   
attained? The father/mother work because they can, both to support   
themselves and the children; the children receive because they need.
I do not address your analysis of Western culture because I agree with   
most of it.
>I'm not, though, arguing that becuase we are self-interested in nature   
we
>are doomed to be selfish in behavior.  That's the naturalistic fallacy,   
and
>has given rise to robber barons, social darwinists, and all manner of   
other
>cultural shoggoths.  I am simply insisting that there is a difference
>between DENIAL and CONTROL.  We can control our baser natures if we
>recognize them, if we confront them, and if we accept them as integral   
to
>our being.  By denial we simply allow them to act unchecked and
>unmonitored.
A decent perspective; rather than confront your baser nature, can you   
turn it to better use?
<Snip discussion of Tibet>
>In the same sense we can look at, value, teach, and reinforce   
"altruistic"
>ideas and behaviors despite the acknowledgement that they often emerge   
from
>or are derivatives of self-interested goals.  I say that altruism   
emerges
>from or is derived from our evolved ability to recognize a good   
swap...and
>that our concepts of "altruism" and "communism" etc. are extrapolations
>that our very plastic minds make from these somewhat more plebian   
barters
>and negotiations over food, ideas, and other neccesities.<
Another decent perspective; I still regard true altruism as a more   
prevalent phenomena than you do. Why are there so many firemen?
>We are altruistic...in the sense that we can engage in trade, that we   
can
>delay gratification, that we are willing to "invest" effort today on the
>assumption that there will be return with interest at a later date, and
>that the extrapolation of these abilities allows us to create and test   
new
>and more mutually benificial mechanisms of group/self-interest.<
And a few, rare or not according to individual perception, engage in   
altruistic behavior because they understand that all humans are related   
by more than common ancestors, that the progress of the race is faster   
when some individuals cooperate more than they compete, and that charity   
is its own justification, without regard to how, why or for whom it is   
done.
Thanks for a thought-provoking post.
james
Reed
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  Reed Konsler                        konsler@ascat.harvard.edu
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