Can humanism be made compatible with evolution? I’m unable to decipher what you understood by what I wrote, but I simply meant that there are arguments that exist (I might happen to agree or disagree with them), which say that human nature isn’t “good by nature” as claimed by some (just look at all the human history and prehistory, with its narrative riddled by wars, prisons, brutality, injustice, oppression, and so on ). Then there’s the other argument that human nature is, quite the inverse of this view, actually “bad by nature”, or in other words, people are naturally greedy, selfish and brutish until you teach them not to be by whatever it is, religion, culture, long years of education, arts and literature, philosophy, whipping, burning at the stake, prison, whatever.
I’m not siding with either of these vague, generalising and rather simple arguments.
I’m also not claiming I disagree with the view that 100 people dying in a flood is worse than 100 wilderbeasts dying in a flood. Nor that I agree with that. I’m not God, I don’t agree or disagree with such things. I have no control over them, so I do what I’m supposed to which is to just take things as they are. I might occasionally choose to not only try and see the world as it is, but also how it ought to be, but I mostly just dismiss such fantasies as useless wishful thinking. But if I could somehow save either the 100 people or the 100 wilderbeests (I don’t know what sort of weird fantastical situation I would be in to be making this decision), then I would choose to save the people. Is this because I’m human, cultured, kind, educated, not a savage, conforming to social standards, soft on the inside, habituated, brainwashed, wise, I do not know. I’d just make that choice, oblivious to the (welcome) side effect that it will make me a more genuine human being, for whatever that means. I also understand that many people would do the same, and many wouldn’t, for this reason or that. The latter contradict your point.