Altruism is the principle and moral practice of concern for happiness of other human beings or animals, resulting in a quality of life both material and spiritual. — Altruism Page Wikipedia
In an extreme case, altruism may become a synonym of selflessness, which is the opposite of selfishness. However, because altruism ultimately benefits the self in many cases, the selflessness of altruistic acts is brought to question. — Altruism Page Wikipedia
Definition of "Selfless": concerned more with the needs and wishes of others than with one's own; unselfish — Google Definitions
Altruism in biological observations in field populations of the day organisms is an individual performing an action which is at a cost to themselves (e.g., pleasure and quality of life, time, probability of survival or reproduction), but benefits, either directly or indirectly, another individual, without the expectation of reciprocity or compensation for that action. — Altruism Page Wikipedia
A related concept in descriptive ethics is psychological egoism, the thesis that humans always act in their own self-interest and that true altruism is impossible. Rational egoism is the view that rationality consists in acting in one's self-interest (without specifying how this affects one's moral obligations). — Altruism Page Wikipedia
commercialised view of human intentions — Echarmion
web of relations — Echarmion
fae — TheMadFool
Are you referring to my attempt to, in what in the eyes of many will appear not only disgusting but also in complete contradiction to the spirit of morality, reduce altruism and by extension, all of morality, to nothing more than a simple calculation, the likes of which we breeze through with the least bit of care in our daily lives? — TheMadFool
At this point, all I can say is that quantification (in your terms "commecialisation") is baked into the very notion of good and bad (morality) for the selling point of morality is that good is better than bad and "better" is a word that is, from its definition, inherently quantitative. — TheMadFool
No, I am referring to the general idea of thinking about human interactions as governed by opposing, atomistic intentions such as self-interest vs. altruism. So that one might end up with an intention made up of "pure altruism", which would be equal and opposite to "pure self-intetest". — Echarmion
Sorry, I don't follow. Are there molecular intentions as contrasted with atomic ones? My guess is you're making a reference to the complexity of the moral sphere and that my take on it is too simplistic and fails to capture or address morality's breadth and depth.
Well, I agree with you that there's more to morality in particular and human personality in general but the point is, if I may be so bold as to say so, the underlying idea of altruism is rather simple - others must be more important than yourself. Whether this fails to acknowledge the intricacies of the "web of relations" or not is a different story. All I'm concerned with, at the moment, is showing how, within the framework of existing moral paradigms, true altruism isn't just possible but is alive and well, needing a mathematical perspective to be seen. — TheMadFool
doing something for others is also always doing something for yourself — Echarmion
No True Scotsman is altruistic. — Banno
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