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My understanding of altruism is the love of another at the exclusion to love of oneself. Perhaps challenging to imagine or to understand through a psychological point of view.
This last one is actually kind of what Kant defined as Altruism, and when I first read it I was quite appalled. Kant says, for a deed to be altruistic, you have to do it without any feeling, without even looking at the person you are helping, without acknowledging that anything even happened. Wow, did there ever lack humanity?
Altruism if not best defined as I shared above, well then simply defined as truly self-less acts (loving choices made with no prior thought to or benefits of any value to oneself).
I am just wondering what others think about this and how it effects your beliefs in general.
This last one is actually kind of what Kant defined as Altruism, and when I first read it I was quite appalled. Kant says, for a deed to be altruistic, you have to do it without any feeling, without even looking at the person you are helping, without acknowledging that anything even happened. Wow, did there ever lack humanity?
I agree with the definition you posted; the 'self' is a feeling that we sometimes have. But not currently having a feeling of self doesn't make the action in which we are lost self-less. It could be a self-serving action or initiated because of selfish interest.I think to continue down that route, we would have to define what the 'self' is, in order to define what self-less actually means.
It's the fate of most of philosophy to be essentially useless and inconsequential. Like a peacock's colorful tail it only serves to adorn the human mind :DI understand and appreciate altrusim as people being kind to others too.