I don’t think altruism is evolutionarily connected to power as you describe. Caesar didn’t come to power by being better at altruism, but by being better at coordinating violence. For a more general example, the Greek and other myths don’t give many examples of compassion (though they give many other human values), it seems the modern form of compassion only appeared with Jesus, which is too recent for any evolutionary explanation.
So it’s possible that the little we got of altruism and other nice things are merely lucky memes. Not even a necessary adaptation, but more like a cultural peacock’s tail, which appeared randomly and might fix itself or not. While our fundamental nature remains that of other living creatures, who eat each other without caring much.
I think the way morality seems to work in humans is that we have a set of potential moral values, determined by our genes, that culture can then emphasize or de-emphasize. Altruism seems to be one of these potential values, that perhaps got more emphasized in recent times, in certain cultures. I think altruism isn’t directly evolutionarily connected to power, and it’s more like “act morally (according to local culture) while that’s helpful for gaining power” which translates to “act altruistically while that’s helpful for gaining power” in cultures that emphasize altruism. Does this make more sense?
Yeah, that seems to agree with my pessimistic view—that we are selfish animals, except we have culture, and some cultures accidentally contain altruism. So the answer to your question “are humans fundamentally good or evil?” is “humans are fundamentally evil, and only accidentally sometimes good”.
I think altruism isn’t directly evolutionarily connected to power, and it’s more like “act morally (according to local culture) while that’s helpful for gaining power” which translates to “act altruistically while that’s helpful for gaining power” in cultures that emphasize altruism. Does this make more sense?
I think that there is a version of an altruistic pursuit where one will, by default, “reduce his power.” I think this scenario happens when, in the process of attempting to do good, one exposes himself more to unintended consequences. The person who sacrifices will reduce his ability to exercise power, but he may regain or supersede such loss if the tribe agrees with his rationale for such sacrifice.
Just because it was not among the organizing principles of any of the literate societies before Jesus does not mean it is not part of the human mental architecture.
I don’t think altruism is evolutionarily connected to power as you describe. Caesar didn’t come to power by being better at altruism, but by being better at coordinating violence. For a more general example, the Greek and other myths don’t give many examples of compassion (though they give many other human values), it seems the modern form of compassion only appeared with Jesus, which is too recent for any evolutionary explanation.
So it’s possible that the little we got of altruism and other nice things are merely lucky memes. Not even a necessary adaptation, but more like a cultural peacock’s tail, which appeared randomly and might fix itself or not. While our fundamental nature remains that of other living creatures, who eat each other without caring much.
I think the way morality seems to work in humans is that we have a set of potential moral values, determined by our genes, that culture can then emphasize or de-emphasize. Altruism seems to be one of these potential values, that perhaps got more emphasized in recent times, in certain cultures. I think altruism isn’t directly evolutionarily connected to power, and it’s more like “act morally (according to local culture) while that’s helpful for gaining power” which translates to “act altruistically while that’s helpful for gaining power” in cultures that emphasize altruism. Does this make more sense?
Yeah, that seems to agree with my pessimistic view—that we are selfish animals, except we have culture, and some cultures accidentally contain altruism. So the answer to your question “are humans fundamentally good or evil?” is “humans are fundamentally evil, and only accidentally sometimes good”.
I think that there is a version of an altruistic pursuit where one will, by default, “reduce his power.” I think this scenario happens when, in the process of attempting to do good, one exposes himself more to unintended consequences. The person who sacrifices will reduce his ability to exercise power, but he may regain or supersede such loss if the tribe agrees with his rationale for such sacrifice.
Just because it was not among the organizing principles of any of the literate societies before Jesus does not mean it is not part of the human mental architecture.