Ivan Seeking said:
Funny, I usually help others because they need help. Helping others is a choice - it is a choice as to the kind of person that you want to be. Are you selfish and think only of yourself, or do you chose to try help other people when you can. In turn, the sum of the choices that we make determine what the world will be. So in the deepest but most practical sense, giving can be considered a philosophy for global peace and prosperity.
Yes, and in as much as "contributing to global peace and prosperity" makes you feel good, you should do it. I argued earlier that we, as social animals, probably developed an urge in that sense, in that it makes us feel good to "contribute to global peace and prosperity". As such, simply doing what makes you feel good will also "improve" society.
But when you think about it, apart from the satisfaction of this urge, I can't find a single reason to "contribute to global peace and prosperity" if I don't take any part in it. The only reason I would like this, is for myself, and (because I'm a mammal) for my close relatives and friends. It's for myself and them that I can think of a *rational* reason to contribute to "global peace and prosperity", because it will make them feel better probably. But really, really, I cannot find any *rational* reason to contribute to the well-being of people far away in space and time, if this *costs* me something and if I will not obtain any gain from it, in whatever form. I can find some emotional appeal, true. Some kind of grandiose feeling that it was *I*, the *hero* that did so, and that I would go into history forever (a bit the kind of hope the Egyptian Pharaos had when they wanted to be remembered in the distant future). But I recognize this as my need for social recognition which has gone bezerk.
If no one needed help, I wouldn't give away my time or money just to feel good.
It would be a terrible world in which nobody needed help. The happy need the sad in order to be happy, the rich need the poor in order to be rich, the smart need the dumb in order to be smart.Just a clarification. Don't get me wrong on this, I'm not saying that it is "irrational" (understood to be "stupid" or something) to be helpful, to be nice, to act "morally". On the contrary. I'm trying to argue that there is no "rational" reason for this behaviour, but that there is a most fundamental reason for it, which is our drive to feel good and be happy, which is, in many human beings, linked to "moral behaviour". But as such, it is something which is not "obliged", which can really not be put into "rules of good behaviour". In the same way as it is purely a matter of feelings whom you might like and love, and whom you don't, it is exactly the same for this kind of "helpful, moral behaviour".
So *if it makes you happy* to think that you "ought to use your talents as best as you can for the highest benefit of society", well, then you should do so, just to satisfy that urge in yourself. If it doesn't make you particularly happy to do so, well, then by all means, don't. There are no "moral rules". There's just feeling happy or not.
However, you have all the reasons in the world to *convince* others that they should behave that way! This will be more beneficial to yourself. So if you can trick others in thinking that they are "sinning against morality" if they don't give all they can to society (and hence partly to you), then you can put them to work for your own benefit (in the same way as charismatic war lords can stimulate their idiot soldiers to go and die on the battlefield for their glory...). So it shouldn't be any surprise that within society, the rumor is running that one should "give all one's talents to society", in the same way that in the past (and present) the rumor runs that one "should behave as a patriot" etc...