Like its distinguished forebear, pathological narcissism, pathological
altruism is defined by a me-first attitude toward the charitable acts.
In defining the concept Professor Barbara Oakley took a step
beyond the adage: “The road to Hell is paved with good intentions.” She wanted
to expose the state of mind of people whose altruism ends up hurting those it is trying to help. (Via James Taranto)
In some cases pathological altruism refers to people who should
have known that their largesse would do more harm than good. If an “external
observer” would have known that harm was “reasonably foreseeable” the altruism
is pathological.
I don’t need to tell you that the notion of a foreseeable
outcome is difficult to pin down. One person’s prediction of failure is often
another person’s reason to persevere. Presumably, one would have some objective
evidence for the failure of an altruistic project, so “reasonably foreseeable”
must refer ultimately to track record.
It is easier to define the concept when we look at cases
where well-intentioned good deeds produce a calamity and the altruist refuses
to take responsibility for the outcome.
Given the choice between shouldering responsibility and
shifting the blame, the pathological altruist falls back on his moral sentiment.
If he feels good about helping, consequences are not his problem.
Oakley explains:
The
bottom line is that the heartfelt, emotional basis of our good intentions can
mislead us about what is truly helpful for others. Altruistic intentions must
be run through the sieve of rational analysis; all too often, the best
long-term action to help others, at both personal and public scales, is not
immediately or intuitively obvious, not what temporarily makes us feel good,
and not what is being promoted by other individuals, with their own potentially
self-serving interests. Indeed, truly altruistic actions may sometimes appear
cruel or harmful, the equivalent of saying “no” to the student who demands a
higher grade or to the addict who needs another hit. However, the social
consequences of appearing cruel in a culture that places high value on
kindness, empathy, and altruism can lead us to misplaced “helpful” behavior and
result in self-deception regarding the consequences of our actions.
In terms of public policy, pathological altruism can produce
horrors.
When Mao Zedong introduced his Great Leap Forward in 1959,
his goal was to modernize and industrialize China quickly. The net effect of
his policy was a famine that killed tens of millions of people. Being a
pathological altruist, Mao refused to believe that his policies had anything to
do with the calamity. He blamed counterrevolutionaries and launched the Great
Proletarian Cultural Revolution to purge China and the Communist Party of
retrograde influences.
Surely, Mao did not intend to starve so many people;
therefore, he seems to have imagined that he was not responsible for the
famine.
Like the pathological narcissist, the pathological altruist
has no real interest in other people. He does not examine the consequences of
his actions, but prefers his self-righteous moral superiority.
Oakley explains:
In
other words, the altruism and empathy we feel often isn’t really about the
person or group ostensibly being helped but instead often are about us.
Sometimes they relate to the pain we might feel at being ostracized or shunned
for thinking or acting differently. Or they relate to building our
reputation—we wish to be publicly perceived as being altruistic, whether or not
our efforts are truly altruistic, so that we can receive the reputational
benefits of indirect reciprocity.
However much we would like to see pathological altruism find
its rightful place in the next version of the DSM, it is an ethical failing
more than a psychiatric condition.
Obviously, much altruism is anything but pathological. If
your good deeds produce good results; if they have a constructive influence on
those less fortunate… you are behaving ethically.
Thus, the value of the altruism depends on the
ability to judge the results objectively.
Pathological altruism is not limited to individuals. Oakley
points out that American public policy may well be infested with it:
Ostensibly
well-meaning governmental policy promoted home ownership, a beneficial goal
that stabilizes families and communities. The government-sponsored enterprises
Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae allowed less-than-qualified individuals to receive
housing loans and encouraged more-qualified borrowers to overextend themselves.
Typical risk–reward considerations were marginalized because of implicit
government support. The government used these agencies to promote social goals
without acknowledging the risk or cost. When economic conditions faltered, many
lost their homes or found themselves with properties worth far less than they
originally had paid. Government policy then shifted . . . the cost of
this "altruism" to the public, to pay off the too-big-to-fail banks
then holding securitized subprime loans. . . . Altruistic intentions
played a critical role in the development and unfolding of the housing bubble
in the United States.
Clearly, our therapy culture is stoking
pathological altruism. By placing more value on how you feel than about whether
you are effective, it is creating the conditions where people are encouraged to blind themselves to the consequences of their actions.
Oakley sees the hand of the therapy culture at work through
its glorification of empathy. Since psychopaths seem to lack empathy, the
therapy culture has concluded that your capacity for empathy is the only thing
standing between you and state prison.
I have often pointed out that empathy will make you a less
effective competitor. Oakley adds that empathy is problematic in many other
ways.
In her words:
Empathy
is not a uniformly positive attribute. It is associated with emotional
contagion; hindsight bias; motivated reasoning; caring only for those we like
or who comprise our in-group (parochial altruism); jumping to conclusions; and
inappropriate feelings of guilt in noncooperators who refuse to follow orders
to hurt others Oxytocin, the
“goody-goody hormone” that underlies maternal bonding and many aspects of
empathy, also increases both envy and gloating. Empathy also can be used by
the self-serving, including psychopaths, to deduce how to further their own
ends . Being emotionally close to someone who is selfish or dishonest has been
found to lead people to becoming more selfish and dishonest themselves.
Allegiance bias causes forensic scientists to call their findings for the team they
believe has hired them . [Indeed, the reliability of all types of forensic
science evidence, including ostensibly objective techniques such as DNA typing
and fingerprint analysis, has been called to question .] Judges, almost all of
whom are lawyers, favor the legal system in their decisions; this bias has
far-reaching and deleterious effects on American law.
One might reasonably conclude that therapists have often
ignored bad treatment results because they have been secure in their knowledge
that they intend the best for their patients.
If they intend the best and their work does not produce good results, the
fault cannot possibly be theirs.
In the law a person is "negligent" for failing to prevent harm to others that is "reasonably foreseeable." The characterization of behavior as "pathological," rather than merely negligent in a given instance, requires some additional evidence or process to determine the meaning of pathology.
ReplyDeleteIn Dead Aid, Dambisa Moyo describes the state of postwar development policy in Africa today and unflinchingly confronts one of the greatest myths of our time: that billions of dollars in aid sent from wealthy countries to developing African nations has helped to reduce poverty and increase growth.
ReplyDeleteIn fact, poverty levels continue to escalate and growth rates have steadily declined—and millions continue to suffer. Provocatively drawing a sharp contrast between African countries that have rejected the aid route and prospered and others that have become aid-dependent and seen poverty increase, Moyo illuminates the way in which overreliance on aid has trapped developing nations in a vicious circle of aid dependency, corruption, market distortion, and further poverty, leaving them with nothing but the “need” for more aid.
Bill Gates recently called Ms Moyo one of the most evil persons on Earth because of her claim that " pathological altruism" is killing Africa. As usual, Jesus' advice is best: "you shall know them by their fruits". Motive or intentions are irrelevant.
Again, a military that is empathic is a dead military and or dangerous to itself and those it is meant to protect.. One should not confuse compassion with empathy. They are two separate concepts. Empathy often leads to jealousy in the guise of feelings for others. Jealousy creates its on food, especially in the selectiveness that almost always follows.
ReplyDeleteOne of the reasons that we have this magnificent brain, where logic and compassion both reside, is to temper feelings that have no logical bounds.
Oakley:"we wish to be publicly perceived as being altruistic, whether or not our efforts are truly altruistic, "
ReplyDeleteThe statement seems circular,if the author is attempting to point out the difference between intent and outcome.
Suggested edit:
"we wish to be publicly perceived as being altruistic, whether or not our efforts yield truly effective results,"
-shoe