Is all human behavior based on self-interest? Many social and
biological theories would argue so, but such a perspective does not
explain the many truly heroic acts committed by people willing to
risk their lives to help others. In "The Heart of Altruism,"
Kristen Renwick Monroe boldly lays the groundwork for a social
theory receptive to altruism by examining the experiences described
by altruists themselves: from Otto, a German businessman who
rescued over a hundred Jews in Nazi Germany, to Lucille, a
newspaper poetry editor, who, armed with her cane, saved a young
girl who was being raped. Monroe's honest and moving interviews
with these little-known heroes enable her to explore the causes of
altruism and the differences between altruists and other people. By
delineating an overarching perspective of humanity shared by
altruists, Monroe demonstrates how social theories may begin to
account for altruism and debunks the notions of scientific
inevitability that stem from an overemphasis on self-interest.
As Monroe has discovered, the financial and religious
backgrounds of altruists vary greatly--as do their views on issues
such as welfare, civil rights, and morality. Altruists do, however,
share a certain way of looking at the world: where the rest of us
see a stranger, altruists see a fellow human being. It is this
perspective that many social theories overlook. Monroe restores
altruism to a general theory of ethical political behavior. She
argues that to understand what makes one person act out of concern
for others and not the self, we need to ask how that individual's
perspective sets the range of options he or she finds
available.
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