If an extreme altruist recognises that taking such an extreme position would lead overall to less altruism in the future, and thus worse overall consequences, surely the right thing to do is stand up to that abuse.
A good point. By abuse I wouldn’t necessarily mean anything blatant though, just that selfish people are happy to receive resources from selfless people.
Besides, what exactly do you mean by “extreme altruism”?
Valuing people equally by default when their instrumental value isn’t considered. I hope I didn’t misunderstand you. That’s about as extreme it gets but I suppose you could get even more extreme by valuing other people more highly than yourself.
A good point. By abuse I wouldn’t necessarily mean anything blatant though, just that selfish people are happy to receive resources from selfless people.
Sure, and there isn’t really anything wrong with that as long as the person receiving the resources really needs them.
Valuing people equally by default when their instrumental value isn’t considered. I hope I didn’t misunderstand you. That’s about as extreme it gets but I suppose you could get even more extreme by valuing other people more highly than yourself.
The term “altruism” is often used to refer to the latter, so the clarification is necessary; I definitely don’t agree with that extreme.
In any case, it may not be reasonable to expect people (or yourself) to hold to that valuation, or to act in complete recognition of what that valuation implies even if they do, but it seems like the right standard to aim for. If you are likely biased against valuing distant strangers as much as you ought to, then it makes sense to correct for it.
A good point. By abuse I wouldn’t necessarily mean anything blatant though, just that selfish people are happy to receive resources from selfless people.
Valuing people equally by default when their instrumental value isn’t considered. I hope I didn’t misunderstand you. That’s about as extreme it gets but I suppose you could get even more extreme by valuing other people more highly than yourself.
Sure, and there isn’t really anything wrong with that as long as the person receiving the resources really needs them.
The term “altruism” is often used to refer to the latter, so the clarification is necessary; I definitely don’t agree with that extreme.
In any case, it may not be reasonable to expect people (or yourself) to hold to that valuation, or to act in complete recognition of what that valuation implies even if they do, but it seems like the right standard to aim for. If you are likely biased against valuing distant strangers as much as you ought to, then it makes sense to correct for it.