Altruism The power of compassion to change yourself and the world

Matthieu Ricard

Book - 2015

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Subjects
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2015.
Language
English
French
Main Author
Matthieu Ricard (author)
Other Authors
Charlotte Mandell (translator), Sam Gordon, 1985-
Edition
First North American edition
Item Description
"Originally published in France as Plaidoyer pour l'altruisme by NiL éditions, September 2013"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
ix, 849 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780316208246
  • Introduction
  • I. What Is Altruism?
  • 1. The Nature of Altruism
  • 2. Extending Altruism
  • 3. What Is Empathy?
  • 4. From Empathy to Compassion in a Neuroscience Laboratory
  • 5. Love, Supreme Emotion
  • 6. The Accomplishment of a Twofold Benefit, Our Own and Others
  • 7. Self-interested Altruism and Generalized Reciprocity
  • 9. The Banality of Good
  • 10. Altruistic Heroism
  • 11. Unconditional Altruism
  • 12. Beyond Imitations, True Altruism: An Experimental Investigation
  • 13. The Philosophical Arguments Against Universal Selfishness
  • II. The Emergence of Altruism
  • 14. Altruism in Theories of Evolution
  • 15. Maternal Love, Foundation for Extended Altruism?
  • 16. The Evolution of Cultures
  • 17. Altruistic Behavior Among Animals
  • 18. Altruism Among Children
  • 19. Prosocial Behavior
  • III. Cultivating Altruism
  • 20. Can We Change?
  • 21. Training the Mind: What the Cognitive Sciences Have to Say
  • 22. How to Cultivate Altruism: Meditations on Altruistic Love, Compassion, Joy, and Impartiality
  • IV. Contrary Forces
  • 23. Egocentrism and Crystallization of the Ego
  • 24. The Spread of Individualism and Narcissism
  • 25. The Champions of Selfishness
  • 26. Having Hatred or Compassion for Yourself
  • 27. The Shortfall of Empathy
  • 28. At the Origin of Violence: Devaluing the Other
  • 29. The Natural Repugnance to Kill
  • 30. Dehumanizing the Other: Massacres and Genocides
  • 31. Has War Always Existed?
  • 32. The Decline of Violence
  • 33. The Instrumentalization of Animals: A Moral Aberration
  • 34. Backfire: Effects of the Meat Industry on Poverty, Environment, and Health
  • 35. Institutionalized Selfishness
  • V. Building a More Altruistic Society
  • 36. The Virtues of Cooperation
  • 37. An Enlightened Education
  • 38. Fighting Inequality
  • 39. Toward a Caring Economy
  • 40. Voluntary, Joyous Simplicity
  • 41. Altruism for the Sake of Future Generations
  • 42. Sustainable Harmony
  • 43. Local Commitment, Global Responsibility
  • Conclusion: Daring Altruism
  • Acknowledgments
  • Karuna-Shechen: Altruism in Action
  • Notes
  • Sources for Figures
  • Select Bibliography
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An overlong but vigorous gloss on the Dalai Lama's famous remark, "My religion is kindness." Former geneticist and longtime Buddhist monk Ricard (Happiness, 2012, etc.) sets out to prove that true altruism exists, but he winds up exploring nearly the whole of human nature. His task is compounded by the Hobbesian mood of the age, when the individualistic mode is one of "irresponsible selfishness and rampant narcissism, to the detriment of the well-being of all." However, altruism means many things to many people. Ricard generally agrees with researchers who hold that it is the motivation and not the "intensity" involved that counts: for it to matter, in other words, altruism is less the instinctual sacrifice of throwing oneself atop a hand grenade in a foxhole than the self-negation that comes, in one of the author's examples, with abandoning a promising white-collar career in order to dig wells for impoverished villagers. One great virtue of this virtuous book is Ricard's ability to poke holes in received wisdom. For example, he observes that while some abused children become abusers as adults, more often, they decide to "do the opposite of their parents when they have children." Sometimes, the author is imprecise: cutting down on meat consumption won't really "prevent 14% of deaths in the world," since all of us die; perhaps he means death will be forestalled in that many cases. Elsewhere, Ricard ranges too far in quest of examples; his revisiting of the Holocaust-era extermination squads Christopher Browning writes about in Ordinary Men (1992) draws perhaps the wrong conclusion, for the opposite of that murder would not be guilty weeping but instead a policeman's taking the place of a victim. Still, Ricard's book, full of good behavior on the part of humansand other animalsis of a piece with Steven Pinker's The Better Angels of Our Nature (2011) in suggesting that we don't have to be rotten. Inspirational in all the right ways but a challenge to get through it all. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.