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10.2: Helping Others and Altruism

  • Page ID
    271344
    • Rajiv Jhangiani and Hammond Tarry
    • Brock University and Adler School of Professional Psychology via BCcampus

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    Altruism is the selfless concern for the well-being of others, often expressed through acts of kindness, generosity, or support without the expectation of personal gain or reward. In psychological terms, altruism can be driven by empathy, moral principles, or social norms, and it often involves a willingness to sacrifice one's own comfort, time, or resources to help others. Altruism is distinct from related concepts like prosocial behavior, which includes any action intended to benefit others, because it emphasizes the absence of self-interest. Whether motivated by compassion, duty, or instinct, altruism plays a vital role in fostering social cohesion and ethical responsibility in both personal and societal contexts.

    Perhaps you are skeptical about altruism. You may have noticed the many cases in which people seem oblivious to the needs of others. We allow tens of millions of people around the world to live in poverty, we do little to help those who are homeless, and often we seem to be more concerned with ourselves that we are with others. You might wonder whether people ever perform behaviors that are not designed—at least in some way—to benefit themselves. Perhaps our seemingly altruistic behaviors are actually motivated not by the desire to increase another’s welfare but by the desire to enhance the self.

    Human nature has created a general tendency for people to enjoy the company of others and to trust, care for, and respect other people. This idea leads us to expect that we will, in most cases, be helpful and cooperative, and perhaps even altruistic. In support of this idea, the 2010 Canada Survey of Giving, Volunteering, and Participating found that 47 percent of Canadians (including 58 percent of Canadian youth) volunteer their time to help others. This adds up to roughly 2.1 billion total volunteer hours every year! Similar results were found in the United States according to independent sector, where a survey given by an established coalition that studies and encourages volunteering found that over 83 million American adults reported that they helped others by volunteering and did so an average of 3.6 hours per week. The survey estimated that the value of the volunteer time that was given was over $239 billion.

    Taken together it seems that many people are helpful to others. Indeed, although few of us are likely to have the opportunity to engage in an act of helpful heroism, we are all likely to have the opportunity to help somebody sometime, and it is likely that—if the costs are not too great—we will do so.

    Media Attributions

    • “Brad Pitt at Incirlik2” by Airman 1st Class Tanaya M. Harms is licensed under a CC0 1.0 licence.

    This page titled 10.2: Helping Others and Altruism is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Rajiv Jhangiani and Hammond Tarry (BCcampus) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.