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Yes. The desire to do good is driven by self-interest; on the other hand, self-interest pursued to the extreme ends in the realization of one’s inseparability from everyone else and thus leads to altruism.
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But I had in my mind something like the beavers, who do not intend to be crucial contributors to biodiversity but who pursue their own ends entirely without regard for the good of the ecosystem. And thus end up being irreplaceable for it.
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And then on the other hand, we humans in our attempts to do good for the world end up destroying it by interfering with interdependent natural processes we cannot understand adequately.
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The central thing to consider is that whatever is perceived as 'good' is entirely relative. What's good for the monkey is not good for the fish—so when the monkey wants to save the fish from drowning by taking it away from the water, it kills it.
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Unimaginable tortures and horrors like the Holocaust were the result of thinking that we knew exactly who we were and what is true.
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