Hey Henry,henry quirk wrote:"why would anyone sacrifice one's life for others?"
An example...
My nephew is eight years old. I find him to be the most marvelous person in the world.
If need be: I'd take a bullet to save him.
Why? Cuz I love him.
I need no other reason.
Is my reason sound?
Probably not...don't care...I believe the world is a better place with him in it...I know my life is better with him in it...I value him beyond all others and things...I want him to live, to grow, to find his place, to be happy.
So: because I value him, I believe it to be in my best interest to preserve and cultivate him, even if I have to sacrifice myself to do it.
Even if I'm not around to see it, knowing (in my last moments) that he continues, serves 'me'.
There's nuthin' noble about it.
It is what it is.
You just described what I consider to be selfless love. Some may say, "well, he's talking about his nephew, so it's still within the instinct of passing on his genes ...", but I think your love for your nephew wouldn't change a bit even if he had, god forbid, a terminal illness. So, you're not valuing him for passing on your genes. You need no reason other than that you recognize the beauty of his spirit, and are willing to give your life for it. In my theistic world, it makes perfect sense, your reason is very sound, and very noble in the eyes of god.
I think we have a slightly different definition of what 'self-serving' is. When someone else's happiness serves 'you' (I guess technically, you could still call that self-serving), that's to me, you're no longer trying to serve the most important need for yourself (in the atheistic worldview), your own survival. That's the way nature supposedly made us, in the purely naturalistic worldview, right? So, I guess you are a loony in your world,
You are a good man, Henry.