QO altruism

Submitted by jhwierenga on Mon, 07/30/2018 - 08:08

Altruism is the result of natural purpose processes, exercised on the quantum concepts for species.

Phenomenon explained :

"Altruistic behaviour is exhibited by many species". Altruism is behaviour which is typical for, or at least frequently manifested by, individuals within a species, which is advantageous for populations within the species to which the individual belongs, but detrimental to the individual's prospects of reproduction. It is difficult to account for within an evolutionary paradigm.

QO altruism is based on the concept that each species exists as a quantum concept, capable of shaping its manifestations. In QO, major selection events are the result of quantum teleology at the level of such quantum concepts. A species with altruistic elements is more likely to pop out of the quantum teleological process, because of a greater resonance. Less resonant quantum concepts for species are likely to be present only virtually. In other words, natural selection operates a priori as well as a posteriori. 

It must be noted that mainstream science has in some cases demonstrated that altruism can be explained by a process of species development in which individuals go through a cycle in which they are sometimes capable of reproduction and sometimes not, and mechanisms have arisen by means of which they can be bound to the non-reproductive stages. 

Credibility:

This explanation follows from the QO explanation for life, plus a hypothesis that altruism is sometimes more likely to be the result of natural purpose, That makes it a complex hypothesis. The explanation of mainstream science is of the same order. Both explanations do not explain why some species exhibit this behavior and others not. That makes the QO explanation tentatively credible.