For those familiar with Thomas Kuhn's work
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions,
this article from the April 2013
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences could be portentious.
The author, a professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering at Oakland University in Rochester MI, describes a concept which she calls "pathological altruism" which could help explain much of the rancor of our domestic politics today.
A common everyday example is parents who try to shield their children from the natural negative consequences of their actions (e.g., the child fails to study, gets a bad grade, and the parent threatens to sue the school district unless the grade is improved).
Note that the pathological altruist
geniunely believes s/he is being helpful! This is a crucial point.
Because people are human, this belief that they are being helpful blinds them to the obvious (to anyone else) observation that the people they are purporting to help, are in fact NOT being helped at all.
I mentioned this article to someone whom I respect greatly, and his first response was, "you mean like government policies that are supposed to help people but wind up making people even more dependent instead?"
Thus we wind up with TWO problems instead of one!
The first problem is the increased dependency of people, where ACTUAL helpfulness would instead be to increase self-reliance.
The second problem is that any attempts to point out the first problem result in the pathological altruist "digging in his/her heels" and becoming even MORE insistent on being "helpful."
The second problem results in highly-polarized politics, as the pathological altruist adopts a defensive attitude of moral superiority, which allows him/her to demonize anyone who disagrees with their policy prescriptions as being "selfish" or "uncaring" when in fact it is frequently the exact opposite which is the motivation.
No one questions their
desire to be helpful; people merely say "look at the results: this isn't working." and of course in the ensuing arguments, the people who actually need the help are totally ignored.