I think you misunderstand. Needs and desires are fundamental and a natural part of our biology and psychology. Instinctive needs, social needs and even intellectual needs are natural. We are able to exist only because of our needs and desires. I am not doubting that at all.
What I am talking about is morality. In the animal world there is no morality even though animals are all the time fulfilling their needs...even by killing and eating one another.
In an animal world there's no morality because there's no higher consciousness to make the complaint 'that's not fair' - without some idea that you 'deserve' a particular treatment or have 'worth' there can be no morality.*
Morality arises only if self awareness and self analysis is possible.
Yes, but only within a cultural context - morality isn't about how you behave in isolation, it's about how you behave within a cultural expectation.
We can arrive at an absolute morality that is independent of social norms....and that is.....morality is essentially about self discipline through self awareness.
How? How can we, in isolation, decide what is right or wrong for everyone, given that we only have on input?
More self disciplined...more moral. More self discipline means less self interest.
I don't see that either of these is true - if you are disciplined about, say, mowing your lawn, how is it more moral to ensure that you don't just do it every second Sunday, but at exactly 11am on every second Sunday? If I'm interested in robbing a bank, then putting in the exercise time to have the fitness to run between cameras in the blind spots is anything but selfless, but it is self-discipline.
Humans fall into a spectrum. It is a gradation with different people being in different points on the scale. At one end is rigid self interest and at the other end is absolute lack of self interest.
It is not just about caring for others. That is also a form of social need.
I don't really understand what you're trying to say here.
Lack of self interest is different. It is at the other end of the spectrum where a person rids himself of all forms of instinctive, social and intellectual needs.
I think that's called depression, and we tend to think of it as either an illness or at least a symptom of some underlying problem.
That is the absolute state where one gets rid of the ego mind that is such an essential and integral part of living in this world.
That's not self discipline, that's self-negation - if you value nothing of what you want or need, you fail to value yourself, you become an irrelevance to even yourself.
That is when one rises above the material world and becomes spiritually perfect.
Even if there were evidence of something 'else', to forgo entirely what you have and what you are is not a 'moral' issue; if you're doing it so that you can 'progress' then your motivation is entirely self-interest, surely?
I am essentially talking of spirituality and its objectives.
And that's part of the difference between our takes on this, because I'm intrinsically trying to deal with morality in the real world.
O.
* I appreciate that there is a growing body of evidence that shows some animals demonstrating a sense of anger or outrage at unequal treatment; I've not read enough into it to know if anyone's been able to extrapolate any sort of reasoning or moral behaviour from that or if it's a purely instinctive 'kin-selection' form of behaviour.