Furbank's slim volume has the merits of a good conversation. It is an essay which truly assays its topic, i.e., examines and explores without coming to a definite conclusion. It asks the question, what is the proper way to help strangers who make up the vast majority of others in the world? It takes this question as the key concern of humanism, and so also evaluates various disciplines designated as such.
Furbank argues very convincingly that the formalized task of helping others known as philanthropy is flawed by being based on the idea that the benefactor is somehow radically different, and usually superior, to those he or she helps. Philanthropy usually involves coercion and/or the expectation of obligations on the part of the recipient. To counteract such flaws, Furbank offers the hypothesis (from Proust)that the proper premise of any humanism might be "that each human being comprises, potentially, the characteristics of the whole human species." I take the implication of this to be that the best way to help others is to help oneself. This, in effect, depolitcizes the politics of philanthropy. But this is also problematic, for how does one help others when one is focusing on oneself?
With this question unanswered, Furbank rather querulously ends his book. He should write another one to answer it. The short answer is thus: An individual life can only be successful based on the will of the individual to better himself. The best thing you can wish for anyone is that they learn to pull themselves up by the bootstraps. The problem with this is that many will inevitably fail and be left by the wayside. The two possible responses to this situation are the basis for the two political poles of today: laissez faire capitalism and altruism (these being much more precise and unambiguous than popular terms like republican and liberal).