I came back to this post a year later because I really wanted to grapple with the idea I should be willing to sacrifice more for the cause. Alas, even in a receptive mood I don’t think this post does a very good job of advocating for this position. I don’t believe this fictional person weighed the evidence and came to a conclusion she is advocating for as best she can: she’s clearly suffering from distorted thoughts and applying post-hoc justifications. She’s clearly confused about what convenient means (having to slow down to take care of yourself is very inconvenient), and I think this is significant and not just a poor choice of words. So I wrote my own version of the position.
Let’s say Bob is right that the costs exceed the benefits of working harder or suffering. Does that need to be true forever? Could Bob invest in changing himself so that he could better live up to his values? Does he have an ~obligation[1] to do that?
We generally hold that people who can swim have obligations to save drowning children in lakes[2], but there’s no obligation for non-swimmers to make an attempt that will inevitably drown them. Does that mean they’re off the hook, or does it mean their moral failure happened when they chose not to learn how to swim?
One difficulty with this is that there are more potential emergencies than we could possibly plan for. If someone skipped the advance swim lesson where you learn to rescue panicked drowning people because they were learning wilderness first aid, I don’t think that’s a moral failure.
This posits a sort of moral obligation to maximally extend your capacity to help others or take care of yourself in a sustainable way. I still think obligation is not quite the right word for this, but to the extent it applies, it applies to long term strategic decisions and not in-the-moment misery.
I don’t love the word obligation in general. I’m using it here to convey that whatever morality applies to split-second-decisions also applies to long term planning.
I came back to this post a year later because I really wanted to grapple with the idea I should be willing to sacrifice more for the cause. Alas, even in a receptive mood I don’t think this post does a very good job of advocating for this position. I don’t believe this fictional person weighed the evidence and came to a conclusion she is advocating for as best she can: she’s clearly suffering from distorted thoughts and applying post-hoc justifications. She’s clearly confused about what convenient means (having to slow down to take care of yourself is very inconvenient), and I think this is significant and not just a poor choice of words. So I wrote my own version of the position.
Let’s say Bob is right that the costs exceed the benefits of working harder or suffering. Does that need to be true forever? Could Bob invest in changing himself so that he could better live up to his values? Does he have an ~obligation[1] to do that?
We generally hold that people who can swim have obligations to save drowning children in lakes[2], but there’s no obligation for non-swimmers to make an attempt that will inevitably drown them. Does that mean they’re off the hook, or does it mean their moral failure happened when they chose not to learn how to swim?
One difficulty with this is that there are more potential emergencies than we could possibly plan for. If someone skipped the advance swim lesson where you learn to rescue panicked drowning people because they were learning wilderness first aid, I don’t think that’s a moral failure.
This posits a sort of moral obligation to maximally extend your capacity to help others or take care of yourself in a sustainable way. I still think obligation is not quite the right word for this, but to the extent it applies, it applies to long term strategic decisions and not in-the-moment misery.
I don’t love the word obligation in general. I’m using it here to convey that whatever morality applies to split-second-decisions also applies to long term planning.
The original Singer parable refers to a shallow pond, I assume to get around this problem.