The Drowning Child
and the Expanding Circle
by Peter Singer
published in 1997
To challenge my students to think about the ethics of what
we owe to people in need, I ask them to imagine that their route
to the university takes them past a shallow pond. One morning,
I say to them, you notice a child has fallen in and appears to
be drowning. To wade in and pull the child out would be easy but
it will mean that you get your clothes wet and muddy, and by the
time you go home and change you will have missed your first class.
I then ask the students: do you have any obligation to rescue
the child? Unanimously, the students say they do. The importance
of saving a child so far out weighs the cost of getting one's
clothes muddy and missing a class, that they refuse to consider
it any kind of excuse for not saving the child. Does it make a
difference, I ask, that there are other people walking past the
pond who would equally be able to rescue the child but are not
doing so. No, the students reply, the fact that others are not
doing what they ought to do is no reason why I should not do what
I ought to do.
Once we are all clear about our obligations to rescue the
drowning child in front of us, I ask: would it make any difference
if the child were far away, in another country perhaps, but similarly
in danger of death, and equally within your means to save, at
no great cost - and absolutely no danger to yourself? Virtually
all agree that distance and nationality make no moral difference
to the situation. I then point out that we are all in that situation
of the person passing the shallow pond: we can all save lives
of people, both children and adults, who would otherwise die,
and we can do so at a very small cost to us: the cost of a new
CD, a shirt or a night out at a restaurant or concert, can mean
the difference between life and death to more than one person
somewhere in the world -- and overseas aid agencies like Oxfam
overcome the problem of acting at a distance.
At this point the students raise various practical difficulties.
Can we be sure that our donation will really get to the people
who need it? Doesn't most aid get swallowed up in administrative
costs, or waste, or downright corruption'? Isn't the real problem
the growing world population, and is there any point in saving
lives until the problem has been solved? These questions can all
be answered: but I also point out that even if a substantial proportion
of our donations were wasted, the cost to us of making the donation
is so small, compared to the benefits that it provides when it,
or some of it, does get through to those who need our help, that
we would still be saving lives at a small cost to ourselves -
even if aid organizations were much less efficient than they actually
are.
I am always struck by how few students challenge the underlying
ethics of the idea that we ought to save the lives of strangers
when we can do so at relatively little cost to ourselves. At the
end of the nineteenth century WH Lecky wrote of human concern
as an expanding circle which begins with the individual, then
embraces the family and 'soon the circle... includes first a class,
then a nation, then a coalition of nations, then all humanity,
and finally, its influence is felt in the dealings of man with
the animal world'. On this basis the overwhelming majority of
my students seem to be already in the penultimate stage - at least
- of Lecky's expanding circle. There is, of course, for many students
and for various reasons a gap between acknowledging what we ought
to do, and doing it; but I shall come back to that issue shortly.
Our century is the first in which it has been possible to
speak of global responsibility and a global community. For most
of human history we could affect the people in our village, or
perhaps in a large city, but even a powerful king could not conquer
far beyond the borders of his kingdom. When Hadrian ruled the
Roman Empire, his realm covered most of the 'known' world, but
today when I board a jet in London leaving what used to be one
of the far-flung outposts of the Roman Empire, I pass over its
opposite boundary before I am even halfway to Singapore, let alone
to my home in Australia. Moreover no matter what the extent of
the empire, the time required for communications and transport
meant that there was simply no way in which people could make
any difference to the victims of floods, wars, or massacres taking
place on the other side of the globe.
By the time anyone had heard of the events and responded,
the victims were dead or had survived without assistance. 'Charity
begins at home' made sense, because it was only 'at home' - or
at least in your own town - that you could be confident that your
charity would make any difference.
Instant communications and jet transport have changed all
that. A television audience of two billion people can now watch
hungry children beg for food in an area struck by famine, or they
can see refugees streaming across the border in search of a safe
place away from those they fear will kill them. Most of that huge
audience also have the means to help people they are seeing on
their screens. Each one of us can pull out a credit card and phone
in a donation to an aid organization which can, in a few days,
fly in people who can begin distributing food and medical supplies.
Collectively, it is also within the capacity of the United Nations
- with the support of major powers - to put troops on the ground
to protect those who are in danger of becoming victims of genocide.
Our capacity to affect what is happening, anywhere in the
world, is one way in which we are living in an era of global responsibility.
But there is also another way that offers an even more dramatic
contrast with the past. The atmosphere and the oceans seemed,
until recently, to be elements of nature totally unaffected by
the puny activities of human beings. Now we know that our use
of chlorofluorocarbons has damaged the ozone shield; our changing
the climate of the entire planet in unpredictable ways and raising
the level of the sea; and fishing fleets are scouring the oceans,
depleting fish populations that once seemed limitless to a point
from which they may never recover. In these ways the actions of
consumers in Los Angeles can cause skin cancer among Australians,
inundate the lands of peasants in Bangladesh, and force Thai villagers
who could once earn a living by fishing to work in the factories
of Bangkok.
In these circumstances the need for a global ethic is inescapable.
Is it nevertheless a vain hope? Here are some reasons why it may
not be.
We live in a time when many people experience their lives
as empty and lacking in fulfillment. The decline of religion and
the collapse of communism have left but the ideology of the free
market whose only message is: consume, and work hard so you can
earn money to consume more. Yet even those who do reasonably well
in this race for material goods do not find that they are satisfied
with their way of life. We now have good scientific evidence for
what philosophers have said throughout the ages: once we have
enough to satisfy our basic needs, gaining more wealth does not
bring us more happiness.
Consider the life of Ivan Boesky, the multimillionaire Wall
Street dealer who in 1986 pleaded guilty to insider trading. Why
did Boesky get involved in criminal activities when he already
had more money than he could ever spend? Six years after the insider-trading
scandal broke, Boesky's estranged wife Seema spoke about her husband's
motives in an interview with Barbara Walters for the American
ABC Network's 20/20 program. Walters asked whether Boesky was
a man who craved luxury. Seema Boesky thought not, pointing out
that he worked around the clock, seven days a week, and never
took a day off to enjoy his money. She then recalled that when
in 1982 Forbes magazine first listed Boesky among the wealthiest
people in the US, he was upset. She assumed he disliked the publicity
and made some remark to that effect. Boesky replied: 'That's not
what's upsetting me. We're no one. We're nowhere. We're at the
bottom of the list and I promise you I won't shame you like that
again. We will not remain at the bottom of that list.'
We must free ourselves from this absurd conception of success.
Not only does it fail to bring happiness even to those who, like
Boesky, do extraordinarily well in the competitive struggle; it
also sets a social standard that is a recipe for global injustice
and environmental disaster. We cannot continue to see our goal
as acquiring more and more wealth, or as consuming more and more
goodies, and leaving behind us an even larger heap of waste.
We tend to see ethics as opposed to self-interest; we assume
that those who make fortunes from insider trading are successfully
following self-interest - as long as they don't get caught and
ignoring ethics. We think that it is in our interest to take a
more senior better-paid position with another company, even though
it means that we are helping to manufacture or promote a product
that does no good at all, or is environmentally damaging. On the
other hand, those who pass up opportunities to rise in their career
because of ethical 'scruples' about the nature of the work, or
who give away their wealth to good causes, are thought to be sacrificing
their own interest in order to obey the dictates of ethics.
Many will say that it is naive to believe that people could
shift from a life based on consumption, or on getting on top of
the corporate ladder, to one that is more ethical in its fundamental
direction. But such a shift would answer a palpable need. Today
the assertion that life is meaningless no longer comes from existentialist
philosophers who treat it as a shocking discovery: it comes from
bored adolescents for whom it is a truism. Perhaps it is the central
place of self-interest, and the way in which we conceive of our
own interest, that is to blame here. The pursuit of self-interest,
as standardly conceived, is a life without any meaning beyond
our own pleasure or individual satisfaction. Such a life is often
a self-defeating enterprise. The ancients knew of the 'paradox
of hedonism', according to which the more explicitly we pursue
our desire for pleasure, the more elusive we will find its satisfaction.
There is no reason to believe that human nature has changed so
dramatically as to render the ancient wisdom inapplicable.
Here ethics offer a solution. An ethical life is one in which
we identify ourselves with other, larger, goals, thereby giving
meaning to our lives. The view that there is harmony between ethics
and enlightened self-interest is an ancient one, now often scorned.
Cynicism is more fashionable than idealism. But such hopes are
not groundless, and there are substantial elements of truth in
the ancient view that an ethically reflective life is also a good
life for the person leading it. Never has it been so urgent that
the reasons for accepting this view should be widely understood.
In a society in which the narrow pursuit of material self-interest
is the norm, the shift to an ethical stance is more radical than
many people realize. In comparison with the needs of people going
short of food in Rwanda, the desire to sample the wines of, Australia's
best vineyards pales into insignificance. An ethical approach
to life does not forbid having fun or enjoying food and wine;
but it changes our sense of priorities. The effort and expense
put into fashion, the endless search for more and more refined
gastronomic pleasures, the added expense that marks out the luxury-car
market - all these become disproportionate to people who can shift
perspective long enough to put themselves in the position of others
affected by their actions. If the circle of ethics really does
expand, and a higher ethical consciousness spreads, it will fundamentally
change the society in which we live.
The Drowning Child and the Expanding Circle
by Peter Singer
New Internationalist magazine, April 1997
Peter Singer, one of the world's leading moral philosophers,
is Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Center for Human
Bioethics at Monash University, Melbourne. He is author of several
books including Practical Ethics, Animal Liberation and the recent,
controversial, Freethinking Life and Death.
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