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==19: NOV 3. Unit Four: Justice, Justified Partiality, and Fair Contracts==
+
==20: NOV 3: Unit Four: Justice and Justified Partiality==
  
 
===Assigned===
 
===Assigned===
  
 
[https://www.npr.org/2020/06/05/870352402/playing-favorites-when-kindness-toward-some-means-callousness-toward-others Hidden Brain, "Playing Favorites: When kindness toward some means callousness toward others"]
 
[https://www.npr.org/2020/06/05/870352402/playing-favorites-when-kindness-toward-some-means-callousness-toward-others Hidden Brain, "Playing Favorites: When kindness toward some means callousness toward others"]
 +
 +
===Advice and discussion on SW3===
 +
 +
:*Questions in the prompt.  Take notes on each, then build a unified essay.
 +
:*Feel free to follow the "road map" in our unit.  Make your own statement.
  
 
===Introduction to Justified Partiality Unit===
 
===Introduction to Justified Partiality Unit===
  
:*A typical question for thinking about social justice is, '''"What do I owe strangers?"'''.  You can think of our approach in this unit as a sneaky way of addressing that question by asking, '''"What, if any, are the limits of partiality to non-strangers (family, intimates, friends...)?"'''   
+
:*A typical question for thinking about social justice is,  
 +
::*'''"What do I owe strangers?"'''.  You can think of our approach in this unit as an indirect way of addressing that question by asking, first:
 +
::*'''"What are the limits (if any) of partiality to family, intimates, friends?" (Your preference network)'''   
  
:*Today's class is focused on "personal partiality," the kind that shows up in our interpersonal social relationships.  The next class is focused on "public partiality", the kind that shows up in our commitments, if any, to benefit strangers (roughly, people with whom we do not seek reciprocal relationship).  
+
:*Today's class is focused on "personal partiality," the kind that shows up in our interpersonal social relationships.  The next class will focus on '''"impersonal altruism"''', which shows up in our commitments, if any, to benefit strangers, especially strangers in our society, but in some cases, globally.  
  
:*Let's define a couple of views to get started:
+
:*Three big questions:
::*'''Tribalism''' - the view that there are no limits to partiality to our social network. Just as no one has a right to my friendship, no one has a moral complaint against me if I spend all of my resources on my partiality network.
+
::*1. What are some the social functions of '''personal preferential treatment'''? (Draw in material from podcast)
::*'''Utilitarian Globalism''' - Following the equal happiness principle, the view that we ought to constrain our natural tendency to favor our own. In principle, saving a life 12,000 miles from here is the same as saving a life in your community.  So, if you can save two lives....etc.
+
::*2. Could our networks of preferential treatment be the effect of and also promote injustice?
::*'''Extreme Altruism''' - Maximize giving. Don't leave any organs un-recycled.
+
::*3. What principles or considerations might lead you to direct some resources (time, money, in-kind aid) outside your preference network? (We need additional resources for Question #3)
 
 
:*Major questions for our work:
 
::*How does partiality fit with a desire for justice as equal treatment? (Rawl's "equal opportunity" principle)
 
::*How big is your US? What is the range of humans you care about and in what degrees?  Is it ok to base your concern (interest in showing partiality) by kinship, geography, membership in a society, ethnic or racial affiliation, viewpoint similarity?
 
::*How does partiality and preference work to increase trust and cooperation in social networks?  If partiality does these, it can't be all bad, right?
 
  
 
===Hidden Brain, "Playing Favorites"===
 
===Hidden Brain, "Playing Favorites"===
  
 
:*Intro
 
:*Intro
::*Expectations for unique attention from one's beloved. We'd rather an inferior unique message than a message shared with others.  We want partiality. (Invite examples.)  
+
::*Expectations for unique attention from one's beloved. We'd rather an inferior unique message than a message shared with others.  '''We want partiality'''. (Think about cases in which someone shows you a simple preference -- offering to pay for coffee, give you a ride somewhere, just showing you attention. It's wonderful!)  
::*How does Partiality fit with a desire for justice as equal treatment?
+
::*How does partiality fit with a desire for justice as equal treatment?  Can partiality cause injustice?
  
:*Discrimination research: IAT - Implicit association test - Mahzarin Banaji one of the researchers on IAT.
+
:*'''Segment 1: Carla's Story'''
::*Mahzarin Banaji and Carla Kaplan. Friends in the 80s being among the few women at Yale.  Story of injury to Carla.  She gets preferential treatment because she is a professor, rather than because she was a quilter.  
+
::*Discrimination research: IAT - Implicit Association Test - Mahzarin Banaji (Harvard) one of the researchers on IAT.
::*Is it discrimination if you are given a preference? [Imagine a system of preferences given to those we know. Could such a system support systemic injustice?]  Someone decides to show you "special kindness"Language of discrimination based on "commission".  But what about omission?  Hard to know if you didn't get preferential treatment.  Yikes!  Carla got to see both what it was like to be treated same and different.  
+
::*Mahzarin Banaji and Professor Carla Kaplan (Yale English at time of story). Also a quilter. Friends in the 80s, among the few women at Yale.  Story of injury to Carla.  She gets preferential treatment because she is a professor, rather than because she was a quilter. Class based.
::*Story by Mahzarin about interview.  Suddenly, the in-group information about being a Yaley was enough to trigger a preference.  Preference networks in Ivy leagues schools.  But also Gonzaga!!!
+
::*Is it discrimination if you are given a preference? [Imagine a system of preferences given to those we know. Could such a system support systemic injustice?]  Someone decides to show you "special kindness" -- above and beyond the ordinary. Language of discrimination based on "commission".  But what about omission?  Hard to know if you didn't get preferential treatment.  Yikes!  Carla got to see both what it was like to be treated same and different
::*"Helping those with whom you have a group identity"
+
::*Most injustices of "omission" are invisible.  
::*Favoritism doesn't get as much attention as discrimination.
+
 +
::*Story by Mahzarin about interview from former student journalist from magazine the professor didn't respect.  Suddenly, the in-group information about being a Yaley was enough to trigger a preference.  Preference networks in Ivy leagues schools.  But also Gonzaga!!! We actively cultivate a preferential network for you!  Because we care about you!
 +
::*"Helping those with whom you have a group identity" is a form of modern discrimination, acc to Mahzarin.
 +
::*Interesting feature of favoritism -- You often don't find out that you didn't get preferential treatment.
 +
::*'''Favoritism doesn't get as much attention as discrimination.'''
  
:*Can you avoid favoritism?   
+
::*Can you avoid favoritism?   
 
::*Could be based on "green beard effect" same school, etc.  
 
::*Could be based on "green beard effect" same school, etc.  
::*Story of Dillon Matthews. Girlfriend didn't like Peter Singer! So he studied him. Singer's argument about helping others in need.  Saving a child from a pondruins your suit.  Utilitarian altruism.  Not helping others is similar to killing them.  Give Well. '''Effective altruism movement'''. The most good you can do. Evidence based altruism.  HannahFocused on family, friends, your neighborhood, city.  Parental lesson.  Dinner together.  Debating moral philosophy on a first date! Wow! It doesn't get any better than that.   
+
 
::*Utilitarian logic.  Equal happiness principle.  Dillon not focused on preference to people near him, but on effectiveness of altruism.
+
:*'''Segment 2: Dillon the Altruist''' 16:00 minutes.
::*Dillon donates a kidney to a stranger.  Hmm. Not giving his kidney felt like hoarding something.  Hannah felt her beloved was taking an unnecessary risk.  Stranger made a diff. to her.   
+
::*What would it be like to try to overcome favoritism.
 +
::*Story of Dillon Matthews. Tries to avoid favoritism. Middle school story. Utilitarian primer: Singer's argument about helping others in need.  Thought experiment: Saving a child from a pond ruins your suit.  Utilitarian altruism.   
 +
::*''Singer's Principle'': If you can do good without giving up something of equal moral significance, you should do it.   
 +
::*"Give Well" - documented charity work. (One of many sources that can assure you that your money did something good. Other examples: Jimmy Carter's mission, Gates' missions.  If you had contributed to such a cause, you would have been effective.)
 +
::*Hannah’s model:  Value the person in front of you.  Then move out to others.  Courtship with Dillon involves debate over these two approaches:  Partiality justified vs not justified. Debating moral philosophy on a first date! Wow! It doesn't get any better than that. 
 +
::*'''Effective altruism movement'''. The most good you can do. Evidence based altruism.  Vs. Hannah: Focused on family, friends, your neighborhood, city.  Parental lesson.  Dinner together.   
 +
::*Utilitarian logic.  Equal happiness principle.  Dillon not focused on preference to people near him, but on effectiveness of altruism. (Feel the rationality, and maybe the unnaturalness of this.)
 +
::*Dillon donates a kidney to a stranger.  Hmm. Not giving his kidney felt like hoarding something.  Hannah felt her beloved was taking an unnecessary risk.  "Being a stranger" made a difference to her. Audio of Dillon’s recovery. Hmm.  Dillon honored by Kidney Association.   
 
::*The Trolley Problem again, this time from Joshua Greene himself!!  Watch "The Good Place".   
 
::*The Trolley Problem again, this time from Joshua Greene himself!!  Watch "The Good Place".   
::*What if the person you had to sacrifice was someone you loved.  Dillon might do it. Dillion would do it.  "They are all the heroes of their own stories..." Dillon would sacrifice Hannah.  Hannah might sacrifice Dillion just know that's what he would want, but no.  She wouldn't.  
+
::*What if the person you had to sacrifice was someone you loved, your child.  Dillon might do it. Dillion would do it.  "They are all the heroes of their own stories..." Dillon would sacrifice Hannah.  Hannah might sacrifice Dillion just know that's what he would want that, but no.  She wouldn't. Dillion jokes that he might kill himself after killing his child. 
::*Greene: She recognizes that what he would do is rational.  He's willing to override it, but might not be able to live with himself for doing that.   
+
::*Greene: She recognizes that what he would do is rational.  He's willing to override it, but he might not be able to live with himself for doing that.  (Elephant and rider.)
  
:*Naturalness of preference.  Evolutionary background
+
:*'''Segment 3: Neurobiology of Preference'''. 33:15 minutes.
::*Preference promotes cooperation. Suite of capacities.  A package.  Don't lie, cheat, steal...
+
::*Naturalness of preference.  Evolutionary background: Preference promotes cooperation. Suite of capacities.  A package.  Don't lie, cheat, steal...
::*Kin cooperation....Cooperation among friends... reciprocity...semi-strangers (same religion. friend of friend)...
+
::*”Morality is fundamentally about cooperation” (Greene):  Kin cooperation....Cooperation among friends... reciprocity...semi-strangers (same religion. friend of kin. friend of friend of kin. Friends! 
::*Moral concentric circles.  How big is my "Us"?  What is the range of humans I care about?
+
::*Moral concentric circles.  How big is my "Us"?  What is the range of humans I care about and to what degree?
::*Greene's analogy of automatic and manual camera modes.  (Two systems. Automatic and Deliberate.)  Difficult decisions might require manual mode.  dlPFC for utilitarians (high cog load).  Automatic -- amygdala.  Snakes in the grass. Thank your amygdala.  (List: Easy calls: sharing concert tickets with a friend.  Buying dinner for an intimate partner. Giving a more valuable gift to one person than another. Harder: Figuring out whether to donate money to help people far away.  How much?)
+
::*Greene's analogy of automatic and manual camera modes.  (Two systems. Automatic (elephant) and Deliberate (rider).)  Difficult decisions might require '''manual mode'''.   
::*Crying baby scenario.  Inevitable outcomes seem to matter here.  Brain wrestles, as in experience. vmPFC
+
::*Manual mode: dlPFC (activated in utilitarian thought) (high cog load).  Automatic -- amygdala.  Snakes in the grass. Thank your amygdala.  Point: We need both systems.  We need lying, cheating, and stealing to be pretty automatic NOs!
::*Lack of Tribal identify might tilt us toward rule based ethics. Equal treatment.  
+
::*List: Easy calls: sharing concert tickets with a friend.  Buying dinner for an intimate partner. Giving a more valuable gift to one person than another. Harder: Figuring out whether to donate money to help people far away.  How much?
::*Loyalty cases: men placing loyalty to men above other virtues.  assumptions about family relationship. Maybe not....
+
::*'''Crying baby scenario'''.  Inevitable outcomes seem to matter here.  Brain wrestles, as in experience. vmPFC (evaluates/weighs) 
 +
::*Lack of Tribal identity might tilt us toward rule based ethics. Equal treatment. Automatic systems not designed for a world that could help strangers 10,000 miles away.
 +
::*Loyalty cases: men placing loyalty to men above other virtues.  Assumptions about family relationship. Do families sometime impose on your loyalty (can be disfunctional)? [Recent example of the Jan 6 insurrectionist who threatened his family not to rat him out. They did.]  The "worth being loyal to" part is sometimes unexamined. [recall the passenger dilemma]
 +
::*Example: Spending lots of money on a birthday party.
 
::*Back to Dillon: Acknowledges limits.  Liver story.  Bits of liver.  It grows back. Partners not so much.  
 
::*Back to Dillon: Acknowledges limits.  Liver story.  Bits of liver.  It grows back. Partners not so much.  
 +
::*Mazarin’s story about giving to alleviate Japanese disaster.  We can retriever.
 +
::*— Giving Well — you really can save lives.
 +
::*Closing point by Joshua Greene.  If you ran into a burning building and saved someone, it would be a highpoint of your life. Why not consider the same outcome heroic even if it doesn't involve a burning building?
 +
 +
===Small Group Discussion: How big is your "us"?===
  
::*How do you decide the limits of your partiality.  How big is my "US"?
+
:*Before we start adding more theory, let's process some of the moral challenges in the podcast:
::*Donations matter even if you don't give your kidneyThis can save lives.
+
::*1. Interpersonal preferences (Carla hand surgery story)Does this story exemplify a problem of doing justice?  Is there a potential for systematic injustice from omissions?
::*If you saved a life in person, you'd never forget it, but most professionals in the US have this ability, if not in person.
+
::*2. Dillon and Hannah -- Which do you tilt toward?  Would you be ok with Dillon's altruism?  Would you draw the line at the liver? Imagine you are in an intimate relationship and raising a family.  You make a median US income of about $70,000.  Your partner wants to give away 10%, 15%, 20% of your family income. Where do you draw that line?
  
===Small Group Discussion: Ethical problems in showing personal partiality===
+
:*Question #3 (from above): "'''What are the limits (if any) of partiality to family, intimates, friends'''?"
  
:*Introduction
+
:*Finding principles and resources for developing a position on "Justified Partiality"
::*Tell anecdote about having "best friends"
 
::*Take a minute to remember back to middle school, when showing preferences and defining social groups started in earnest. Typical examples include: inviting some friends, but not others out; gift giving; defining partiality in intimate vs. social relationships. Try to recall how you become sophisticated about the social rules for showing preferences (inviting friends to party, or out). Can you recall conflicts or awkward situations as you and social group figured out how to show partiality without upset feelings? 
 
  
:*Within your small groups, try to address these two topics.
+
:*Let's define a couple of viewpoints to get started. Note that these views draw on both our study of morality as an evolved system as well as our philosophical theories:
  
::*In the first part of your discussion, try to identify the common social rules that you follow when showing personal preferences, like preferring the company of some people to others, or offering help or cooperation to someone you like. Give examples of when it is ok or not ok to make your partiality known, for example, in invitations or gift giving.  
+
::*'''Tribalism''' - The view that there are no limits to partiality to our social network. Just as no one has a right to my friendship, no one has a moral complaint against me if I spend all of my resources on my partiality network. The tribalist might point the importance and naturalness of having a kin and friendship social network.  Helping people outside this network might still be justified by self-interest. A libertarian might arrive at a similar practical position, though from a focus on individual liberty and "self-ownership".
  
:*In the second part of your discussion, consider how our social rules and systems for showing preferential treatment may or may not have ethically problematic consequences. Many theorists will confirm our common sense intuition that "partiality networks" serving good ends.  They define groups for trust and cooperation, giving us people to spend positive emotional time with and get help from when neededAt the heart of many "partiality networks" are family and intimate partners, from whom we often hope for great partiality! Moreover, many of the networks Gonzaga community members travel in are quite privileged and highly resourcedWhile having a good partiality network makes many problems easier to solve, could they also be sources of systemic bias and unfairness? Consider partiality networks you hope to benefit from, like GU alumni who might hire you, as well as friends that might tip you off to a job prospect.
+
::*"'''Post-Tribal Urbanism'''" - You recognize that values are needed to sustain large scale societies: values supporting market exchanges with strangers, values that support impersonal trust, impersonal honesty, and impersonal altruismAdd a "Rawlsian twist" for refreshing additional theory!
 +
 
 +
::*'''Utilitarian Globalism''' - Following the equal happiness principle, the view that we ought to constrain our natural tendency to favor our ownIn principle, saving a life 12,000 miles from here is the same as saving a life in your community. So, if you can save two lives....etc. Your "us" is big, but you still give weight to your preference network because you accept that this is a useful part of your evolved social behaviors.
  
:*You may want to argue for one or more of the following positions:
+
::*'''Extreme Altruism''' - You feel that humans need to evolve from their preferential treatments of others.  You choose to live simply. Maximize givingDon't leave any organs un-recycled. A bit of liver can go a long way!
::*Partiality networks are fundamentally unfair, just like friendship itself, and there is nothing to be done about.
 
::*Partiality networks are unfair, but they serve some natural and good endsWe can avoid some of the problems with them if we adopt the right personal rules.
 
::*Partiality is a natural expression of our freedom and nothing to apologize for.  We ought to help intimates, family, and friends.  If we enjoy good fortunate and can express greater generosity to friends, so much the better. 
 
::*Feel free to add your own positions here.
 

Latest revision as of 20:10, 3 November 2022

20: NOV 3: Unit Four: Justice and Justified Partiality

Assigned

Hidden Brain, "Playing Favorites: When kindness toward some means callousness toward others"

Advice and discussion on SW3

  • Questions in the prompt. Take notes on each, then build a unified essay.
  • Feel free to follow the "road map" in our unit. Make your own statement.

Introduction to Justified Partiality Unit

  • A typical question for thinking about social justice is,
  • "What do I owe strangers?". You can think of our approach in this unit as an indirect way of addressing that question by asking, first:
  • "What are the limits (if any) of partiality to family, intimates, friends?" (Your preference network)
  • Today's class is focused on "personal partiality," the kind that shows up in our interpersonal social relationships. The next class will focus on "impersonal altruism", which shows up in our commitments, if any, to benefit strangers, especially strangers in our society, but in some cases, globally.
  • Three big questions:
  • 1. What are some the social functions of personal preferential treatment? (Draw in material from podcast)
  • 2. Could our networks of preferential treatment be the effect of and also promote injustice?
  • 3. What principles or considerations might lead you to direct some resources (time, money, in-kind aid) outside your preference network? (We need additional resources for Question #3)

Hidden Brain, "Playing Favorites"

  • Intro
  • Expectations for unique attention from one's beloved. We'd rather an inferior unique message than a message shared with others. We want partiality. (Think about cases in which someone shows you a simple preference -- offering to pay for coffee, give you a ride somewhere, just showing you attention. It's wonderful!)
  • How does partiality fit with a desire for justice as equal treatment? Can partiality cause injustice?
  • Segment 1: Carla's Story
  • Discrimination research: IAT - Implicit Association Test - Mahzarin Banaji (Harvard) one of the researchers on IAT.
  • Mahzarin Banaji and Professor Carla Kaplan (Yale English at time of story). Also a quilter. Friends in the 80s, among the few women at Yale. Story of injury to Carla. She gets preferential treatment because she is a professor, rather than because she was a quilter. Class based.
  • Is it discrimination if you are given a preference? [Imagine a system of preferences given to those we know. Could such a system support systemic injustice?] Someone decides to show you "special kindness" -- above and beyond the ordinary. Language of discrimination based on "commission". But what about omission? Hard to know if you didn't get preferential treatment. Yikes! Carla got to see both what it was like to be treated same and different.
  • Most injustices of "omission" are invisible.
  • Story by Mahzarin about interview from former student journalist from magazine the professor didn't respect. Suddenly, the in-group information about being a Yaley was enough to trigger a preference. Preference networks in Ivy leagues schools. But also Gonzaga!!! We actively cultivate a preferential network for you! Because we care about you!
  • "Helping those with whom you have a group identity" is a form of modern discrimination, acc to Mahzarin.
  • Interesting feature of favoritism -- You often don't find out that you didn't get preferential treatment.
  • Favoritism doesn't get as much attention as discrimination.
  • Can you avoid favoritism?
  • Could be based on "green beard effect" same school, etc.
  • Segment 2: Dillon the Altruist 16:00 minutes.
  • What would it be like to try to overcome favoritism.
  • Story of Dillon Matthews. Tries to avoid favoritism. Middle school story. Utilitarian primer: Singer's argument about helping others in need. Thought experiment: Saving a child from a pond ruins your suit. Utilitarian altruism.
  • Singer's Principle: If you can do good without giving up something of equal moral significance, you should do it.
  • "Give Well" - documented charity work. (One of many sources that can assure you that your money did something good. Other examples: Jimmy Carter's mission, Gates' missions. If you had contributed to such a cause, you would have been effective.)
  • Hannah’s model: Value the person in front of you. Then move out to others. Courtship with Dillon involves debate over these two approaches: Partiality justified vs not justified. Debating moral philosophy on a first date! Wow! It doesn't get any better than that.
  • Effective altruism movement. The most good you can do. Evidence based altruism. Vs. Hannah: Focused on family, friends, your neighborhood, city. Parental lesson. Dinner together.
  • Utilitarian logic. Equal happiness principle. Dillon not focused on preference to people near him, but on effectiveness of altruism. (Feel the rationality, and maybe the unnaturalness of this.)
  • Dillon donates a kidney to a stranger. Hmm. Not giving his kidney felt like hoarding something. Hannah felt her beloved was taking an unnecessary risk. "Being a stranger" made a difference to her. Audio of Dillon’s recovery. Hmm. Dillon honored by Kidney Association.
  • The Trolley Problem again, this time from Joshua Greene himself!! Watch "The Good Place".
  • What if the person you had to sacrifice was someone you loved, your child. Dillon might do it. Dillion would do it. "They are all the heroes of their own stories..." Dillon would sacrifice Hannah. Hannah might sacrifice Dillion just know that's what he would want that, but no. She wouldn't. Dillion jokes that he might kill himself after killing his child.
  • Greene: She recognizes that what he would do is rational. He's willing to override it, but he might not be able to live with himself for doing that. (Elephant and rider.)
  • Segment 3: Neurobiology of Preference. 33:15 minutes.
  • Naturalness of preference. Evolutionary background: Preference promotes cooperation. Suite of capacities. A package. Don't lie, cheat, steal...
  • ”Morality is fundamentally about cooperation” (Greene): Kin cooperation....Cooperation among friends... reciprocity...semi-strangers (same religion. friend of kin. friend of friend of kin. Friends!
  • Moral concentric circles. How big is my "Us"? What is the range of humans I care about and to what degree?
  • Greene's analogy of automatic and manual camera modes. (Two systems. Automatic (elephant) and Deliberate (rider).) Difficult decisions might require manual mode.
  • Manual mode: dlPFC (activated in utilitarian thought) (high cog load). Automatic -- amygdala. Snakes in the grass. Thank your amygdala. Point: We need both systems. We need lying, cheating, and stealing to be pretty automatic NOs!
  • List: Easy calls: sharing concert tickets with a friend. Buying dinner for an intimate partner. Giving a more valuable gift to one person than another. Harder: Figuring out whether to donate money to help people far away. How much?
  • Crying baby scenario. Inevitable outcomes seem to matter here. Brain wrestles, as in experience. vmPFC (evaluates/weighs)
  • Lack of Tribal identity might tilt us toward rule based ethics. Equal treatment. Automatic systems not designed for a world that could help strangers 10,000 miles away.
  • Loyalty cases: men placing loyalty to men above other virtues. Assumptions about family relationship. Do families sometime impose on your loyalty (can be disfunctional)? [Recent example of the Jan 6 insurrectionist who threatened his family not to rat him out. They did.] The "worth being loyal to" part is sometimes unexamined. [recall the passenger dilemma]
  • Example: Spending lots of money on a birthday party.
  • Back to Dillon: Acknowledges limits. Liver story. Bits of liver. It grows back. Partners not so much.
  • Mazarin’s story about giving to alleviate Japanese disaster. We can retriever.
  • — Giving Well — you really can save lives.
  • Closing point by Joshua Greene. If you ran into a burning building and saved someone, it would be a highpoint of your life. Why not consider the same outcome heroic even if it doesn't involve a burning building?

Small Group Discussion: How big is your "us"?

  • Before we start adding more theory, let's process some of the moral challenges in the podcast:
  • 1. Interpersonal preferences (Carla hand surgery story). Does this story exemplify a problem of doing justice? Is there a potential for systematic injustice from omissions?
  • 2. Dillon and Hannah -- Which do you tilt toward? Would you be ok with Dillon's altruism? Would you draw the line at the liver? Imagine you are in an intimate relationship and raising a family. You make a median US income of about $70,000. Your partner wants to give away 10%, 15%, 20% of your family income. Where do you draw that line?
  • Question #3 (from above): "What are the limits (if any) of partiality to family, intimates, friends?"
  • Finding principles and resources for developing a position on "Justified Partiality"
  • Let's define a couple of viewpoints to get started. Note that these views draw on both our study of morality as an evolved system as well as our philosophical theories:
  • Tribalism - The view that there are no limits to partiality to our social network. Just as no one has a right to my friendship, no one has a moral complaint against me if I spend all of my resources on my partiality network. The tribalist might point the importance and naturalness of having a kin and friendship social network. Helping people outside this network might still be justified by self-interest. A libertarian might arrive at a similar practical position, though from a focus on individual liberty and "self-ownership".
  • "Post-Tribal Urbanism" - You recognize that values are needed to sustain large scale societies: values supporting market exchanges with strangers, values that support impersonal trust, impersonal honesty, and impersonal altruism. Add a "Rawlsian twist" for refreshing additional theory!
  • Utilitarian Globalism - Following the equal happiness principle, the view that we ought to constrain our natural tendency to favor our own. In principle, saving a life 12,000 miles from here is the same as saving a life in your community. So, if you can save two lives....etc. Your "us" is big, but you still give weight to your preference network because you accept that this is a useful part of your evolved social behaviors.
  • Extreme Altruism - You feel that humans need to evolve from their preferential treatments of others. You choose to live simply. Maximize giving. Don't leave any organs un-recycled. A bit of liver can go a long way!