HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
- Messages
- 23,741
The reverse of that argument is if you are compelled to treat / pay for / etc. etc. etc. what does that make you?
There are shades of grey between _compelled_ and seeing no rationale to do it. Introducing the cost to self as a factor is also too blanket to really cover the topic in any satisfactory degree.
E.g., if you notice a fire, even calling the firemen is ultimately at some cost to self. Even the time to make that call. But it's a very small cost to self vs a very large cost to someone else if you don't.
And, ultimately, that's how society always worked. You could just sit and watch the neighbour's house burn down, or even take the Crassus route and make a killing out of it, but we'd all be worse off for it. The first fire would have wiped out any town.
Or you could sit and watch as someone breaks into the neighbour's house, but ultimately that would defeat everyone's home security if we all did that. Most of the physical security isn't in having a door that can't be kicked in, and bulletproof doors, and unpickable locks, but mostly in having a "my property starts here" kind of marker and at most a delay that increases the thief's chances of being noticed. If everyone took the view that there's no rationale to help when they see a thief, then someone could just come kick a door in at their leisure, in broad daylight, safe in the knowledge that nobody will intervene.
Ultimately, society always worked because of those little things that everyone does for everyone else. In other words, "enlightened self-interest", if you need a name on it.
You're not compelled in the sense that anyone will send you to jail for not calling the cops, nor vote to kick you out of town like in ancient Greece, but there is a moral expectation that you too will do your part whenever you can.