Wisdom and Moral Development

Derby

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Morality can be defined as how people treat one another.The psychologist Lawrence Kohlberg was particularly interested in this area of study. He used hypothetical situations – a storytelling technique – to engage the interest of his readers. Among these stories, most famous was one known simply as “The Heinz Dilemma.” It goes like this:

A poor man named Heinz has a wife who is sick and dying. There is a new drug available that might save her. The drug is available at a local pharmacy, but it is wildly expensive. Heinz tries to raise money for the drug by going to friends and family. He cannot raise enough. He pleads with the pharmacist, who has invented this new drug. He asks for a discount. The pharmacist refuses to part with the drug for anything but the full price. This is because the pharmacist plans to sell the patent to the drug and become rich. He even refuses to let Heinz pay the money owing for the drug in installments.

Heinz, who has always been an honest man, despairs. He goes home, and looks at his wife, who is lying weakly upon her bed. After she has fallen asleep, Heinz sneaks away from the house. He breaks into the pharmacy and steals the drug that might cure her.


The hypothetical situation captured in The Heinz Dilemma stirs questions connected to both morals and wisdom. We might ask, for example, about the morality of the theft. Would it have made any difference if the person dying were a child rather than Heinz’s wife? Would it have made any difference if the pharmacist himself were very poor? Regarding wisdom, we wonder how someone truly wise might react to this turn of events in his or her life. For example, the philosopher Socrates allowed himself to be put to death for the sake of his scruples. Yet he had the chance to go into exile and escape from prison. Had he taken either of these routes, would history have still remembered him as being wise?

We could also understand the Heinz Dilemma as an ethical problem for the community. Although we usually consider wisdom as a personal quality, our actions naturally influence society. We could think of the pharmacist as a tyrant, and of Heinz as a defender of human decency. Stealing the drug could be understood as an act of moral and ethical rebellion in the face of outrageous greed. Henry David Thoreau, the revered American writer, encouraged acts of civil disobedience for the sake of the common good. His defiant approach has been emulated by many social activists, including Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr.

Stages of Moral Development

Kohlberg’s stages of moral development has three levels. The higher our level of moral development, the better we are at resolving moral dilemmas.

The three levels are pre-conventional, conventional, and post-conventional morality.
The pre-conventional level is common in children, although adults can also slip into this basic form of reasoning. At this level, one might not steal because the result of being caught would be punishment.

Next is the conventional level. It’s typical of adolescents, but also common among adults. The person who operates at this level would not steal because of the social taboo against such an action.

Finally, those in the post-conventional level understand rules as tools that help maintain social order. They do not understand rules as decrees to be obeyed without question. They operate with personal sets of ethics, developed around virtues in which they have unshakable confidence.

Under ordinary circumstances, the person with post-conventional moral reasoning would have too much personal integrity to steal. That said, this same person might break into a pharmacy to steal the life-saving drug for a dying relative. Problems that aren’t straightforward, such as Heinz’s dilemma, require a special type of thinking, or knowing. When we reason outside the limits of ordinary ways of thinking, we move into the realm of wisdom.

Question for Discussion:

Heinz stole the drugs to save his wife. Was his theft wise? Why or why not?



 

I believe Heinz theft was wise. Even if he is caught and punished he can take comfort in the fact that he did "wrong" for the best of reasons.
I find the pharmacists position morally repugnant.
 
I think Heinz should have tried to talk to the pharmacist and try to get the medicine that way. If he got caught stealing who then would care for his wife? I don't think he thought it through. I do understand his stealing it though to save someone dying.
 

I tend to agree with you, Sarah: the pharmacist's position was morally repugnant. That said, I wonder how Heinz felt about the choice he made. I also have made a morally difficult decision based on family allegiance. In my case, it was the choice of standing up for my brother in a situation where both he and another individual were equally at fault. I certainly didn't feel wise when I made my decision to defend my brother, and I don't feel any wiser now, years later. When either choice that you make will break some social, moral, or ethical rule, it's difficult to finish the matter without serious twinges of guilt. I believe that the guilt I feel over the wronged party -- jerk that he might have been, ha ha -- deprived me of the satisfaction of feeling I made a wise decision.
 
I believe Heinz theft was wise. Even if he is caught and punished he can take comfort in the fact that he did "wrong" for the best of reasons.
I find the pharmacists position morally repugnant.


I tend to agree with you, Sarah/Prospero's daughter: the pharmacist's position was morally repugnant. That said, I wonder how Heinz felt about the choice he made. I also have made a morally difficult decision based on family allegiance. In my case, it was the choice of standing up for my brother in a situation where both he and another individual were equally at fault. I certainly didn't feel wise when I made my decision to defend my brother, and I don't feel any wiser now, years later. When either choice that you make will break some social, moral, or ethical rule, it's difficult to finish the matter without serious twinges of guilt. I believe that the guilt I feel over the wronged party -- jerk that he might have been, ha ha -- deprived me of the satisfaction of feeling I made a wise decision.
 
I think that in some situations, worrying about what is "moral" is irrelevant. The pharmacist one is a good example.

Here's another hypothetical one: What if you had a rare opportunity to kill a murderous tyrant who is killing thousands of other people, and imprisoning, starving, and torturing many more. You know that killing is wrong, but would it be wrong in this case? Are there situations where there are exceptions to the usual rules of morality?

Of course there are.
 
Wise or unwise: kill a tyrant

Yet would this be a wise decision? I suppose that it would depend on your definition of wisdom. If your definition of wisdom includes compassion, then compassion for the tyrant would need to be included. However, if your definition of wisdom focuses more on reason, then taking the most expedient route to solve the problem might include promptly killing the tyrant. All that said, I recall a piece of folk wisdom that suggests "two wrongs don't make a right." This is the argument that causes many countries to refuse imposing a death penalty. From this perspective, would the wisest course of action be simply to incarcerate the tyrant and hope for rehabilitation?





I think that in some situations, worrying about what is "moral" is irrelevant. The pharmacist one is a good example.

Here's another hypothetical one: What if you had a rare opportunity to kill a murderous tyrant who is killing thousands of other people, and imprisoning, starving, and torturing many more. You know that killing is wrong, but would it be wrong in this case? Are there situations where there are exceptions to the usual rules of morality?

Of course there are.
 
OK, what if the murderous tyrant was Adolf Hitler, or Osama Bin Laden, and you were armed and unexpectedly face to face with them? And having them incarcerated was simply not feasible in this situation? Your choices are either to kill them or let them go? What would be the "moral" thing to do? And does worrying about morality in that situation even figure into it?

In general, I am against the death penalty. But what about in these extreme cases?
 
When I made my post I hadn't read the full thing on the pharmacist; thus my post was ignorant. Sorry but now I think what Heinz did was his only option.
 
If Heinz discussed his stealing or not stealing of the drug with his wife, what do you think his wife would tell him? And should Heinz listen to her?
 
OK, what if the murderous tyrant was Adolf Hitler, or Osama Bin Laden, and you were armed and unexpectedly face to face with them? And having them incarcerated was simply not feasible in this situation? Your choices are either to kill them or let them go? What would be the "moral" thing to do? And does worrying about morality in that situation even figure into it?

In general, I am against the death penalty. But what about in these extreme cases?



Interesting point! I suppose that the message I get from this is that rules -- whether personal or societal -- need to be considered in their individual context. Stealing might be bad as a rule, but when you're stealing from a tyrant, or when survival depends upon it, perhaps it's not such a bad thing. Wisdom, it is said, requires the ability to accept ambiguity. That means that the wise realize that "right" and "wrong" aren't written in stone, but rather depend upon the circumstances. It might usually be "wrong" to bear false witness, but what about doing this when your family member is on trial by a tyrannical leader on trumped-up charges? I would certainly lie in that court of law, especially to protect my loved ones. In this case, I think of the laws requiring women to wear head and face coverings. Should a woman be punished for failing to cover herself? If my sister were to disagree and flout the law, should she be punished? Should a lie to protect her? What would the wise choice be?
 
I don’t understand why compassion would not be a major component of reason. Isn’t a balanced mind an enlightened one? Oh, and my vote is for Heinz.


Good point! Rousseau, the philosopher and political theorist, pointed out that compassion is natural to all higher animals (humans included, of course). He went on to state that compassion must be controlled by -- and in turn control -- reason. I wonder why we so seldom mention compassion as a part of reason. By the same token, I wonder why compassion is so seldom considered an essential element of wisdom.
 
Good point! Rousseau, the philosopher and political theorist, pointed out that compassion is natural to all higher animals (humans included, of course). He went on to state that compassion must be controlled by -- and in turn control -- reason. I wonder why we so seldom mention compassion as a part of reason. By the same token, I wonder why compassion is so seldom considered an essential element of wisdom.[/QUOTE


I believe that, for some, any inclusion of emotion is perceived as clouding the purity of reason, and that wisdom somehow supercedes the untidiness of unregulated “animalistic” feelings. That view, at least from a psychotherapist’s perspective, is often indicative of pathology. Of course, one could argue that a psychotherapissed viewpoint is skewed also.
 


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