Sometimes people mention “expanding the moral circle” as if it’s universally good. The US flag is an item that has expanded and contracted in how much care it gets.
The US Flag Code states: “The flag represents a living country and is itself considered a living thing.” When I was a child, my scout troop taught us that American flags should never touch the ground, and a worn-out flag should be disposed of respectfully by burial (in a wooden box, as if it were a person) or burning (while saluting the flag and reciting the Pledge of Allegiance) and then burying. Example instructions. People from most countries find this hard to believe!
One explanation is that the veneration for this physical object is symbolic of respect for military troops and veterans, but my scout troop sure put more effort into burning the flag properly than we ever did to helping troops or veterans in any more direct way.
Which beings / objects / concepts are worthy of special care can be pretty arbitrary. Expansion isn’t always good, and contraction of the moral circle isn’t always bad.
My sense, though, is that if you scratch most “expand the moral circle” statements you find a bit of implicit moral realism. I think generally there’s an unspoken ”...to be closer to its truly appropriate extent”, and that there’s an unspoken assumption that there’ll be a sensible basis for that extent. Maybe some people are making the statement prima facie though. Could make for an interesting survey.
Sometimes people mention “expanding the moral circle” as if it’s universally good. The US flag is an item that has expanded and contracted in how much care it gets.
The US Flag Code states: “The flag represents a living country and is itself considered a living thing.” When I was a child, my scout troop taught us that American flags should never touch the ground, and a worn-out flag should be disposed of respectfully by burial (in a wooden box, as if it were a person) or burning (while saluting the flag and reciting the Pledge of Allegiance) and then burying. Example instructions. People from most countries find this hard to believe!
One explanation is that the veneration for this physical object is symbolic of respect for military troops and veterans, but my scout troop sure put more effort into burning the flag properly than we ever did to helping troops or veterans in any more direct way.
Which beings / objects / concepts are worthy of special care can be pretty arbitrary. Expansion isn’t always good, and contraction of the moral circle isn’t always bad.
Further reading: https://gwern.net/narrowing-circle
I did not know this. That’s wild.
Good point and good fact.
My sense, though, is that if you scratch most “expand the moral circle” statements you find a bit of implicit moral realism. I think generally there’s an unspoken ”...to be closer to its truly appropriate extent”, and that there’s an unspoken assumption that there’ll be a sensible basis for that extent. Maybe some people are making the statement prima facie though. Could make for an interesting survey.