I wonder if there are other situations where a person has a “main job” (being a scientist, for instance) and is then presented with a “morally urgent situation” that comes up (realizing your colleague is probably a fraud and you should do something about it). The traditional example is being on your way to your established job and seeing someone beaten up on the side of the road whom you could take care of. This “side problem” can be left to someone else (who might take responsibility, or not) and if taken on, may well be an open-ended and energy draining project that has unpredictable outcomes for the person deciding whether to take it on. Are there other kinds of “morally urgent side problems that come up ” and are there any better or worse ways to deal with the decision whether to engage?
I wonder if there are other situations where a person has a “main job” (being a scientist, for instance) and is then presented with a “morally urgent situation” that comes up (realizing your colleague is probably a fraud and you should do something about it). The traditional example is being on your way to your established job and seeing someone beaten up on the side of the road whom you could take care of. This “side problem” can be left to someone else (who might take responsibility, or not) and if taken on, may well be an open-ended and energy draining project that has unpredictable outcomes for the person deciding whether to take it on. Are there other kinds of “morally urgent side problems that come up ” and are there any better or worse ways to deal with the decision whether to engage?