One tendency can always be counterbalanced by another in particular cases; Iām not trying to give the full story of āhow emotions workā. Iām just talking about the undeniable datum that we do, as a general rule, care more about those we know than we do about total strangers.
(And I should stress that I donāt think we can necessarily ālevel-upā our emotional responses; they may be biased and limited in all kinds of ways. Iām rather appealing to a reasoned generalization from our normative appreciation of those we know best. Much as Nagel argues that we recognize agent-neutral reasons to relieve our own paināreasons that ideally ought to speak to anyone, even those who arenāt themselves feeling the paināso I think we implicitly recognize agent-neutral reasons to care about our loved ones. And so we can generalize to appreciate that like reasons are likely to be found in othersā pains, and othersā loved ones, too.)
I donāt have a strong view on which intrinsic features do the work. Many philosophers (see, e.g., David Velleman in āLove as a Moral Emotionā) argue that bare personhood suffices for this role. But if you give a more specific answer to the question of āWhat makes this person awesome and worth caring about?ā (when considering one of your best friends, say), thatās fine too, so long as the answer isnāt explicitly relational (e.g. ābecause theyāre nice to me!ā). Iām open to the idea that lots of people might be awesome and worth caring about for extremely varied reasonsāfor possessing any of the varied traits you regard as virtues, perhaps (e.g. one may be funny, irreverent, determined, altruistic, caring, thought-provoking, brave, or...).
Iām just talking about the undeniable datum that we do, as a general rule, care more about those we know than we do about total strangers.
There are lots of X and Y such that, as a general rule, we care more about someone in X than we do someone in Y. Why focus on X=āthose we knowā and Y=ātotal strangersā when this is actually very weak compared to other Xs and Ys, and explains only a tiny fraction of the variation in how much we care about different members of humanity?
(By āvery weakā I mean suppose someone you know was drowning in a pond, and a total stranger was drowning in another pond thatās slightly closer to you, for what fraction of the people you know, including e.g. people you know from work, would you instinctively run to save them over the total stranger? (And assume you wonāt see either of them again afterwards, so you donāt run to save the person you know just to avoid potential subsequent social awkwardness.) Compare this with other X and Y.)
If I think about the broader variation in āhow much I careā it seems itās almost all relational (e.g., relatives, people who were helpful to me in the past, strangers I happen to come across vs distant strangers). And if I ask āwhy?ā the answer I get are like, āmy emotions were genetically programmed to work that wayā and ābecause of kin selectionā and āit was a good way to gain friends/āallies in the EEAā. Intrinsic /ā non-relational features (either the features themselves, or how much I know or appreciate the features) just donāt seem to enter that much into the equation.
(Maybe you could argue that upon reflection Iād want to self-modify away all that relational stuff and just value people based on their intrinsic features. Is that what youād argue, and if so whatās the actual argument? It seems like you sort of hint in this direction in your middle parenthetical paragraph, but Iām not sure.)
for what fraction of the people you know, including e.g. people you know from work, would you instinctively run to save them over the total stranger?
Uh, maybe 90 ā 99%? (With more on the higher end for people I actually know in some meaningful way, as opposed to merely recognizing their face or having chatted once or twice, which is not at all the same as knowing them as a person.) Maybe weāre just psychologically very different! Iām totally baffled by your response here.
One tendency can always be counterbalanced by another in particular cases; Iām not trying to give the full story of āhow emotions workā. Iām just talking about the undeniable datum that we do, as a general rule, care more about those we know than we do about total strangers.
(And I should stress that I donāt think we can necessarily ālevel-upā our emotional responses; they may be biased and limited in all kinds of ways. Iām rather appealing to a reasoned generalization from our normative appreciation of those we know best. Much as Nagel argues that we recognize agent-neutral reasons to relieve our own paināreasons that ideally ought to speak to anyone, even those who arenāt themselves feeling the paināso I think we implicitly recognize agent-neutral reasons to care about our loved ones. And so we can generalize to appreciate that like reasons are likely to be found in othersā pains, and othersā loved ones, too.)
I donāt have a strong view on which intrinsic features do the work. Many philosophers (see, e.g., David Velleman in āLove as a Moral Emotionā) argue that bare personhood suffices for this role. But if you give a more specific answer to the question of āWhat makes this person awesome and worth caring about?ā (when considering one of your best friends, say), thatās fine too, so long as the answer isnāt explicitly relational (e.g. ābecause theyāre nice to me!ā). Iām open to the idea that lots of people might be awesome and worth caring about for extremely varied reasonsāfor possessing any of the varied traits you regard as virtues, perhaps (e.g. one may be funny, irreverent, determined, altruistic, caring, thought-provoking, brave, or...).
There are lots of X and Y such that, as a general rule, we care more about someone in X than we do someone in Y. Why focus on X=āthose we knowā and Y=ātotal strangersā when this is actually very weak compared to other Xs and Ys, and explains only a tiny fraction of the variation in how much we care about different members of humanity?
(By āvery weakā I mean suppose someone you know was drowning in a pond, and a total stranger was drowning in another pond thatās slightly closer to you, for what fraction of the people you know, including e.g. people you know from work, would you instinctively run to save them over the total stranger? (And assume you wonāt see either of them again afterwards, so you donāt run to save the person you know just to avoid potential subsequent social awkwardness.) Compare this with other X and Y.)
If I think about the broader variation in āhow much I careā it seems itās almost all relational (e.g., relatives, people who were helpful to me in the past, strangers I happen to come across vs distant strangers). And if I ask āwhy?ā the answer I get are like, āmy emotions were genetically programmed to work that wayā and ābecause of kin selectionā and āit was a good way to gain friends/āallies in the EEAā. Intrinsic /ā non-relational features (either the features themselves, or how much I know or appreciate the features) just donāt seem to enter that much into the equation.
(Maybe you could argue that upon reflection Iād want to self-modify away all that relational stuff and just value people based on their intrinsic features. Is that what youād argue, and if so whatās the actual argument? It seems like you sort of hint in this direction in your middle parenthetical paragraph, but Iām not sure.)
Uh, maybe 90 ā 99%? (With more on the higher end for people I actually know in some meaningful way, as opposed to merely recognizing their face or having chatted once or twice, which is not at all the same as knowing them as a person.) Maybe weāre just psychologically very different! Iām totally baffled by your response here.
Yeah, seems like weāve surfaced some psychological difference here. Interesting.