Caring and Evil
Caring and Evil
Caring and Evil
ought to resist complicity in the evils around us. I have in mind evils of two
kinds: the evils strangersdo to strangersand the evils intimatesdo to intimates.
Each raises different problems. Issues of racism and sexism can illustrate the
two.
On the one hand, resting all of ethics on caring threatens to exclude as
ethically insignificantour relationshipswith most people in the world, because
we do not know them individually and never will. Regarding as ethically
insignificant our relationships with people remote from ourselves is a con-
stituent of racism and xenophobia. On the other hand, resting all of ethics on
caring also seems in danger of valorizingrelationships that are sheerly exploita-
tive of our distinctively human capacity to take another’s point of view. It
thereby threatens to exacerbate the positions of women and other care-takers
in a sexist society. By “sheer exploitation” I mean valuing others and their
capacities sheerly for what they contribute to ourselves or our projects, by
contrast with valuing them for themselves, apart from our own development
and projects.
Consider the first problem, our ethical relations with most people in the
world. Nel Noddings grants (even insists) that no one has the responsibility
even to try to care for everyone, in the full-blown sense of “caring” that her
book develops. I agree. But that leaves the question of what ethical notions
me relevant to our relationships with strangers, persons whose lives we may
significantly affect although we will never know them as individuals, never
encounter them. Where we have no responsibility to care for others, I should
think that we still have responsibilitiesto refrain from doing them harm-to
be careful, in a sense that does not require encounters with those for whose
sakes we ought to take care?
On Nel Noddings’analysiscaring requires real encounters with individuals.
My ethical responsibility is to meet those whom I encounter as one-caring.
The ideal, apparently, is to reproduce the quality of caring experienced in
infancy (791, an experience lacking what most of us would recognize as
reciprocity. (I will say more about that shortly). She is concerned not to dilute
caring to include just any positive concern we can have for another. Her
“caring for” is not just “being concerned about”; it has three elements: (1)
motivational engrossment-r “displacement”-in another, (2) a regard for
or inclination toward the other (she spealrs of “being present to” them), and
(3) an action component, care-tuking, such as protection or maintenance (p.
9 and Chapter 2). Ideally, the reception of caring involves a responsivenessof
spontaneously sharing with the carer one’s aspirations, appraisals, and ac-
complishments(p. 72 and Chapter 3), in particular, sharing the development
that caring made possible.
The strengths of this analysis, which distinguishescaring from other ways
of being concerned, also suggest certain limitations of caring as the basis for
an ethic. Technologyhas made it possible for the effectsof our actionsto extend
Claudia Card 103
have learned well to do it with masters. To be the valuers that ethical caring
requires we need to preserve in ourselves, as well as value in others, a certain
spiritual integrity. Otherwise, we risk becoming simply tools or extensions of
others. With a capacity for “motivational displacement”-receiving others
into oneself-but lacking integrity as a self who chooses and rejects relation-
ships, one is in danger of dissolving into a variety of personalities, changing
one’s colors (or values) like a chameleon in changing environments. Women
know this danger intimately,as does anyone whose personal safety has regularly
depended upon how well they were able to “receive others into themselves.”
This last is not so much a disagreementas a suggestion for further develop-
ment in analyzing caring as an ethical ideal. Where I disagree is on the need
to both supplement and limit care with justice. In one sense caring is more
basic to human life than justice: we can suruiue without justice more easily than
without caring. However, this is part of the human tragedy because, in another
sense,justice is also basic: life can be worth living despite the absence of caring
from most people in the world, but in a densely populated high-tech world, life
is not apt to be worth living without justice from a great many people, including
many whom we will never know.
NOTES
An earlierdraft of this essay was presented to a joint session of the Radical Philosophers
and the Society of Women in Philosophy at the Central Division APA meetings in
Cincinatti, April, 1988.
1. All references to Noddings are to this work.
2. At least, she did in In a Difjerent Voice, but it is no longer clear that she holds this
view. In her essay, “Moral Orientation and Moral Development,” (1987) she develops
the idea that the justice and care orientations are related to one another as alternative
gestalts. It is not clear from the account of these gestalts whether each has a place for the
basic concept in the other or not, nor if so,what place it has.
3. Nel Noddings agreed with this point during discussion at the April 1988 prrsen-
tation of this essay.
4. I owe this point to Victoria Davion’s (1990) critique of Sara Ruddick‘s (19844
“ M a t e d Thinking” and (1984b) “Preservative Love and Military Destruction” in
“Pacifwm and Care.”
5. See Marilyn Frye (1983) “In and Out of Harm’s Way: Arrogance and Love,” for
discussion of this phenomenon as a result of abuse.
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