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26 J. Value Inquiry 1 (1992)

handle is hein.journals/jrnlvi26 and id is 1 raw text is: The Journal of Value Inquiry 26: 1-6, 1992.

Editorial
Value Inquiry: Insensitivity, egoism, and the ethical
community
MYRA MOSS, Associate Editor
The essays that compose our January 1992 value inquiry are all concerned
with some aspect of the theme, Insensitivity, Egoism, and the Ethical
Community. Among the thought-provoking questions that this issue
suggests are: What is the relationship between sensitivity and a person's
selection of one or more possible virtues? Is sensitivity to the needs and
feelings of others, for instance, required for such a choice? Is it, moreover,
sufficient for it? If so, how much sensitivity and toward whom? Toward
one's friends only? Toward members of some organizations and certain
countries, or toward all human beings? Would an awareness of and
empathy with the needs of some non-human sentient species also be
required for a selection of moral values? And what about perception of the
earth's environment, including the space around it? Should sensitivity
toward non-sentient entities be present as well in the moral choice? Yet,
when we expand our sensitive awareness to include the existence of both
human and non-human objects, sensitivity alone seems not to suffice for
our selection among possible virtues.
In his essay, Insensitivity and moral responsibility, Larry May ex-
amines insensitivity and sensitivity, terms he believes are as yet unex-
plored in philosophical writings. May's analysis confines itself to the uses
of these terms as they occur in ordinary language and in their morally sig-
nificant senses. For him, sensitivity involves an awareness of the needs or
feelings of others, along with a caring about the consequences of behavior.
Its value, moreover, lies in providing critical perceptiveness in moral judg-
ment. Indeed, sensitivity amounts to a meta-virtue inasmuch as it provides
the ground or necessary condition for the proper exercising of at least some
of the other virtues, and thus may act as a corrective for them. If sensitivity
is required for good moral behavior, what then of insensitivity and culpable
ignorance? May illustrates easier and hard cases of moral responsibility
for insensitivity. These cases range from physiological disabilities to the
influence of stereotypes. Habits may serve to reinforce stereotypic thinking.
Nevertheless, a person may keep open the possibility for change and thus
remain responsible for those acts that result from not so doing.

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