I have been severely depressed, and I can understand why people see the distinction between people with psychological and physical problems. A supervisor told me I wasn't depressed because I was able to get out of bed and come to work, unlike her husband. But her husband was able to get out of bed and go to the bathroom. I don't hear about depressed people lying in bed, soiling it, until they starve to death. Depression is horrible, does make limitations, but not to the extent as if someone were paralyzed. On the other hand, it's also not something you can just choose not to have. It can interfere with the ability to think.http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2015-11/uow-pam110615.php
Public Release: 6-Nov-2015
People attribute moral obligation and blame, regardless of ability
University of Waterloo
Professor John Turri and postdoctoral researcher Wesley Buckwalter of the Department of Philosophy at Waterloo investigated the link between being morally obligated to do something and having the ability to do it. Traditional philosophical wisdom says that "ought implies can." However, their recent study found that people routinely attribute moral obligations to people who cannot fulfill them.
"In one experiment, participants considered a case where two swimmers are drowning," explains Buckwalter. "Because the drowning swimmers are so far apart, the lifeguard on duty can save one or the other but not both of them. Despite acknowledging that the lifeguard is literally unable to save both swimmers, the overwhelming majority of participants judged that the lifeguard was still obligated to do so."
The research team conducted eight experiments to test the link between a range of moral requirements and abilities in ordinary moral evaluations. Participants were assigned to groups, asked to read a story that described different inabilities (short-term or long-term, physical or psychological), and then asked to answer questions about moral obligation or blame.
The study also revealed important differences between the way people perceive physical and psychological inabilities.
"People are less willing to believe that an agent is unable to drive a car due to clinical depression than due to physical injury," said Professor Turri. "Moreover, people are more willing to blame agents suffering from psychological inabilities. This asymmetry may reflect the assumption that people can just get over mental inabilities, such as clinical depression, in ways that they cannot just get over, say, a broken leg."
These findings may also apply to issues such as the refugee crisis European nations are facing and the immigration reform at the forefront of U.S. politics.
"One important practical question is the extent to which these nations have the ability to help all those in need around the world," said Buckwalter. "But another question involves figuring out what these nations have a moral obligation to do. Our results show that, in most people's minds, the moral question is not settled simply by learning, for instance, that a nation cannot take in more refugees."
Professor Turri, Buckwalter, and their research colleagues are currently studying why people are more likely to blame or stigmatize those with mental inabilities. Progress on this question could have important social benefits, such as improving the treatment and experience of mental health patients.
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