A man dies. His community's culture deems that he be buried in holy ground
lest the community suffer some catastrophe. He, having always been at odds with
his community on this point, has left a provision in his will that he be
cremated and his ashes scattered into the ocean. The body waits in the hospital
while the community debates the issue. What is to be done?
The elders have asked for a moral opinion. What is one to say? If the belief
that the man must be buried is one deeply ingrained in the hearts and minds of
the community, then a decision to cremate him would cause an uproar. On the
other hand, if there are some who sympathize with the man, either decision
might cause a schism within the community. The ultimate action would have to
depend on much more than the culture's belief about burial. It would have to
take into account the culture's beliefs on individual rights, freedom of
belief, and the validity of the man's will. It would also have to take into
account the moral implications of carrying out a man's dying wish and the
repercussions of violating a sacred social institution. This is not a decision
to be taken lightly, but by stepping back and weighing the options carefully,
one can come to a conclusion which would be the most moral given the situation.
I say most moral because there really is no right choice here. Any action taken
will most definitely be wrong to at least one group of people. Here no plea can
be made to universal morality because neither belief in its specific sense
appeals to any pure moral intuition. People on the other side of the world
might have neither the belief that the man should be buried, nor the belief
that his ashes should be spread. Each person's choice would be too influenced
by his own cultural morality, and so nobody would really have a right to judge.
Were I to be asked for an opinion on this matter, I feel I would have no
authority in my response. It is really the community's choice, and I would be
afraid to make a decision which affects people completely strange to me. I
doubt they would ask me in the first place, but were I to be asked my opinion I
would say that the man should be buried in the special burial ground. My
decision has nothing to do with my own beliefs about death and life and the
sacredness of the body. Instead it is based on a variety of moral principles
which attempt to conceptualize man's intuitive morality. The question is a
difficult one, but by considering the bed of moral relativism on which it lies,
and by thinking about it in the separate moral mentalities of egoism,
utilitarianism, and Kantianism, one can come up with an adequate answer which
will be the most favorable to all.
The question of moral relativism is central to this scenario. Whose beliefs are
right? Why should the man believe what his culture does? How could an outsider
possibly give proper counsel? By considering the idea of the man's beliefs, it
may come to mind that the culture should respect them. How can the community
possibly say that the man is wrong? The man is basing his decision on his own
moral code which the community cannot confuse with its own. Therefore, the
community has no jurisdiction, and cannot force its own beliefs on the
individual. This might be a westernized perspective, perhaps skewed by a
concept of individuality that is not universal, but the idea of moral
relativism still stands to say that the man cannot be judged wrong. So then
should the culture cremate him? No. By cremating him the culture must then
assimilate the man's beliefs. When looked at in the converse, is it not obvious
that the man should be buried in the special burial ground? How can anyone
judge the culture's beliefs wrong? It cannot be expected that the community
take the risk of catastrophe which they believe will result from cremating the
man. There is no reason for them to conform to the man's individual culture.
Cremating the man would be equivalent (in the context of moral relativism) to
letting a criminal go free because he believed that murder was the right thing
to do. If a community allowed everyone to follow their own individual cultures
this would surely be the result, and most can agree that this would not be a
way to live. There would be no responsibility, and people could only be blamed
for ignoring their own morality, which can never be verified. If the culture is
thought of as preserving its own moral standard, however, it can be justified
in punishing criminals, and likewise it can be justified in applying its own
burial procedures to the man. There is no reason for the culture to bow for an
individual unless there is a specific value in the culture that the individual
outweighs the whole, in which case the question of burial would be moot. The
man would have been cremated immediately. But lacking this incentive, it is the
right of the community to do as it chooses, and to preserve its culture if
necessary. The elders of the community have the authority to judge this, and
likewise they would judge this without thinking of moral relativism, by merely
having an egoist mentality.
An egoist mentality for the elders would mean they would care for themselves.
Their decision would reflect not the needs of the community, but their own
wants and desires, particularly a desire to stay in power. The man requesting a
different form of burial would be seen as a dissident, strong in himself but
dangerous to the authority of the elders. Were the elders to give in and
cremate the man, it would seriously undermine their authority. Others might
individually start requesting action of the elders, and the elders would not be
able to rightfully deny it. A decision to cremate the man would create
shockwaves through the religious community, and make for a populace more
difficult to control. Therefore, from the viewpoint of egoism, there is little
or nothing that would point to cremating the man. From the viewpoint of egoism,
the wise and prudent thing to do would be to cremate the man. It would cause
less instability to the community and would allow the elders to keep their
current level of control over the citizens. The man's wishes would be
sacrificed, and the community would be at peace.
The irony of the egoist perspective on this matter is that its decision, made
selfishly by the elders, would actually be moral according to an entirely
different moral principle. From the viewpoint of utilitarianism, a
consequential philosophy which defines moral actions as those which result in
the greatest amount of total happiness, the man should be buried for the good
of his community. Assuming that the community's religious belief and their fear
of resulting disaster is stronger than the culture's regard for individual
rights and the wishes of the dead, burying the man would make for a lot more
happy people than unhappy ones. It would result in a much greater happiness
than cremating him by far. Were the man cremated, there would be many people
living in fear of the impeding catastrophe. On the other hand, by burying him,
the community would lose nothing, and only the dead man's wishes would be
violated. From a utilitarian perspective this would be no loss at all because
the man is already dead, and theoretically has no more feelings on the matter.
So barring a majority of the community sympathizing with the man, burying him
would be the moral choice. Utilitarianism has very little to say in favor of
cremating the man.
But is utilitarianism the correct moral principle here? Does utilitarianism not
always sacrifice the needs of the individual for the good of the many? Would it
not sanction the harvesting of organs from one man to help people far away?
This does not seem like the moral thing to do, and yet utilitarianism suggests
it. What of other moral principles, perhaps one which takes into account more
of our moral intuition? What about Kantianism?
The Kantian viewpoint argues that there is a "categorical imperative"
(CI) by which all morality is judged. Though not defining this CI directly,
Kant (hence Kantianism) gives two forms derived from it. The first argues that
one should not act in a way which one would not want others to act in at the
same time. Further explanation can not be given here. The second for says that
one should care not to treat others merely as means, but also as ends in
themselves. Basically it argues against using people for selfish ends. What
does Kantianism have to say about the burial procedure for the man?
The first form of the CI might argue that one would not want everyone to ignore
one's wishes after death, and so the wishes of the man would have to be met.
The second form would argue that by burying the man, the community is using him
as a means for its own happiness. So here the answer seems to be that the man
should be buried. But the issue is deeper than that. The man is dead, so does
all this apply? The second form has been interpreted as an urging to always
respect human life. It covers exploitation, suicide, and many other immoral
things, but what about the wishes of the dead man? Does he still count as human
life? The intuition seems to say no, and yet there seems to be wrong about
ignoring a man's dying wish. The first form still stands. It would be immoral
to ignore the man's wishes, but when applied to the community in general, the
first form also says that it would be immoral to ignore the needs of the
community. If everyone were to ignore the needs of the community, the community
would crumble, so it should then be immoral to ignore the needs of the
community in this case. This dilemma is a difficult one to resolve, and this is
what lends the "most moral" aspect to this decision.
However, I believe that in this case the morality of burying the man outweighs
a decision to cremate him. Apart from my own individualist upbringing this is
the right thing to do. The culture will have the decision to make, but this is
my advice. I would not be able to push my beliefs about individual rights on
others. I do not know the specifics of the culture; this is why the community
itself must have the final choice. The decision here will set a precedent for
others, and the wrong one could crumble the community. I say bury the man in
his special holy ground. It would be the best for all.