Forgot to mention on the weekend, but this Vox piece:
Is it immoral if you feel schadenfreude about Trump’s Covid-19?
is really good. After considering what some famous philosophers have said on the topic, it ends on this consideration:
That said, what if someone wishes for Trump to die, not out of pure
punitiveness, but out of a desire for Americans to get a new president
who that person believes would save many lives?
Whether you think this is ethically acceptable depends a
lot on your preexisting moral commitments. Specifically, you’ll answer
differently depending on which school of ethics you gravitate toward:
utilitarianism, deontology, or virtue ethics. Here’s a brief (and
admittedly oversimplified) breakdown.
If you’re a utilitarian, you might argue this is a
perfectly acceptable wish because something is moral if it produces good
consequences — and having a president who doesn’t bungle a national pandemic response would prevent a lot of death, which is clearly a good consequence.
But if you’re a deontologist (also known
as a Kantian), then you’d argue this is an unacceptable wish because
something is moral if it’s fulfilling your duty to others and immoral if
it’s not. Immanuel Kant famously said we have a duty always to treat
human beings as ends in themselves, not means to our ends. Wishing death
upon someone — even if it’s to save many more people from death — is
treating that someone as a means.
A virtue ethicist would likely agree with the
deontologist that wishing death on someone is unacceptable, but for a
somewhat different reason: By doing so, you’re cultivating in yourself a
negative trait, rather than a virtuous trait like empathy. Even if it
doesn’t actually harm anybody else (wishes are different from actions,
after all), it harms you as a moral being, potentially chipping away at your capacity for empathy in the long term.
The virtue ethicist would probably want to remind us that
it is perfectly possible to wish for the alleviation of suffering in a
human being who has tested positive for a lethal pathogen, even if we
happen to deeply dislike that human being. It is possible to wish for
that human being’s recovery even if we feel a simultaneous sense of
superiority, of vulnerability, of desperation to see justice in our
world — and even if we think the world would be better off if that
person didn’t recover.
If we examine what’s under the hood of our schadenfreude
and don’t like what we see, it’s worth remembering that we have this
option at our disposal.
Despite my general sympathy towards Kantian and virtue ethics, I'm leaning towards utilitarianism on this one.