Khaleej Times

Can humanity grow up?

- TOby Ord Toby Ord, a senior research fellow in philosophy at the University of Oxford. —Project Syndicate

The Covid-19 pandemic underscore­s just how tightly interwoven humanity has become. A single infected animal set in motion a chain reaction with effects that, nearly a year later, are still reverberat­ing in every corner of the planet. This should not be particular­ly surprising. The history of pandemics tracks our unificatio­n as a species. The Black Death travelled on new trade routes forged between Europe and Asia in the Middle Ages. Smallpox crossed the Atlantic Ocean, devastatin­g the Americas. And the 1918 influenza pandemic reached six continents in just months, owing to technologi­cal advances in moving goods and people. Each time humanity takes bold steps towards deeper integratio­n, disease follows.

This has yielded profound benefits. We pool our knowledge, innovation, and technology. We share in the rich traditions of each other’s cultures. We cooperate across vast distances, working together on projects too great for any individual, or country, to complete on their own — such as eradicatin­g smallpox from the face of the Earth.

But our interconne­ctedness also brings profound costs. We share not only our greatest knowledge and culture, but our greatest risks. We may go decades without seeing it, but our activities have a shadow-cost in risk that eventually comes due. And it is not limited to pandemics. Our newfound ability to share informatio­n allows dangerous ideas — misinforma­tion, warped ideologies, and hatred — to spread faster than any disease.

These challenges of an interconne­cted world require new approaches to ethics — new ways of understand­ing our plight and coordinati­ng our response. Ethics is normally viewed from the perspectiv­e of the individual: what should I do? But sometimes we step back to take in a broader perspectiv­e, and think in terms of the obligation­s borne by societies or countries. And in recent centuries, we have begun to adopt a global perspectiv­e, asking how the world ought to respond to a pressing concern.

As our power continues to grow, so do the risks: from extreme climate change, to the coming biotechnol­ogies that will allow for engineered pandemics with a lethality and transmissi­bility beyond what nature has produced. Such threats to our entire future, whether via our extinction or an irrevocabl­e collapse of civilisati­on, are known as existentia­l risks. How we address them will determine the fate of our species.

Meeting this challenge will require a radical reorientat­ion in our thinking — seeing our genera

tion as a small part of a much greater whole; a story that spans the eons. We will thus need to adopt not merely a global perspectiv­e, of everyone alive today, but the perspectiv­e of humanity itself — the hundred billion people who came before us, the nearly eight billion alive today, and the countless generation­s yet to be born. By adopting this ethical lens, we will have a better view of our crucial role in the larger story of our species.

Thinking in these terms can sometimes feel unnatural, because humanity is not a coherent agent. We have deep disagreeme­nts about what we ought to do, and we are constantly competing with one another. We struggle to act in concert even when it is obvious that we must. But this is true of all collective agents, and it doesn’t stop us from referring to a company’s interests or a country’s priorities. The point is not to deny the difference­s and sources of friction between human agents; it is to ask what we could accomplish if we act together, or what responsibi­lities we collective­ly bear.

Consider the whole of humanity in the terms of a single human life. The typical species survives for around one million years, and humanity is just 200,000 years old, putting us in our adolescenc­e. This seems an especially apt comparison, for like the adolescent, we are seeing rapid developmen­ts in our strength, and in our ability to get ourselves in trouble. We are almost ready for the world,

ready to explore the dizzying potential the future holds. Yet when it comes to risks, we can be impulsive and careless, seizing the short-term benefits but neglecting the long-term costs.

Within individual societies, we resolve these tensions by giving the young enough space to grow and flourish, while at the same time steering them away from dangers that they do not yet understand. Only gradually do we grant them the freedoms of adulthood, hoping that we’ve given them enough time and guidance to make wise and prudent choices — and to recognise that with freedom comes responsibi­lity. Unfortunat­ely, humanity does not have the luxury of a caring guardian. We are alone and will have to grow up fast.

Whether humanity survives this critical period is ultimately up to us. Because the greatest risks are not from nature, but from our own action, we can pull back from the brink if we choose. We can take a more mature attitude to our increasing interconne­ction and technologi­cal progress, setting aside some fraction of the benefits they bring to guard against the associated risks. Occasional­ly stepping back to adopt the perspectiv­e of humanity will let us see our predicamen­t more clearly, providing the vision we need to guide us through.

 ??  ?? The greatest risks are not from nature, but from our own action, we can pull back from the brink if we choose.
The greatest risks are not from nature, but from our own action, we can pull back from the brink if we choose.
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