http://www.deccanchronicle.com/op-ed/india%E2%80%99s-crisis-ethics-321

India’s crisis of ethics
August 13th, 2010
Shiv Visvanathan

I firmly believe one does not get old fashioned as one gets older. One
gets more demanding of the new. One demands a sense of fundamentals
without the facileness of fundamentalism. The world might shrink in
terms of people who mattered yet memories become everlasting lemon
drops to taste and treasure. Looking over the last few years what I
sense most is the absence of an ethics which conveys a robust goodness
and also understood the inventiveness of evil.

Consider the newspaper or TV as a landscape and ask where ethics come
from and where are the ethical figures? It is definitely not in
religion. Our gurus and acharyas preach well being, they might be
ascetics and renouncers but they offer a religion separate from
ethics. Take our corporate dons. Even the best, from Ratan Tata to
Narayan Murthy, remain blasé about the violence of Gujarat riots,
almost suggesting that investment is a substitute for ethics.
Corporate life has a discipline which often simulates ethics. Sadly,
our social movements have lost the edge that JP, Baba Amte, the early
Medha Patakar provided them with. One can hardly think of ethicists in
academic life.

If one moves from individuals to domains and searches for
institutional frames or organisational sites, the search is equally
futile. The bureaucracy has only an occasional whistleblower to redeem
itself. The corporate world offers corporate social responsibility as
a great dropping to legitimise its indifference to ecology, justice
and moral indifference. Occasionally, non-governmental organisations
bring sensitivity to issues but don’t dwell long enough to make a
difference. Literature helps by producing a Mahasweta Devi and seems
content with it.

Our world of politics brings forth a few Hamlets but the rest are
content with a sense, a greed, an appetite for power which makes Right
and Left brothers under the same carnal skin. The media offers
stuttering pygmies as examples, but they are eventually brittle or
hysterical, substituting an inquisitional style for a lived ethics.
Eventually the examples we thrive on are the good father or the pious
mother, a goodness that gets reduced to family recipes.

The question one wants to ask is why is there an absence of ethics in
public spaces.

The first thing one senses is the absence of a civilizational view.
There is no Bhakti Movement to rework ethics into law, music or
politics. We use civilisation as a prop, a relic, or best as a
heritage. It is a monument we salute but not a code, a model or a way
of life. The nation state has corroded civilisational possibilities
and consumerism has dessicated it further. The simple differences
between need and greed as litmus tests have lost their relevance.
Ethics as a home remedy becomes impotent in public life.

Earlier nationalism provided a framework of values through people like
Gandhi, Gaffar Khan and Kumarappa. They walked their talk. But as
nationalism yielded to the nation state, value frames got dessicated
into policy frames. Gradually, politics became managerial. By reifying
corruption as a political or bureaucratic problem, we failed to
realise the inventiveness of evil. In fact, if anything is global, it
is the globalisation of evil that we fail to confront. Terror,
genocide, societal indifference to violence or poverty is spreading.
Consider how dessicated our ideas of peace, progress and rights are.
Evil is not only more inventive, it possesses a more seductive sense.
We see goodness as effeminate, lacking the robustness of evil. In
fact, we see violence as the only way to fight evil, and thus becoming
what we fight.

Thirdly, there is something about democracy that banalises ethics.
Ethics get managerialised, banalised or become a collection of
regulations. It becomes a rote procedure rather than a set of
individual initiatives. It is reduced to a set of do’s and don’ts and
as a result it lacks inventiveness. An ethical act, rather than being
the norm is seen as a signal for deviancy. Ethics becomes a singular
act of whistle blowing where the ethical act is seen as rare, even
eccentric and vulnerable.

Fourthly, we are caught in a dualistic economy of thought which
separates the ethics of science from the ethics of religion, the
ethics of the formal and the informal, the domains of public and
private, the ethics for male and female. Oddly, where we need
specialised thinking as in the ethics of scale or the ethics of risk
technology, we assume stupidly that conventional science or economics
has the answer. We assume that ethics is a symptom that surfaces in
crises, disallowing a prosaic ethic of everydayness.

As a result, India as a civilisation, as a nation state, as a civil
society, as a community, has few answers about development,
displacement, diversity, alternatives, terror, poverty or torture. The
poverty of our ethics is more stunning than the poverty of our
society. Maybe the two are connected and we need to invent a different
ethics of technology, development, poverty and ecology, if India is to
remain a viable democracy.

Let us be clear that the old words stemming from Christianity like
philanthropy, aid, charity have run dry. We need other words and
metaphors to answer questions like what are our ethics regarding
poverty? Do we criminalise it or pathologise it or do we treat it as a
threat to peace, a form of structural disempowerment? What new thought
experiments and institutions can we invent that goes beyond the
commoditisation of the environment that sees climate change through
carbon credits? What is the ethics of the other that can make
citizenship more tolerant of tribals and nomads? What is a
civilisational ethic that resists the economisation of a problem or
the forced obsolescence of a people? Can we devise a new Hippocratic
code for the ethical illiteracy of science? Our ethics need not be
fundamentalist but it needs to be a way of life, a dwelling, not an
abstract paradigm or a dessicated flower lacking the life blood of
water, nor does it have to be humorless wardenship of Gandhi?

We need to invent, create new forms of response to fill in our current
silence about Afghanistan, Sri Lanka or the idiocy of our development
or the emptiness of our ideas of science, agriculture or governance.
The 63rd anniversary of our Independence should provoke some concern
about such issues.



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