My reader thought nothing of his find. "People lose a lot of gloves in the wintertime," he figured. But a bit further along, he came upon what was obviously the companion glove.
He presumed that the second glove had either been dropped
by a child who had also dropped the first, or perhaps thrown away in irritation
by an adult who noticed the absence of its mate. On their walk home, the reader
and his mother retraced the route they had taken earlier and picked up both
gloves. "Having no use for them myself, I donated them to a thrift
shop," he writes.
Since then, he's been bothered by the thought that he
should have paired the gloves and left them somewhere along the way so the
original owner might have seen and retrieved them. But his thinking at the time
was that they were nice gloves and would probably be picked up by some third
party instead. He also figured that since they were walking in an affluent
area, "the owner could probably afford a replacement, whereas someone
buying them at a thrift shop would probably need them more."
He writes that he'd have had no problem keeping the
gloves for himself. It was only when he decided not to keep them, but took it
upon himself to make judgments about who should or shouldn't have them, that
things got a little murky for him. "Perhaps I ought to have left them
there, if I wasn't going to use them."
He explains his question isn't about right.
"Clearly, having found them, the gloves were mine to do with as I saw
fit." But he struggles with what the proper thing was for him to do with
them.
He thinks he knows the answer to the question, that
"basically it's finders keepers." But for whatever reason it feels
more complicated to him, even months after the fact.
I don't believe it makes a difference whether he kept the
gloves for himself or decided to give them away. One is no better and no worse
a decision to have made.
While the fact that his decision involved gloves may make
his struggle seem a bit trivial in comparison to other more life-altering
decisions he might have to make, his quandary points to a central challenge
when it comes to making good ethical decisions. More often than not, the work
of making an ethical decision isn't a choice between right and wrong, but
rather a choice among many right options with the goal being to make the best
right choice possible.
Given his concern that the gloves had no identification
on them and he determined they were unlikely to find their way to their
rightful owner, my reader did the right thing by assessing the situation and
deciding that the most useful thing to do with the gloves was to donate them to
a charity that might get them onto the hands of someone who needed them. It
wasn't the only choice he could have made, but it was a good one.
Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Right Thing:
Conscience, Profit and Personal Responsibility in Today's Business and
The Good, the Bad, and Your Business: Choosing Right When
Ethical Dilemmas Pull You Apart, is a lecturer in public
policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School.
Follow him on Twitter: @jseglin
(c) 2012 JEFFREY L. SEGLIN. Distributed by Tribune MediaServices, Inc.
4 comments:
Comments correct.
Alan O
Greenfield, Ma
I would pair the [gloves] and leave them in one of the two places if the weather is good. If it's bad, I leave a water-proofed note and take the [gloves] with me. Thereafter, keeping them or a charitable donation both seem ethical if nobody claims them.
I would pair the [gloves] and leave them in one of the two places if the weather is good. If it's bad, I leave a water-proofed note and take the [gloves] with me. Thereafter, keeping them or a charitable donation both seem ethical if nobody claims them.
I can't see any reason to worry over it, but, if this would work in the city--that is, if people use craigslist-- one could keep them and post about them there. But there are a LOT of people in New York. Reuniting these gloves with their original owners would be nothing short of a miracle.
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