Smith critiques the 'whining and melancholy moralists' who urge us to grieve over distant calamities we can neither serve nor hurt, arguing we should not expend emotional energy on such cases; but Klein defends them, noting that because of unknowability we often misjudge whom we can serve or hurt, so figures like Peter Singer who raise such issues may be doing us a favor by alerting us to connections we had dismissed.
normativepending
Speaker
Dan KleinEvidence Quote
“I do think that there's something to be said for these whining and melancholy moralists because what we whom we can and can't serve and hurt... is not something we necessarily always have a great sense of”
Source
Dan Klein on The Theory of Moral Sentiments, Episode 4--A Discussion of Part III 04/29/2009— EconTalkCreated: 6/15/2026, 9:36:51 AM
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