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Parable Of The Sadhu And Lifeboat Ethics

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The Case Against Helping The Poor : This 3 page paper provides a synopsis of each story and discusses. The writer provides comments to compare and contrast the two stories. Bibliography lists 2 sources.

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3 pages (~225 words per page)

File: MM12_PGsdhlf.RTF

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or death themselves. The author, Bowen McCoy, had experienced pulmonary edema on a trip through the Himalayas at just over 16,000 in the past and was justifiably concerned reaching 18,000 feet. Even to be successful, the group had to travel before the ice steps melted. Each of the members in the group was either very tired or suffering from some sort of illness, such as altitude sickness. While at a rest stop, a group that was ahead of the authors group came back down the hill carrying a sadhu, a holy man, who was scantily clothed and obviously suffering from hypothermia but he was alive. Members in the authors group took off some of their outer clothing and got more clothing from their packs to fully clothe the sadhu. The author took off and checked with those who followed about the sadhus condition and was told he was fine and one man who stayed behind was now on his way. This was a tragedy of being more concerned about the goal than the people. Consider: McCoy left Stephen to ask the Japanese to let them use the horse to transport the sadhu to the hut, they refused, Steven asked the Pasang to have the porters carry the man down but they carried him 1,000 feet and not the remaining 500 feet. The Japanese gave the man food and water and reported he was "listlessly" throwing rocks at their dog who had frightened him. Nobody ever knew if the man lived or died. No group and no individual on that trek would accept responsibility for the welfare of the sadhu. Each did what he could, i.e., what was convenient. Steven asked the right questions: What would each group have done if the sadhu had been a well-dressed person of ...

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