Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/03/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]<<I make some of my images in third world countries. As I already mentioned in an earlier message, our Leicas are 'worth' more money than the majority of human beings would ever earn their whole life. A farmer in India, for instance, would at least have to work for ten years to earn what we paid for an M6. In this perspective the fundamental idea, Needs vs Wants, also becomes a moral one. --Oddmund>> Oddmund, Of course one can transmute a Leica or a Toyota into dollars that represent the fulfillment of a need to someone in the Third world. The same could be said of a great virtuoso's Strad. But that rationale begs the question of the relationship between a need and a want. Both the virtuoso and the Indian farmer have needs: one for the violin, the other for the selling price of the violin. When you sold your Leica equipment I assume the proceeds didn't go to feed that Indian farmer. Or did you send him that money? I don't think you did. You probably used it to buy other equipment or put it in your bank account for your own use. So the money represented by the Leica or the Strad would never reach the poor in material need in any case. But in the hands of the artists who own them they could satisfy the needs of the poor or deprived in spirit. Therefore the moral imperative remains tho the analogy you make is fallacious. Had you said that if a playboy bought some expensive trinket for $100K, like a custom yacht, then your analogy has some validity. That money was a waste. It could have been used to alleviate the plight of those Indian farmers by paying for medical facilities and marketing transportation, etc. What has the Leica in the hands of a skilled photographer got to do with that Indian farmer? What has the Strad in the hands of Perlman got to do with that Indian farmer? Zubin Meta would consider you quixotic, to say the least -- and he's a countryman of that Indian farmer. In no way is the money paid for a Leica by a photographer a moral compromise. The only moral consideration that would apply is that it would be a sin if a first rate talented photographer who needs that instrument would be deprived of a Leica because he couldn't afford it. That would be like denying a stethoscope to an excellent physician. Those acts would be immoral. This linking of the pecuniary value of professional instruments to the needs of poor folk is absurd. If you were to dwell on the immorality of the $billions one hears that self-indulgent damned fools all over the world spend on illegal drugs, to equate it with the poverty of that Indian farmer, then the analogy holds. Those transactions have a relationship between a need and a want in the moral sense. Oddmund, you've got a good heart. But also use your head. I know you have a fine mind as well. It is well that you sold that Leica. Another photographer needed it. Bob R