How the West made passivity the only safe strategy


I. The Paradox

You watch someone drown. You do nothing. Legally: no liability. Morally: “tragic, but not your fault.”

You try to save them. You fail. They die anyway. Legally: potential liability for negligent rescue. Morally: “why didn’t you do it properly?”

You try to save them. You succeed, but break their rib doing CPR. Legally: they can sue you. Morally: “was that level of force really necessary?”

The structure is clear: interaction creates liability; detachment creates immunity. The safest move is always to walk away.

This essay traces how this asymmetry emerged, how it became encoded into Western institutions, and why it now functions as a civilizational selection mechanism against agency itself.

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