Vulnerability, Pluralism, and Why This Paper Needed a Video
The paper was born out of 25 years of live conversations with people in academia, industry, and peacebuilding spaces where worldviews clash and moral language breaks under pressure. Again and again I saw the same pattern: whenever we grounded our ethics in agency, innocence, doctrinal certainty, or identity, our frameworks fractured in contact with real lives and real harms. When we grounded them in vulnerability and pluralism, they held.
The core claim of the Vulnerability–Pluralism Model (VPM) is simple but uncompromising:
Vulnerability – our shared susceptibility to be harmed – is the only coherent moral baseline across humans, non‑humans, and systems.
Pluralism – the principled coexistence of multiple worldviews without coercion – is the minimum legal and political baseline for any society that claims to be just.
The video is my attempt to make that architecture emotionally legible: to move from abstract argument to lived texture, from diagrams to faces, stories, and stakes.
Read the full paper here:
Vulnerability & Pluralism; Universal Ethics for a Fractured World [https://www.academia.edu/145253478/Vulnerability_Pluralism_Universal_Ethics_for_a_Fractured_World_Revised_Edition?source=swp_share]
What The Video Tries To Do
In the video, I try to:
Show why agency‑based ethics fails precisely where protection is needed most: infants, people with severe cognitive impairment, civilians in asymmetric wars, non‑human animals, and those trapped in theocracies or single‑ideology regimes.
Make visible how a vulnerability baseline lets us talk coherently about speciesism, structural violence, trauma, and AI governance within one continuous frame.
Illustrate how pluralism, understood as a minimum legal floor rather than a vague tolerance slogan, becomes non‑negotiable for any state that does not want to structurally abandon its most exposed people.
If the paper is the scaffolding, the video is an invitation: to feel what it means to design institutions, technologies, and conflicts around the question, “Who is most vulnerable here, and what do we owe them?”
A Personal Thank You
This revised edition, and the courage to bring it into a wider public conversation, would not exist without a number of people who insisted that ethics must stay close to bodies, hormones, trauma, and daily thresholds of overwhelm.
I want to offer a very special thank you to Dr. Shabnam Sarshar – phytopharmacist, women’s health scientist, and founder of The Recalibration. Her work at the intersection of female biology, cannabinoid‑based innovation, and hormone‑wise leadership is a living example of what a vulnerability‑intelligent ethics looks like when it is translated into care for real women moving through perimenopause and midlife.
Through her writing and practice at www.drshabnam.de [http://www.drshabnam.de/] and The Recalibration newsletter on Substack, Shabnam keeps returning the conversation to the body: to fog, fatigue, recalibration, and the quiet heroism of working with rather than against our physiology. Her insistence that “your body is recalibrating, not failing” sits in deep resonance with the VPM’s insistence that vulnerability is the starting point of any honest ethics.
Shabnam Sarshar [https://substack.com/profile/389421361-shabnam-sarshar] The Recalibration [https://substack.com/profile/365941247-the-recalibration] – thank you for inspiring me with the courage to release this video today, for synchronicity, the depth of your science, the tenderness of your language, and the integrity with which you hold space.
I have been following your work which has been a quiet companion and source of inspiration and a reminder that no ethical architecture is worth anything if it cannot also sit beside someone and give them one more reason to make a stand for love and kindness.
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit richardastradobson.substack.com [https://richardastradobson.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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