Heinz’s Dilemma: Stealing Medicine to Save a Life
In a small town, a man named Heinz faces an unbearable choice: his wife is gravely ill, and a pharmacist has developed a drug that could save her life. The problem? The medicine costs ten times more than it took to make—and Heinz can’t afford it.
He begs, borrows, and pleads. The pharmacist refuses to lower the price or let Heinz pay later. With time running out, Heinz breaks into the pharmacy and steals the drug.
Was Heinz wrong to steal the medicine?
Or was he morally justified in doing whatever it took to save his wife’s life?
This is Heinz’s Dilemma, a foundational moral scenario introduced by psychologist Lawrence Kohlberg in the 1950s. It’s used not to judge right or wrong, but to explore how people reason about ethics—and what that says about moral development.
The Setup
The original version, simplified for students and researchers, goes something like this:
“A woman was near death from a rare cancer. One drug might save her, discovered by a local chemist. He was charging $2,000, ten times what it cost to make. Heinz tried everything to raise the money but came up short. He asked the chemist to sell it cheaper or let him pay later, but the man refused. So Heinz broke in and stole the drug.”
Kohlberg posed this dilemma not to find the right answer, but to understand the reasoning behind people’s decisions.
The Levels of Moral Reasoning
Kohlberg believed people move through three stages of moral development, each with two sub-levels:
1. Pre-Conventional Morality
Obedience and punishment: “Heinz shouldn’t steal because he’ll get caught.”
Self-interest: “Heinz should steal because he’ll be happier if his wife survives.”
2. Conventional Morality
Interpersonal accord: “Heinz should steal because a good husband puts his wife first.”
Law and order: “Heinz shouldn’t steal because it’s against the law.”
3. Post-Conventional Morality
Social contract: “Heinz should steal because the right to life is more important than property.”
Universal ethical principles: “Heinz must act based on justice, even if it means breaking the law.”
The action might be the same (stealing the drug), but the justification reveals a person’s moral depth.
Is Stealing Ever Justified?
Let’s unpack some major ethical frameworks using Heinz’s dilemma.
Utilitarianism
A utilitarian would ask: Which choice creates the greatest good for the greatest number?
Saving a life has more utility than preserving property.
The pharmacist loses some money, but a human life is preserved.
From this perspective, Heinz’s theft is morally justified—even obligated.
Deontology
A deontologist (like Immanuel Kant) would argue that morality is based on duties and universal rules, not outcomes.
Stealing is always wrong, regardless of intention.
If everyone stole when they had a good reason, trust and law would break down.
Therefore, Heinz’s action violates a moral duty—even if his motive is love.
Virtue Ethics
This approach asks: What does a virtuous person do in this situation?
Heinz is showing courage, compassion, and loyalty. But is he also showing justice and respect for others’ rights?
A virtue ethicist might sympathize with Heinz but also ask: why is the pharmacist so unmoved by suffering?
Ethics, in this view, is relational—it depends on the kind of person you are becoming, not just the rule you follow.
What About the Pharmacist?
While Heinz gets the spotlight, the pharmacist’s behavior raises its own ethical questions.
Should life-saving medicine be priced for profit?
Does the right to private property outweigh the right to life?
Is refusing payment or delayed compensation morally defensible?
Some argue the pharmacist has a social obligation to make medicine accessible. Others defend his property rights and autonomy—after all, he created the drug.
This side of the dilemma mirrors real-world debates over health care pricing, insulin access, and the patenting of life-saving drugs.
Real-World Parallels
Heinz’s story isn’t just a classroom thought experiment—it echoes real moral challenges.
1. Healthcare Inequality
Globally, millions face choices like Heinz’s every day. Lack of access to affordable treatment forces families to:
Delay care
Ration medication
Go into debt
Or resort to illegal actions
In this light, the dilemma becomes a systemic indictment, not just a personal one.
2. Medical Bankruptcy
Medical debt is one of the leading causes of bankruptcy in countries without universal healthcare. When life and livelihood are on the line, moral boundaries blur.
3. Insulin and EpiPen Prices
Recent public outcry over the rising costs of insulin and allergy medication mirrors the pharmacist’s refusal to lower prices. These stories raise tough questions about profit, ethics, and public health.
The Law vs. Justice
This dilemma also highlights the difference between legal and moral actions.
Laws are rules enforced by governments.
Morals are principles about right and wrong.
They often overlap—but not always. History is full of civil disobedience: people breaking laws to uphold moral ideals (think Rosa Parks or Gandhi).
So the question becomes: When is it okay to break the law to do the right thing?
Cultural Differences
Interestingly, studies show that culture affects moral reasoning.
People may prioritize family or social harmony in collectivist societies (like Japan or India).
People might emphasize personal rights or legal structures in individualist societies (like the U.S.).
This means moral dilemmas don’t have universal answers, but they do reveal universal questions.
Glossary of Terms
Utilitarianism – A moral theory that emphasizes consequences and maximizing overall well-being.
Deontology – An ethical approach based on following rules or duties regardless of the outcomes.
Virtue Ethics – A theory focusing on moral character rather than rules or results.
Civil Disobedience – Breaking a law to uphold a moral principle.
Moral Development – The process through which people evolve in their ability to reason about ethics.
Discussion Questions
Was Heinz morally justified in stealing the drug? Why or why not?
Should the pharmacist have lowered the price or offered a payment plan?
Can breaking the law ever be the most ethical choice?
References and Further Reading
Kohlberg, Lawrence. Essays on Moral Development, Vol. I: The Philosophy of Moral Development
Encyclopedia Britannica – Heinz Dilemma