A problem would appear in the following situation: saving your child or two stranger's children. — LFranc
I agree that the meaning of "morally valuable" is unclear. But I also think that Jonas Salk was a morally better person than Hitler. But I also think that both of them and John Doe are all equally human persons and therefore have exactly the same moral claims on the rest of us. That's what human rights are all about.Was Hitler as morally valuable (and what does that mean, exactly?) as Jonas Salk? — RogueAI
No, of course not. But I would be wrong for prioritizing your kid over someone else's kid. (Given that we have no social connection beyond this forum.)Suppose I'm faced with a choice of saving my child or a stranger's child. Am I wrong for prioritizing my kid? — RogueAI
I think I can understand what you're saying. But you need to say that you don't believe that everyone is equally valuable and consequently that Singer's argument is invalid, and so his conclusions don't apply to you. But it would be inconsistent to admit that his argument is valid and deny the obligation that follows from it.I do not believe everyone is equally morally valuable and so his conclusions dont apply to me — Ourora Aureis
But I would be wrong for prioritizing your kid over someone else's kid. — Ludwig V
As you please.Thanks for talking about this thing that you can't talk about though, it was very interesting — LFranc
However, that is okay for Singer, because helping the poor (or whether the duty of helping the very poor when we have extra money) can be done without the help of humanitarian organizations. Maybe Singer should have insisted on that more — LFranc
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zakat
Zakat (or Zakāh) is one of the five pillars of Islam.[a][3] Zakat is a form of almsgiving, often collected by the Muslim Ummah.[1] It is considered in Islam a religious obligation,[4][5] and by Quranic ranking, is next after prayer (salat) in importance.[6]
As one of the Five Pillars of Islam, zakat is a religious duty for all Muslims who meet the necessary criteria of wealth to help the needy.[7][8] It is a mandatory charitable contribution, often considered to be a tax.[9][10]
I'm not very interested in this possibility, but in this one:- "Suppose we don't have a crystal ball. Should we prioritize one over the other?" Since that one is where we are, let's have the answer. Considering the other possibility is just messing about.Suppose we have a crystal ball and we know that one kid will grow up to cure a kind of cancer and another kid will grow up to become a drug addict and die of an OD at a young age, and we have to save one or the other. — RogueAI
I have heard that a healthy, fresh, corpse can save nine lives. Not bad for one death.The problem in the ethical theories created by many self-regarded saints is that they end up in the logical conclusion that we should kill a person (or ourselves) to harvest organs to save many others. That however does not align with our moral intuition, so it is safe to discard the theory. — Lionino
I don't disagree with you. But I'm not sure I know what the point of ethics is supposed to be.My opinion is that even coming up with a normative ethical theory is already missing the point of what ethics is supposed to be. — Lionino
Thanks for the reminder. But I think that "charity levy" is self-contradictory. A levy for charitable purposes is possible, but the justification for it would be justice, not charity. And so, I am not opposed to "charity" in the name of justice - for example, as an intervention when authorities refuse to implement justice. Food banks, for example - or indeed, a charity for famine relief. Come to think of it, if we interpret Singer's argument as about justice, it would have considerably more traction.The moral obligation certainly exists in Islam in the form of zakaat, i.e. the mandatory charity levy. — Tarskian
But I'm not sure I know what the point of ethics is supposed to be. — Ludwig V
I don't trust "intuition", except as a starting-point for evaluation. — Ludwig V
Myth: If I agree to donate my organs, the hospital staff won't work as hard to save my life.
Fact: When you go to the hospital for treatment, the health care team tries to save your life, not someone else's. You get the best care you can get.
and in like manner I will not give to a woman a pessary to produce abortion
and will abstain from every voluntary act of mischief and corruption; and, further from the seduction of females or males
Yes. But I'm open to argument.Do you not trust yours that we shouldn't kill someone healthy to save 9 who are dying? — Lionino
I think this is a situation in which silence should not be taken as consent. However, presumed consent might be better than the current situation (as I understand it), which is that if you don't express a view, your nearest and (possibly) dearest will be asked to decide for you. Are you sure that they will decide as you would have decided or, perhaps, that they will decide correctly?Should the state consider you an organ donor unless you notify them otherwise (presumed consent)? — RogueAI
Yes. But that doesn't mean it should become a legal imperative.I believe there is a moral imperative to be an organ donour. — Lionino
It is a worry, I suppose. I think the possibility that efforts to save me will be pushed too far is much more likely. There comes a point when continued efforts amount to torture.The issue is that, in some cases, once someone is known to be an organ donour, less efforts will be made to save the person in critical condition, so you are basically being mainslaughtered for being altruistic. — Lionino
That's not something you should guess about. However, it is true that autism is a spectrum and mild autism may be much more common than we suppose. But whatever your opinion, it should not interfere with proper, serious, consideration of your philosophy. Dismissing your view just because your mental health is less than perfect is simply prejudice.If I had to guess, both Kant (I am confident about this one) and John S. Mill had autism, much stronger than mine at least. — Lionino
Quite so.The entire premise that folks are obligated to donate to a charity misunderstands the meaning of "donate". — LuckyR
That's not something you should guess about. However, it is true that autism is a spectrum and mild autism may be much more common than we suppose. But whatever your opinion, it should not interfere with proper, serious, consideration of your philosophy. Dismissing your view just because your mental health is less than perfect is simply prejudice.
However, I share your suspicion of normative theories of the conventtional kind. They seem to me to be rather unhelpful - even distracting. — Ludwig V
I believe that it is not appropriate behaviour to base an argument on a philosophical doctrine that I do not believe. "If P then Q" is not a sound argument if P is false. But I have seen people attempt that tactic. (I suspect that, in truth, they are just trying to change the subject.)(please no solipsism argument here for this conversation hinges on behaviour correctly reflecting mental states). — Lionino
I don't know what your training or background may be, but I'm inclined to think that one needs better information before beginning to pin psychiatric diagnoses on people based on the kind of information we have about both Kant and Mill.Narcissistic psychopaths, specially when untreated, are not quite able to experience love (please no solipsism argument here for this conversation hinges on behaviour correctly reflecting mental states). — Lionino
. There is plausibility in the idea that personality traits may influence the philosophical doctrines that people sign up to. But that does not mean that the position that they sign up to is not sound.Likewise, there may be a set of psychological traits that may make someone anxious about the fluid and uncertain nature of what constitutes good behaviour. Because of that, they may invent a set of rigid rules to make up for that. I think that, unfortunately, that misses the very nature of good behaviour, which is ethics. — Lionino
But I think that "charity levy" is self-contradictory. A levy for charitable purposes is possible, but the justification for it would be justice, not charity. — Ludwig V
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.