You are literally not helping others, protecting others, or soothing any suffering by hiding in your house. You are hiding. You have retreated. You have cowered. — NOS4A2
That's a somewhat different point. But leaving it aside. Do you want more or less people to be infected than there are now?
Obviously less, though I think a herd immunity approach has some merit — NOS4A2
But before you try to trap me in a contradiction — NOS4A2
Again I don’t think it’s that black and white. You are literally not helping others, protecting others, or soothing any suffering by hiding in your house. You are hiding. You have retreated. You have cowered. Those who are helping people are the first line in this pandemic: doctors, nurses, “essential workers”. So let’s stop pretending we are in some way morally better because we hide in our bedrooms. — NOS4A2
In my mind the utilitarian calculus is the one that claims to save lives by denying basic civil liberties and human rights while ruining the very means with which we provide for our families. It does not follow that such measures need to be enforced in order to practice them. Do you yourself require a police-state and a ruined economy to physically distance yourself from others, to practice hygiene and to follow common-sense steps to avoid infection? — NOS4A2
Well, right now it's the argument between NOS4A2 and @NOS4A2 on whether he wants more or less infections. Go figure it out, and then come back and argue for whichever you decide on. — Baden
I could be wrong (no shit), but don't we end up with the same number eventually infected whether we isolate or not? — Hanover
The better question is whether you want more preventable deaths or not. Would you shut down the economy like we've done to save a single person? Probably not. 1m people? Probably so. Now we just need to figure out the specific number we can let die. It's somewhere between 1 and 1m, but it is a number. Do you acknowledge we agree in principle that there is such a number and our only quibble is what that actual number is? — Hanover
, yes, it's impossible to save everyone, but I would say you are obliged to try to maintain numbers low enough that give you a fighting chance of at least being able to treat everyone. Some level of economic shutdown is required for that. — Baden
I could be wrong (no shit), but don't we end up with the same number eventually infected whether we isolate or not? — Hanover
The better question is whether you want more preventable deaths or not. Would you shut down the economy like we've done to save a single person? Probably not. 1m people? Probably so. Now we just need to figure out the specific number we can let die. It's somewhere between 1 and 1m, but it is a number. Do you acknowledge we agree in principle that there is such a number and our only quibble is what that actual number is? — Hanover
You're not responding still. Option A - No quarantining, the respirator capacity is overwhelmed by 1 and one person dies. Option B - Quarantining, shutting down the economy, plenty of respirators, no deaths.No, I wouldn't. The implication of my answer is that you do whatever you can to keep below that critical level, including shutting down the economy — Baden
You're not responding still. — Hanover
If quarantining saved only 1 life and it required the economy be shut down 3 months, would you do it? — Hanover
No, I wouldn't. — Baden
Option A - No quarantining, the respirator capacity is overwhelmed by 1 and one person dies. Option B - Quarantining, shutting down the economy, plenty of respirators, no deaths. — Hanover
A or B? No other options. No buiilding more respirators etc. Assume under Option A we built as many respirators as humanly possible but one man didn't get one. — Hanover
Anyone who's being intellectually honest needs to bite the bullet and admit that there is always a point at which a huge economic loss will outweigh the loss of one life. — Baden
↪Andrew M We had a weekend everyone went to the beach despite the clear advice by the government and experts to stay home. That was in the same week everyone applauded the health care workers in the evening from their homes. My neighbour who is an anesthesist said to that :" Everyone who went to the beach should've raised their middle finger at the health care workers instead".
The next day a law was passed that allows police to fine people.
Personal responsibility is all well and good when other people's lives aren't at stake. In this situation not so much. The risk is too abstract when a people see .2% CFR. — Benkei
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.