If Willy can create any world he wants, then no, creating this one doesn't seem particularly moral. — ChatteringMonkey
I think you are being too generous regarding the suicide pill. The reality is a lot more distressing for the person doing the act, and for the people left behind. — Down The Rabbit Hole
If the fruits of these people's labor are needed somewhere then it's fine depending on how needed this labor is. Otherwise if you're doing it for no reason probably not. — khaled
It is quite moral. Because he gives free will and does not punish any choice. — SimpleUser
What difference does it make? — frank
What happens if Willy can imagine other worlds that are better, but the best he can do is create the one described in the OP? — schopenhauer1
Why are the fruits of the labor the summum bonum? — schopenhauer1
But you yourself created the conditions for the game. If the very creation of such a world is moral, then the creation of a pill for committing suicide in this world is also moral. The only thing the creator should do in this situation is not to punish the creature for the choice. Otherwise it will be immoral in itself.So that is all that matters here? So if I put someone in any X circumstance, as long as they have free choice, putting them in that circumstance itself makes no moral difference? That will lead to some weird conclusions... — schopenhauer1
Then it cannot be something to be blamed for morally. Moral evaluations require some agency typically, the ability to do otherwise...
In any case, I take it you meant the thought experiment to shed some light on the real world. I don't think it does, because we indeed don't have the ability to create any world we want... and there is no one Willy that created this world to begin with. — ChatteringMonkey
The highest value is prevention of suffering. If said labor is needed (aka is preventing suffering) then it's fine. Because in that case not creating the factory is also harmful. — khaled
But you yourself created the conditions for the game. If the very creation of such a world is moral, then the creation of a pill for committing suicide in this world is also moral. The only thing the creator should do in this situation is not to punish the creature for the choice. Otherwise it will be immoral in itself. — SimpleUser
What circumstance? If creatures voluntarily leave the world you created, then most likely you are a bad creator. After all, you created a free world, and not just a theater for your own entertainment. Or theater?Is not putting people into this forced circumstance itself suspect or immoral? — schopenhauer1
What difference does it make? — frank
I mean, what difference does anything make, man? — schopenhauer1
Willy has the agency not to create the world or rather not to force others into the world in the first place, no? — schopenhauer1
Let's say I am Willy Wonka.. — schopenhauer1
How it doesnt count as proelytis which is forbidden I cannot tell. Its the same thing over and over with the only discussion offered is a tactic so he can whine about life. — DingoJones
I have created this world and will force others to enter it.
Isn’t antinatalism an ideology? If not, doesn’t it become ideological if the anti-Natalist cannot let the subject go and everything they “contribute” to discussion is either the anti Natalist point or the anti natalist point disguised as something else? Plus the counter arguments not being much acknowledged as the broken record plays on. How is that not promoting an ideology? — DingoJones
This bloody victim mentality again.Is not putting people into this forced circumstance itself suspect or immoral? — schopenhauer1
Willy's a bit cynical here. More of "Well, it's an 'option' (wink, wink)." — schopenhauer1
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