Under this interactionist definition of harm, could we have some kind of coherent and unified way of explaining what all types of harmful actions have in common? — TheHedoMinimalist
The fact that the harm was interactionally derived guaranteed previsibility which is necessary for a principle to work. The harm must not be phenomenologically open in order for the principle to work, it must be phenomenologically closed.
I think some communities, especially more religious ones, may conceptualize harm as something that could be impersonal and victimless. — TheHedoMinimalist
Your problem is with the harm, or more precisely, with actions that truly concern only the self and more specifically, whether or not actions really can be private because of the social embeddedness of human actions. Two problems emerge with assessing the significance of harms : which harms are relevant and the privacy of the action that caused the harm.
The relevance of harm is hardly a settled matter. Are harms instigated by false beliefs real harms? Is a harm a mental state or are there other relevant matters for assessing harm? Furthermore, does the way in which the harm was brought about relevant? Should we think that merely
allowing a bad thing to happen is sufficient in order to consider constraining it? Or should we in fact think that only
doing harm is relevant? Maybe we should criminalize
willful doing of harm. But does willfully allowing harm essentially equate to willfully doing harm?
For example, they might say that smoking weed causes harm because it upsets God or because it violates the sanctity of the community even if done completely privately. — TheHedoMinimalist
If privacy matters, even if it hurts your values, you can be against criminalization of that act but be morally against the commission of the particular act. See for example the prime minister of Canada, P-E Trudeau in 1969 when he decriminalized homosexual intercourse :
We don’t allow homosexuality, we’re just saying we’re not going to punish. We will not send the police to the bedrooms to see what is going on between consenting adults in private. […] We are taking the idea of sin out of the Criminal Code. — Pierre E. Trudeau
Another commentator, Thérèse Casgrain, commented on a case where people were imprisoned :
It is inconceivable that we so arbitrarily lock up an individual for acts which do not violate public decency since they are committed privately or against the integrity of young people, since they were committed between consenting adults. — Thérèse Casgrain
Maybe Trudeau and Casgrain were against homosexual intercourse, but privacy did matter when assessing the significance of the harm committed. It seemed clear, in that case, that actions between two consenting individual were not a public affair, because homosexual intercourse is conceptualized as a singular event which did not concern public law, even though it shocked more than the two persons involved in the action.
Thus said, I hardly see how these matters actually affect our
agreement over the the harm principle. We can agree with the harm principle without agreeing to a common theory of the significance of harm. We can agree that 1) an action which only hurts me 2) jand does not impact someone else 3) in a significant manner in order to constitute it as harm, should not be criminalized. We can agree on the principle (albeit a very reinterpreted one) without agreeing with what precisely is a significant harm comprised in condition 3. Therefore, the harm principle isn’t in any way vague about what conditions are relevant for prohibition, but it is quite harder for it the be
specific about what it prohibits.