If you ask Bentham what would be the morally right act, he would say that it is to save the scientist as his invention will amount in a large amount of pleasure all around the world. Yet, would it be really a morally right decision to let one´s own child drown in favor for a stranger? — LittleLisa
If argued in favor of it, it would at least be very unrealistic, and especially when thinking of our own nature, the main duty of a mother is to take care of her offspring, so in this moment she would neglect her own self in order to act morally right which is a contradiction. — LittleLisa
But thinking of it without being a utilitarian, would you still take the same decision or wouldn't you go for the, in the eyes of a utilitarian, wrong moral decision. — LittleLisa
And I wonder, Bentham says that pleasure and pain are the only two drivers of human nature. However, human nature also involves a mother who has to take care of her children. Isn't it then a contradiction that Bentham stresses the mother to neglect her naturalistic principles in order to maximize the pleasure of society?
And who even says that it would be good if medicine that prevents death is bringing more pleasure. Wouldn't this lead to more and more people exploiting the planet and leading to more hardship to those that are already on the planet?
Bentham says that pleasure and pain are the only two drivers of human nature. — LittleLisa
And who even says that it would be good if medicine that prevents death is bringing more pleasure. Wouldn't this lead to more and more people exploiting the planet and leading to more hardship to those that are already on the planet? — LittleLisa
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.