The strongest counter approach is religious.
— frank
How so? — Banno
Yeah. The paradox is in valuing a world without values, of preferring a world without preferences. — Banno
I'll take that as you dont want to address the issue. — schopenhauer1
But why would capabilities be their own end... — schopenhauer1
But you do not see their worth, so you cannot see their worth. I can't fix that for you. — Banno
Here's an odd thing: the introduction of the words objective and subjective freezes ethics.
So, don't. — Banno
Yeah. The paradox is in valuing a world without values, of preferring a world without preferences. — Banno
Here's an interesting thing: It's not a paradox when you understand that the world doesn't have goals and you do - that there is no such thing as an objective morality. — Harry Hindu
What happens when life is full and flourishing? Do people get a thumbs up on their gravestone? — schopenhauer1
Why does someone need to live a full life in the first place? — schopenhauer1
Interesting what hidden just so theories lurk behind most ethical claims. — schopenhauer1
Would you prefer the opposite? Would you prefer that everyone else live such a life? — Fooloso4
What hidden just so theories lurk behind Nussbaum's enumeration of capacities? — Fooloso4
We do not have a choice as to whether we are born or not. If someone thinks it is better to not bring children into the world then that is their choice. But it is not everyone's choice. As long as there are people being born and living then how they live is an issue.
Since this thread is about Nussbaum I am going to leave off on this line of inquiry. — Fooloso4
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