Banno
A counterpoint to consider. I met a gentleman who was deaf from birth, now in his middle years. His parent refused to provide any remediation, including contact with other deaf people, in the belief that this would build his ability to adapt to "normal" hearing society and so position him well for a good life. However the result was that although he could not fit in well with the hearing, he also could not fit in with the deaf community, and so found himself isolated.This is uncomplicated, but some contend that they would not arrange the procedure for any young deaf children they had, which is more complicated. — Jeremy Murray
Hanover
A counterpoint to consider. I met a gentleman who was deaf from birth, now in his middle years. His parent refused to provide any remediation, including contact with other deaf people, in the belief that this would build his ability to adapt to "normal" hearing society and so position him well for a good life. However the result was that although he could not fit in well with the hearing, he also could not fit in with the deaf community, and so found himself isolated.
The attempt by his parents to maximise his opportunity had the exact opposite result. — Banno
Banno
The final rule therefore likely being that one ought do what increases the overall happiness of the individual even if it means tacitly admitting their former state was wanting from the state you are moving them to. — Hanover
Hanover
Notice the absence here of "tacitly admitting their former state was wanting" ? instead we look towards maximising benefit - but not in terms of happiness so much as of capability. It's not worth that has increased, but capacity - they can do more things — Banno
Banno
Why would I need to?But how would you justify a cochlear implant in someone feeling full fulfillment within the deaf community, having no desire to leave its comfort? — Hanover
Nothing about me without me.
Hanover
If they don't want an implant, I won't make 'em have one. — Banno
Banno
Life, Bodily Health, Bodily Integrity, Senses/Imagination/Thought, Emotions, Practical Reason, Affiliation, Other Species, Play, and Control over the Environment, ensuring basic freedoms like adequate nutrition, movement, education, love, political participation, and respect for nature and oneself.
Hanover
A bit more than personal preferences. — Banno
So there is something a bit more sophisticated here than "happiness". — Banno
L'éléphant
I'm still having a hard time putting it this way. It's the same as saying that the infrastructure in place now is discriminatory towards and/or dismissive of people with disability. Or, the design itself makes them disabled.The driving force was disabled activists insisting that disability is not a deviation from the normal human body, but the consequence of social design. — Banno
Banno
Engineering and construction focus towards the functionality and usage by the average population. — L'éléphant
AmadeusD
L'éléphant
No one is ever average... — Banno
Hanover
Is this such a bad thing? — Banno
This said, I actually agree with Banno on the restriction on enforced surgery. I think consent is fundamental. — AmadeusD
Why? No one is ever average... — Banno
Banno
Well, I'll say "almost" and point out that Nussbaum, perhaps the foremost ethicist here, is a classicist authority on Aristotle, so let's call it "flourishing"?No, but I wasn't arguing it was a bad thing as much as I was saying we were agreeing with the happiness principle. — Hanover
I don't think anyone is denying that wheelchair users need a wheelchair...If pressed though, I wouldn't be willing to then start suggesting there really aren't important physical differences that can be chararacterized as being less advantageous just because that position loses credibility in not recognizing certain truth. — Hanover
baker
To be clear: You promote the adversarial approach to human interaction. How do you reconcile this with your idea of a person having "infinite worth"?In any event, I draw a rigid distinction between ability and worth, with infinite worth taken as a given, undiminishable and not measurable by ability. That is, to suggest the worth of the deaf person has increased when he has been given the ability to hear is offensive. His worth is not to be measured in terms of the things he can do. — Hanover
AmadeusD
All of this implies the disabilities we are referencing don't affect one's ability to give consent. Intellectual and psychiatric disabilities raise entirely different questions. — Hanover
So survival of the fittest? — frank
Banno
I'll move my response here, since it fits in better with the discussion of disability than of "normal".I took your concern to be disability ought be considered an interplay of person upon environment, focusing more upon the deficiencies in the environment than the person. Under this model, we view the environment needing modification and correcting, leaving challenges to dignity of the person undisturbed. This requires we recalibrate the conceptual, pointing to the deficient environment, not the person. — Hanover
All of these misuses occur in the medical model of disability.Austin would highlight several philosophical temptations:
Reification — Treating “the normal” as a property things have, rather than a judgement relative to a practice.
Illicit normativity — Smuggling ought into is under cover of medical or statistical language.
False objectivity — Speaking as though “normal” names a natural kind rather than a shifting standard.
Category drift — Moving from “statistically normal” to “functionally proper” to “morally acceptable” without noticing the slide. — Banno
AmadeusD
All of these misuses occur in the medical model of disability. — Banno
frank
So survival of the fittest?
— frank
Bit of a black-white fallacy I think. I'm pressing against survival of the least fit as a mode - not suggesting we do the Nazi thing. But I think it patently odd (and probably a bad thing, overall) that we train our best and brightest to put themselves in harm's way (well, 60 years ago this would hit a lot harder) and do our absolute best to pour resources into retaining the worst(you really need to read this word in context and not ascribe some mora position to me because of an emotional reaction here of us, in terms of species-level survival and progress. There is almost no way that doesn't leave a bad taste in mouths - but it seems obvious. — AmadeusD
Jeremy Murray
A counterpoint to consider. I met a gentleman who was deaf from birth, now in his middle years. His parent refused to provide any remediation, including contact with other deaf people, in the belief that this would build his ability to adapt to "normal" hearing society and so position him well for a good life. However the result was that although he could not fit in well with the hearing, he also could not fit in with the deaf community, and so found himself isolated. — Banno
Internal coherence is not sufficient for social or communicative normality in the practical sense that matters for care, welfare, and interpersonal life. — Banno
There are situations that do not have an unambiguously clear response, situations in which we cannot know hat it is best to do and must muddle through. — Banno
I'll point again to the study that showed a multiplier effect of 2.25 for the NDIS scheme. Having folk with disabilities, indeed all folk, participate as fully as there capabilities will permit has a benefit to us all, even in dry economic terms. — Banno
Hanover
All of these misuses occur in the medical model of disability. — Banno
The response from Hegelians is the ongoing dialectic. But all this amounts to is our acknowledging that our responses are never compete, that the task and the discussion are ongoing. — Banno
bert1
The term "neuro-divergent" is a word that has become euphamistic for autistic, and so despite it being a euphamism, it has picked up a connotation of someone who thinks differently in a way that challenges them socially. — Hanover
bert1
This just points out the difficulty in creating language truly intended to be neutral. — Hanover
Hanover
I don't think it's a euphemism exactly, although maybe some use it that way. It's supposed to be a broader category than autism, to include ADHD, dyslexia, hyperlexia, savantism etc. — bert1
I guess the issue is that the word "normal" is not normatively neutral, but it designates someone who is appropriate in some respect.But it's hard to think of medical concept of disability that is normatively neutral. If you just define 'disability' as statistical outliers without making a judgement, then gingers are disabled. — bert1
bert1
But all of those conditions refer to conditions that are generally thought of disadvantageous — Hanover
I guess the issue is that the word "normal" is not normatively neutral, but it designates someone who is appropriate in some respect. — Hanover
AmadeusD
bert1
I can't quite understand the question - having red hair is not an ability-related trait. — AmadeusD
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