Utilitarianism has a lot of problems, and has been exposed as an inadequate moral theory — LD Saunders
Well the fat man was just about to produce such a calculus, the benefit of which would have been incalculable, but some short-sighted consequentialist pushed him in front of a trolley. — unenlightened
The calculus must fail, and one ought to walk away from Omelas. — unenlightened
Is it a price worth paying? — unenlightened
one person will be deprived of all this and live in misery and squalor, and this miserable life is the essential learning tool through which everyone else's wonderful life is sustained. — unenlightened
Yes, though, this leads to the crude understanding that utilitarianism is a hedonic philosophy, which isn't necessarily true. — Posty McPostface
in that case, the suffering of the child will cause the suffering of everyone else in society as it is emotionally and ethically unappealing and this will be reflected in the calculus making that system unviable. — khaled
most people will regretfully accept the suffering of one, for the benefit of many — unenlightened
So in the end, the unjust suffering of one person, if known to everyone, will be reflected in the calculus as an unviable system due to the staunch disagreement of a few. — khaled
On the other hand pleasure can be attached to dubious things like overeating and causing obesity and heart disease and even Nazis and slave owners experienced pleasure. — Andrew4Handel
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