You mean the question of the quality of someone's life can be settled by empirical facts about them?I think you can validly challenge someone about the quality of life and their quality of life on an empirical basis. — Andrew4Handel
How about an alternative where we cannot quantify the quality of everyone's life?The alternative where someone is always right about the quality of life means you cannot differentiate between quality of life and is a subjective nihilism, where the individual is always right about their interpretation of the external world. — Andrew4Handel
Aren't you arguing form particular to the general here? What is your justification for the case that we can make an empirical judgement about all the quality of life issues, and not just the cases where people are in deep suffering?The ad absurdum is that a child dying of malnutrition in a war torn slum could claim to have a good quality of life. But if you accept this would be an absurd claim then there is some objective standard. Also examples are such as the Holocaust, famine in general, mental illness and cancer. — Andrew4Handel
What about the quality of lives that people are happy? Without mention to happiness, your thesis leads, at best, to a negative utilitarian calculation.So once you accept somethings are highly undesirable you can start an empirical utilitarian calculation about the quality of life. — Andrew4Handel
The alternative where someone is always right about the quality of life means you cannot differentiate between quality of life and is a subjective nihilism, where the individual is always right about their interpretation of the external world. — Andrew4Handel
When we're talking about quality (of life), value, etc., we're talking about someone's personal assessment, how they happen to feel towards something. There's nothing to match or fail to match. — Terrapin Station
Facts about a disease they have, or level of injury, facts about societal inequality. — Andrew4Handel
Sometimes people feelings are based on inaccurate beliefs.
What I think is nihilism is the idea that someone who feels that something like child abuse is acceptable cannot be challenged by external facts.
Aren't you arguing from particular to the general here? What is your justification for the case that we can make an empirical judgement about all the quality of life issues, and not just the cases where people are in deep suffering? — Purple Pond
Sure, no argument there, but those things just aren't the same thing as their assessment of their quality of life. — Terrapin Station
What about the quality of lives that people are happy? Without mention to happiness, your thesis leads, at best, to a negative utilitarian calculation. — Purple Pond
I am not convinced quality of life is based on how someone feels. People can be happy whilst suffering. They don't believe they have a great quality of life but they have found some things to be happy about. So I don't think feeling happy means you have a good quality of life or that you believe that you have a good quality of life. — Andrew4Handel
It is hard to find a framework to judge quality of life and value of life — Andrew4Handel
We could simply ask people and then report the results — Terrapin Station
Here is one of the first definitions of "Quality" that I found: "the standard of something as measured against other things of a similar kind" So this to me implies an objective standard something being a measured against as opposed an opinion. — Andrew4Handel
What would you say is the process for establishing an objective standard? — Terrapin Station
In that definition it says to be measured against other things of a similar kind.
So it would probably involve comparing states of being. So If you live in poverty you know there is a better state of being you are not in and compare badly to. — Andrew4Handel
Maybe they even think it's better to live in poverty — Terrapin Station
I think the likelihood of people enjoying a situation is fairly objective. — Andrew4Handel
The problem is this: what does that fact have to do with whether someone can get their quality of life wrong? — Terrapin Station
If statistics and other external facts go against someone having a good quality of life yet they believe they have then that raises questions about their judgement. — Andrew4Handel
Something subjective can still be wrong. For example illusions such as where one line seems longer than another or when a bush looks like a cow in the night. — Andrew4Handel
But what would anyone be matching or failing to match re quality of life assessments? — Terrapin Station
You'd have to believe that people should feel the same way, should make the same assessments, as most other people. But what would be the argument for that? — Terrapin Station
As I mentioned with the just world fallacy they have false beliefs about the external world so they the emotions they feel are being generated by falsehoods. For example someone might feel happy because they believe poverty has decreased then you can hypothetically show them statistics that refute this belief showing that their feelings had a false basis. — Andrew4Handel
I don't think one person claims about their quality of life is relevant in the wider picture of society per se when you are making a calculation about the average desirability of life. — Andrew4Handel
You're trying to claim that the quality of life assessment can be objective. — Terrapin Station
If you are a building a society you are going to try and build it considering the physical facts concerning what harms people. — Andrew4Handel
I don't accept that quality of life simply reduces to how someone feels about their situation at a given moment. — Andrew4Handel
there are objective facts about things that are likely to increase someones well being. — Andrew4Handel
Which has to be about how they feel about things, — Terrapin Station
What physical benefits someone is not about what they feel. — Andrew4Handel
Although I think how they feel still relates to objective circumstance. — Andrew4Handel
No state is objectively preferred to any other state. — Terrapin Station
But some physical states are functional and relied upon to keep a human body alive. No one could flourish in an environment that was lethal to the human body. — Andrew4Handel
Before anyone can express a desire about their life they need to have come to exist and survived in an environment conducive to human well being. — Andrew4Handel
Sure. But that doesn't make any state objectively preferable. — Terrapin Station
The fact that someone can only express a desire after their body has reached a certain level of functionality means that there is a certain necessary level of functionality required to even have this debate and make judgments, so these are things we are subservient to. — Andrew4Handel
I see no reason to assume someone is right when they make a claim about their quality of life. — Andrew4Handel
I have given reasons why they could be wrong such as having false beliefs. — Andrew4Handel
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.