It is relevant for making causal explanations and predictions. — Andrew4Handel
But you can't realistically say it is not harmful to stab someone. — Andrew4Handel
Quality of life is their spouse cheating on them. The assessment does not equal the quality of life. Quality of life is someone living in poverty not how they feel about it. — Andrew4Handel
You can't say that it doesn't have the particular physical effects it does, but those facts imply nothing about any value judgments. So we'd need to cleave using "harm" with a value judgment connotation (which it usually has) from using "harm" to refer to a set of objective physical facts that we're arbitrarily setting off from other physical facts. You're wanting to conflate the two. — Terrapin Station
If someone is a pain you don't need to invoke a magic value judgement to assess that situation. There is no magic leap between assessing someone is injured, depressed or in poverty to the claim they have a poor quality of life. — 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. There's only something to report--the person's assessment or how they feel. It's not a matter of right or wrong. It just tells us something about that person, something about their dispositions, their preferences, their tastes. — Terrapin Station
This is simply not true. — Andrew4Handel
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