That risk is still greater than any risks from getting the vaccine, and so being vaccinated is better than being unvaccinated. — Michael
You not getting vaccinated doesn't mean that your vaccine gets to go to a diabetic slum dweller in India. It just means that your vaccine goes to waste. — Michael
So you're saying that you believe the vaccine is more dangerous than COVID? That's just flat-out false. — Michael
Sure you are. And if the reasons for a woman to have an abortion are irrational by your standards, should she not be allowed to have? — Tzeentch
If she is in the midst of a psychotic break and believes that the foetus is the spawn of Satan then I think there are reasons to prevent any rash decision that she may regret after treatment. — Michael
if they tell me that their foetus is the spawn of Satan and must be aborted I'm going to judge that their reason for having an abortion is irrational. — Michael
Irrelevant. We are not, in any other walk of life obliged to reduce our risks until they are as low as it is possible to make them. In all other walks of life the obligation is only to reduce your risk to an acceptable level. My risk of needing hospital treatment from covid infection is below the level we already find acceptable for many other lifestyle choices. Stopping eating bacon is a lower risk than eating bacon (even though it might cause you some sadness), yet there's no moral obligation to do so simply because the risk is lower than the alternative. — Isaac
That others who ought to act in a chain of events aren't doing their bit does not remove a moral obligation to do my bit. I free up the supply. If others are too lazy, greedy or stupid to do with that what's needed, then that's not something I have any control over. Not doing my bit doesn't help, it just encourages the situation to persist. In lowering the demand in my country I'm opening the possibility for redistribution, that's all I can do. If I don't buy extra food it doesn't go to the starving either, it goes in the bin, so should we no longer care about food waste?
I didn't make any claim of fact, so it can't be false. I said I don't trust them. It's my preference.
its risks are less than the risks of COVID. — Michael
The moral obligation comes from the fact that a) it's irrational to not get vaccinated and b) not being vaccinated increases the risk of harm to others. — Michael
Therefore "other people need the vaccine more" isn't a valid reason for refusing the vaccine, and so is an irrational reason. — Michael
The vaccine is safe and effective; its risks are less than the risks of COVID. — Michael
It's irrational to refuse the vaccine and being unvaccinated puts others at risk. Therefore you ought be vilified. — Michael
Would you deny a woman who is deemed irrational beyond a reasonable doubt her right to have an abortion? — Tzeentch
The result would be that a woman is forced to give birth against her will, or perhaps worse, attempt to terminate the pregnancy herself.
I honestly can't see how this can be acceptable, whether she is deemed irrational or not. — Tzeentch
It's simplistic, I know, but I believe everyday all of us face a choice between the Star Trek future and the Mad Max future — Srap Tasmaner
What people inject into their bodies is no business but their own. Whatever reasons they may have, no matter how illogical to outsiders, does not factor into whether they should have the right to make their own decision. To me, this discussion is as clear cut as abortion. — Tzeentch
It's not just your taking-up-a-bed that counts, but the fact that you also risk causing others to need a bed — Srap Tasmaner
A good example is a lifetime study of epidemiology.A good example is potatoes. — Isaac
No ones complained about a preference; it's the nonsense supporting it that is the issue. The question is regarding dissemination of reasoned positions for convincing the public it ought succumb to viral infection. Like I said weeks ago, simply stating "I rather not" is the pseudo responsible approach to this maelstrom of idiocy. No one needs justification for making that observation. It's the need to convince yourself by convincing others or in this case arguing to no foreseeable end that your decision though detrimental when applied broadly is the best course of action.Until then, I don't see a case for why my preferences (which I take seriously, and are both social welfare based, not personal gain based) need be sacrificed to achieve a risk threshold which is not demanded of others exercising far more trivial preferences. — Isaac
It's the need to convince yourself by convincing others or in this case arguing to no foreseeable end that your decision though detrimental when applied broadly is the best course of action. — Cheshire
Never had the chance to use 'daft' in a post and appreciate the opportunity. Notice the sign above the door to this particular room concerns anti-vaxxer as a position. So, the matter at hand is regarding the position, not philosophy in general. At any point you want to acknowledge this as a charade by all means. We all have lives, some less prone to viral infection, so if this is just entertainment it would be nice to know. Otherwise, I think this argument falls below even your standards.Arguing philosophical positions, such as ethical ones, is what we do here. Did you not notice the sign above the door? — Isaac
Notice the sign above the door to this particular room concerns anti-vaxxer as a position. — Cheshire
if this is just entertainment it would be nice to know. — Cheshire
Do you want to get at the truth of the matter or defend your argument? Because, it isn't clear what is a genuine position and what's a high degree of tactical mastery in arguing a position. The lack of a chorus of statistically trained analyst covering the anti-vaxx position; like finding flat earthers with physics degrees from places that exist makes the authenticity, well statistically questionable. Aside from your "Phd" survey. Which is just an odd thing to have on hand. I'm surprised academic professionals would provide an answer to an up or down question regarding vaccination.I don't see anything trivially entertaining about discussing ethics, no. I think it's very serious. There's some entertainment in poking the ants, but the subject matter is a serious one. — Isaac
The vaccines only give you antibodies for 7-8 months. Then you're unvaccinated again. — frank
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