I am curious to know everyone's thoughts on a few things, particularly around the ethics and moral discussion. — Cobra
I am essentially asking if the elements of ones past and history where they have demonstrated to be indifferent, or at least, disinterested in preserving the well-being of others, should be taken into account when giving someone an organ transplant, that may prolong their life further, when there are demonstrably better candidates to pick, but may not be "next in line". — Cobra
Let's assume that the two people are equal medical-wise, meaning they're both good candidates for the transplant. But the first person had a dark past, he hurt another individual, the second person is a law-abiding citizen. The first person is next in line, so he gets the transplant.I am essentially asking if the elements of ones past and history where they have demonstrated to be indifferent, or at least, disinterested in preserving the well-being of others, should be taken into account when giving someone an organ transplant, that may prolong their life further, when there are demonstrably better candidates to pick, but may not be "next in line". — Cobra
The victim's mother came forward, and made an argument that this man should not have received the transplanted heart. He did not deserve it. — Cobra
rationing if necessary should be decided on who is likely to have the most benefit. That is a hard enough calculation on its own without bringing in moral judgements. — unenlightened
But look at the bigger picture, expand your horizon -- what if this happens in another situation where you are involved, or your loved ones are involved. — Caldwell
hey aren't supposed to be equivalent people. — Cobra
Just use your own definition or something. — Cobra
Sorry to know about it. But good for you for having the wisdom.I have a brother in Prison for truly horrific reasons I won't mention, with a history of recidivism. Having grown up witness to him, I am comfortable saying he is exactly where he belongs. He is actually what inspired me to go to law school. I doubt he cares about preserving lives, or mine for that matter. — Cobra
It's not the people whom I called non-equivalent. It's the questions.
1. You asked to make a moral judgment.
2. Then you said that that is not the question.
All I ask, read it carefully, please: Define morality for me, and then we can make a moral judgment. Tell me what is moral in its essence. — god must be atheist
I don't have that definition. I doubt that you do, or that anyone else does. — god must be atheist
The big deal is that you asked a question that is impossible to answer. Why ask questions that are impossible to answer? talking about them won't answer them. No way you can answer them. So what's the point of asking questions that are impossible to answer? This is a rhetorical question, this last one, not something I expect an answer to.What's the big deal? — Cobra
What's the big deal? — Cobra
The big deal is that you asked a question that is impossible to answer. Why ask questions that are impossible to answer? talking about them won't answer them. No way you can answer them. So what's the point of asking questions that are impossible to answer? This is a rhetorical question, this last one, not something I expect an answer to. — god must be atheist
So you're having some kind of personal issue with answering the question, what do you want me to do about it? — Cobra
This is what I wish you will do about it: define morality. By providing positive, inclusive, and sufficiently delineating parameters.
It may be diversified, open-ended, hypothetical and imaginative, but completely meaningless. Talking about a topic from a point of view that nobody knows what it is, by way of a lack of an agreed or even approximate definition, is meaningless. — god must be atheist
and those that have gave definitions, — Cobra
I am showing you that the entire discussion is meaningless. — god must be atheist
Would it then be in our best interest to choose the latter man, over the former to receive a new heart? — Cobra
I am curious to know everyone's thoughts on a few things, particularly around the ethics and moral discussion.
Ex; 1 - There are two men. One man has committed not only a series of heinous homicides in terms of breaking the law, but has also effectively taken multiple lives of numerous moral agents without remorse or justification. The second man, has no such background. Instead, he goes to work, comes home, attends to his community with a series of good deeds, and feeds his family. The only important commonalities are both need a new heart, and there is only one.
Did the above woman, removing all reactionary emotions and logical inconsistency, make an interesting point to consider?
1. Would it then be in our best interest to choose the latter man, over the former to receive a new heart? And if not, if the decision is simply to be random, and the former man receives the heart, and the man has a complex and patterned negative behavior history and recidivism, where as the former has the same, but positive, and the decision turns out to be more harmful than the previous selection, to whom does this speak to?
Should these then be elements be taken into account, when selecting recipients of organ transplants? — Cobra
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