Agent Smith
a) the hypothetical consent is informed and not a product of ignorance; — Bartricks
b) the actual informed consent is not practically possible; — Bartricks
c) when not doing X to Rachel would either result in her being harmed, or deprived of a significant benefit; — Bartricks
d) when the hypothetical consent can be considered to be present prior to the performance of the act. — Bartricks
Bartricks
Problemo! If Rachel has a different set of values, you wouldn't be able to give/withhold consent on her behalf. One man's meat is another man's poison. — Agent Smith
Agent Smith
sometimes it won't be easy to tell if c is satisfied. — Bartricks
Agent Smith
Bartricks
Agent Smith
I repeat: not knowing whether C is satisfied or not is not evidence that C is false.
We ought not to hurt another, other things being equal. But sometimes we can't tell whether doing X will hurt another or not. By your wonky lights that's evidence that it is false that we ought not to hurt another. — Bartricks
Existential Hope
Agent Smith
Bartricks
You're contradicting yourself. — Agent Smith
First you affirm it isn't (always) possible to know what someone wants and then, second you deny that very position by averring that hypothetical consent is permissible. — Agent Smith
Bartricks
Existential Hope
Agent Smith
Existential Hope
Agent Smith
Similar to how hypothetical dissent could be possible, provided that clear signs of interests in an alternative state of affairs are present ;) — DA671
Existential Hope
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.