I think it is important for companies and governments to do this, despite it seeming unsettling. If someone cannot afford a medical treatment, is society/everyone willing to pay for it? What if it isn't a life saving treatment, but one that will enhance their life or make it happier, or potentially extend it? — Paulm12
But life itself is not tradable — Cuthbert
Can we put a monetary value on the life of an individual? — Benj96
Life can be traded through our actions — Benj96
Trading my own life is not possible. I can't exchange my life for anything. Being dead puts me beyond the possibility of taking anything in exchange. — Cuthbert
Are you a businessman? It's them mainly who are valuing people on a monetary basis. They have to. Entrepreneurs have to pay money for their employees and they expect that they would get back some money as a result of their production. No one would like to keep an unproductive employee in his business. Also they usually pay more money, offer bonuses, commissions, etc. to the most productive ones --although this not always the case.Can we put a monetary value on the life of an individual? — Benj96
Yes, for instance at a slave auction.Can we put a monetary value on the life of an individual? — Benj96
Given the comparative scarcity of the productive, or desired, attributes on offer, setting a "value" – price – depends on what the slave market will bear.Are some individuals more valuable than others in this respect?
Slaves^^ are individuals (by force or with consent) treated – used – by others as mere means-to-ends (pace Kant).And is that moral?
Can we put a monetary value on the life of an individual? — Benj96
Slaves^^ are individuals (by force or with consent) treated – used – by others as mere means-to-ends (pace Kant). — 180 Proof
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