How does a newborn come into the world with values and principles? — NOS4A2
And even so, does it matter if the subject in question has certain values at all? If we accept the principles mentioned, it seems that the newborn can still be "violated" regardless of the future values it may accept as an adult. The retroactive application of values unnecessarily convolutes the argument. — finarfin
Once an individual is born, they are immediately part of a society that may not fully align with their values and principles, and they may have to make compromises and trade-offs to survive and succeed in that society.
I cannot just accept the first assertion and move on. I need to know if the principles and values were acquired later in life, through life, long after the fact of being born. — NOS4A2
So no, it isn’t true that “Once an individual is born, they are immediately part of a society that may not fully align with their values and principles, and they may have to make compromises and trade-offs to survive and succeed in that society”. The very first assertion…at this point I could care less what follows. — NOS4A2
In a world where violation is inevitable upon being born, a minimum standard of living is the only way to ameliorate the harm caused by this compromise. Social programs offer this minimum standard of living... — schopenhauer1
Is that true, though?
As a basic humanistic starting point, I like to believe every person deserves a healthy mind and a healthy body. — Tzeentch
Are states really able to offer these things? — Tzeentch
Which part? — schopenhauer1
Because I struggle to think of ways states contribute to people's healthy bodies and healthy minds.
The best case could perhaps be made for modern medicine, but honestly I think the state as a whole does about as much to cause problems as it does to solve them. — Tzeentch
Can one truly afford to answer such questions after the fact and still consider oneself ethical? — Tzeentch
Can one truly afford to answer such questions after the fact and still consider oneself ethical? — Tzeentch
Not sure what you mean. — schopenhauer1
How is something like universal healthcare bad for the populace, necessarily? — schopenhauer1
It'd be like a doctor experimenting on his patients. — Tzeentch
Modern medicine is probably one of the better things states provide — Tzeentch
Further, if we accept this healthy body/healthy mind minimum, the actions of the state that pertain to those things are not limited to medicine. — Tzeentch
What it boils down to is that states don't have the will nor capacity to genuinely pursue the healthy bodies and minds of their citizens, which is why I don't believe we should look for states to do such things.
And to circle back to the ethical nature of the OP, if the state can't do a damn good job, there's no way it can justify the costs it imposes on people. — Tzeentch
The way you're framing it, it also sounds an awful lot like collective punishment, in which people are punished for crimes (or moral slights) they did not commit. — Tzeentch
I posit that an individual forcing someone into existence, while a personal ethic, is also committing a political action because they are force "endorsing" the child to become part of a larger social contract of the society simultaneously. — schopenhauer1
What about the people who do not have children, though? Perhaps I should have specified better, but this is the group that in my view is subjected to collective punishment, because they haven't done anything wrong and yet are forced to pay. — Tzeentch
No one will agree on any form. — schopenhauer1
Why not? Don't people voluntarily agree on ways to coexist all the time?
States just aren't a useful way of reaching such voluntarily agreements, because they're inherently predicated on coercion. This is also why I believe attempts to instrumentalize the state for ethical ends is a flawed endeavor. — Tzeentch
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