No we cannot. And the reason for this is, all of us do not have the moral entitlement to live. None!Can we morally justify sacrificing people for the greater good, especially if it is a huge sacrifice (like getting tortured constantly)? — Bob Ross
Yes. Nicomachean ethics. Virtue ethics. Because we don't waste our time debating about its being objective or its being relative.What normative ethical theory do you subscribe to? A form of deontology, perhaps virtue ethics? — Bob Ross
NO: one cannot torture a child nor kill a child even if it saves the entire human species. — Bob Ross
I merely created a thought experiment taking this to its extreme: what if, right now, we had to perpetually torture a child (and I will let you use your imagination on what exactly is done to them) to prevent the immediate annihilation of the entire human species — Bob Ross
Even if you meant that in at least one scenario the child would be safe, one may wonder: how would a child even live and evolve as a psychologically and biologically sound human being if the rest of humanity would be immediately annihilated?
if we must choose, would it be permissible to have child X to be safe at the expense of the rest of the human species to be immediately annihilated?
Because if neither killing/torturing a child is permissible even when the rest of humanity would be safe, nor having the rest of humanity safe at the expense of killing/torturing a child, and we must choose anyways (why exactly?)
what lesson do you wish to draw from this hypothetical predicament?
I do wonder: what’s even the point of moral reasoning over thought experiments designed to fail in guiding choice and action exactly?
let’s imagine that that child X whom nobody is permitted to sacrifice, is somebody who will soon develop a torturing mortal disease for natural causes and die atrociously even if the rest of the human species was immediately annihilated to save the child, or that the child a psychopathic which enjoys torturing living creatures before killing them for the rest of his life or a Hitler on steroids which will torture and exterminate the entire human species anyways and repeatedly if he only had the chance. What would be morally legitimate to do?
What if the lesson we draw from the thought experiment varies remarkably depending on how the thought experiment is construed?
The problem is not much that there is a moral rule (where?!) that says “do not torture or kill any child ever for whatever reason” but more why would we be committed to such rule exactly? Saying because it is moral, it would shift the problem: how did this rule get the label “moral” in the first place? What is there in claiming “morality” that would me make me feel (?!) or taken (?!) to be committed to it or compelled BY DEFAULT and without consulting me first? And if it is not that what is implied, what else is exactly?
Neither deontology nor consequentialism seem to fully match our intuitions, since you can construct cases where either violate them. An approach that somehow combines both would probably be needed. I think I lean towards consequentialism, while acknowledging there are cases it cannot account for.
In unnatural situations like this one, which our intuitions weren't designed for, things are bound to fall apart.
My own intuition says, torture the child, since it doesn't really distinguish between that and killing them. Would you agree to kill the child?
Why a child? What if it were middle aged, or elderly?
What problems can you construct for deontology? — Bob Ross
It isn’t that unnatural, and that’s why “The One’s Who Walk Away from Omelas” is such a good, quick read. Enslaving 1% of the population would increase the well-being of the 99% (if we presuppose specifically utilitarianism), wouldn’t it? Etc. — Bob Ross
Nope. Seems like we shouldn’t violate that child’s rights to me. — Bob Ross
Interesting. What problems can you construct for deontology? I lean much more towards that than consequentialism. — Bob Ross
Would you lie to the Gestapo about Jews hiding in your house?
But what of the rights of everyone else? Are you not maximally violating the rights of every person on earth, by making the decision to preserve the child?
Consequentialism comes in a very wide variety of forms: from “the proof is in the pudding” type mentality that can be used as evidence that might makes right (with its associated potential atrocities) to notions such as that of karma (which at base is about cause and consequence).
Of what good is deontology if it doesn’t produce good results, i.e. good consequences? If no satisfactory answer can be given to this question other than that of affirming it to be good on account of its good consequences, then deontology (as can then be likewise said of virtue ethics and so forth) will itself be a form of consequentialism broadly defined.
At this juncture, I’ll simply object to its supposition of necessity
: I don’t see how this is incompatible with deontology, although certainly incompatible with Kantianism — Bob Ross
There’s a difference between violating someone’s rights (which requires active participation therein) and letting someone’s rights get violated (which is an inactive, passive, allowing of it to happen). In the latter, one is not morally blameworthy; whereas in the former they are. — Bob Ross
Good is measured in deontology by intentions towards one’s duties and not the consequences they bring about. — Bob Ross
Here is Book II:I don't quite follow: doesn't Aristotle believe that the good is objective? — Bob Ross
He is not arguing for a universal, objective right reason.Since then the object of the present treatise is not mere speculation, as it is of some others (for we are enquiring not merely that we may know what virtue is but that we may become virtuous, else it would have been useless), we must consider as to the particular actions how we are to do them, because, as we have just said, the quality of the habits that shall be formed depends on these.
Now, that we are to act in accordance with Right Reason is a general maxim, and may for the present be taken for granted: we will speak of it hereafter, and say both what Right Reason is, and what are its relations to the other virtues.[4]
But let this point be first thoroughly understood between us, that all which can be said on moral action must be said in outline, as it were, and not exactly: for as we remarked at the commencement, such reasoning only must be required as the nature of the subject-matter admits of, and matters of moral action and expediency have no fixedness any more than matters of health. And if the subject in its general maxims is such, still less in its application to particular cases is exactness attainable:[5] because these fall not under any art or system of rules, but it must be left in each instance to the individual agents to look to the exigencies of the particular case, as it is in the art of healing, or that of navigating a ship. Still, though the present subject is confessedly such, we must try and do what we can for it.
Okay, good exegesis!So, there’s a certain moral perfection to a society where no-one goes astray, where there is no crime, people cooperate fully etc., but the emptiness of this social morality is highlighted by the cost necessary to achieve it. — Baden
IMO, that's instrumental reasoning (re: things, i.e. means-to-ends) and not moral reasoning (re: persons, i.e. ends-in-themselves) which I'd sketched out in this old post mentioning Le Guin's "Omelas":Can we morally justify sacrificing people for the greater good, especially if it is a huge sacrifice (like getting tortured constantly)? — Bob Ross
It could be the case that no one is morally justified in sacrificing that child and that the child would have, if they were the sole survivor, no feasible living arrangement afterwards.
Perhaps this factors into your moral reasoning though: to you, does that reason count in favor of potentially sacrificing the child? I don’t believe so. — Bob Ross
That child nor I can use other people as a means to and end, even if that end is saving other people. I cannot throw you into a moving car to stop it from running over my child. — Bob Ross
if we must choose, would it be permissible to have child X to be safe at the expense of the rest of the human species to be immediately annihilated?
My answer would also be no. — Bob Ross
You have the choice to refrain from actively violating someone’s rights in both scenarios: what you don’t have control over is the predestined stipulations of the thought-experiment. You can say no and simply not be morally blameworthy for the annihilation of the human species (by my lights). — Bob Ross
what lesson do you wish to draw from this hypothetical predicament?
Is consequentialist normative ethical theories valid in any scenario? That’s the question. — Bob Ross
you cannot violate that child’s rights, period. Doesn’t make baby hitler right in doing atrocities later in life, but we cannot violate peoples rights period; especially over ‘forseeable’ consequences of their existence (which I find really unreliable, but that’s irrelevant to my main point). — Bob Ross
Metaethically, I would say there aren’t any moral facts. With respect to normative ethics, I would say we must treat persons with respect as objects of intrinsic respect. Admittedly, I am still working out the details. — Bob Ross
currently illegal jobs like prostitution, selling organs, dealing drugs. — neomac
Correct. — Patterner
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