Ian Montgomerie's Utilitarian Faq probably covers the most objections.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
How can anyone be a Utilitarian?
Collapse
X
-
"Spirit merges with matter to sanctify the universe. Matter transcends to return to spirit. The interchangeability of matter and spirit means the starlit magic of the outermost life of our universe becomes the soul-light magic of the innermost life of our self." - Dennis Kucinich, candidate for the U. S. presidency
"That’s the future of the Democratic Party: providing Republicans with a number of cute (but not that bright) comfort women." - Adam Yoshida, Canada's gift to the world
-
Originally posted by Velociryx
Sure it would increase. It would increase a lot more if EVERYONE hated him, but if he had no friends, and everybody who knew him was ambivalent about it, then it'd increase on the basis of my happiness increase--well, and for the person I split the money with. (for everybody who was neutral, it'd be a "push")
-=Vel=-
Comment
-
Originally posted by Velociryx
Sure it would increase. It would increase a lot more if EVERYONE hated him, but if he had no friends, and everybody who knew him was ambivalent about it, then it'd increase on the basis of my happiness increase--well, and for the person I split the money with. (for everybody who was neutral, it'd be a "push")
-=Vel=-
Comment
-
Exactly, if that dying person hated themselves, along with everyone else, it could well be good. For instance, assisted suicide could be argued as being Utilitarian.Smile
For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next
But he would think of something
"Hm. I suppose I should get my waffle a santa hat." - Kuciwalker
Comment
-
I'm not forgetting the dying person. I counted his - in happiness, but it was offset by my +, and by the + of the person I split the money with.
-=Vel=-
Comment
-
*says to self* "Don't start Ben, don't start"
I believe that Utility has a point and a value, but then as it concerns the "pleasure" or the "good" of one person, multiplied by the number of persons in society, minus one (the person that suffers, or number of people), then it also has a limit.
I believe, as a relativist and a libertarian, that this point is the Mill Limit. This says that one can do anything but inhibit the rights of another to do the same. I also don't see that utilitarianism is the best model for a society (despite the name "Mill Limit"
Who is society to determine that though the act of making one suffer (or in this case, breach the Mill Limit, I'll ignore the obvious slippery slope implications too), in order to increase the happiness of millions? Fundamentally, it comes down to one subjective forcing its will onto an equally valid subjective, and as the relativist argument goes, that is unsatisfactory.
Drogue is familiar with my argument about psuedo-objectivity, and thus I wont waste words repeating what he will refute, also my argument is not dependant on that, but in the lack of some means of judging between the two subjectives, the utilitarian society and the one who would suffer, the act of forcing one equally valid subjective onto anothers "molehill" (figuratively speaking), would require a degree of absolutist thought among the utilitarianists, which as has been generally established, but I would be happy to do so upon request, as being a fundamentally flawed argument.
Wow, linking total utilitarianism with the existence of god. I'm on a roll tonight
"I work in IT so I'd be buggered without a computer" - Words of wisdom from Provost Harrison
"You can be wrong AND jewish" - Wiglaf :love:
Comment
-
Vel: It also depends how big the +s and -s are, nut just the number. Dying is a big -, whereas money is a much smaller +, in most cases. It may take millions of small +s to make one big -, if you do it like that.Smile
For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next
But he would think of something
"Hm. I suppose I should get my waffle a santa hat." - Kuciwalker
Comment
-
What about this?
You are a time-traveller from the future and you meet one man (lets call him Jim) whose Great-grandchild will one day commit a crime where 1000 innocent people die.
You meet him before he encountered the woman with whom he had his children (an event which eventually led to the birth of his Great-Grandchild who commited the crime).
You know that by killing Jim the timeline wouldn´t be altered very much (at least till the time where you come from) but the crime would be prevented.
You also don´t have the chance to travel to any time later with the intention kill Jims Son, or grandchildren or the Great-Grandchildren himself, so your only chance to prevent the crime would be to kill Jim.
So would you, as an utiliarian, kill Jim, despite he is absolutely innocent and is liked by many people of his time?Tamsin (Lost Girl): "I am the Harbinger of Death. I arrive on winds of blessed air. Air that you no longer deserve."
Tamsin (Lost Girl): "He has fallen in battle and I must take him to the Einherjar in Valhalla"
Comment
-
Drogue: So who can say what the value of a human life is? That seems to be a rather difficult thing to nail down, yes?
Further, it has already been put forth that it's "okay" in terms of aggregate happiness to sacrifice one man for a thousand (or more), but as we cannot peer into the future, would it still be okay if the man killed would have gone on to find and develop cures for the top ten diseases plaguing the world?
Utilitiarianism is a hollow shell. We humans only just barely understand the world around us, and this strikes me as a clumsy attempt at value assignment to justify whatever acts or actions one desires.
Until we can see into the future, we have no real means of judging the value of human life. At best, we can wildly speculate.
-=Vel=-
Comment
-
Ok, this would have the great answer of "it depends". You would have to know all the consequences to be able to decide properly, and weigh up pros against cons. Moreover, Time Travel is impossible, and even if it were possible, why could you travel tom one time and not another, slightly closer to home?
However, if it is a case of 1 innocent death vs 1000 innocent deaths, and by doing nothing the 1000 die, as I think you are trying to imply, then yes, I would choose the 1 death. If the consequences of killing him are better than the consequences of not killing him then it is a partly Utlitarian action. If the consequences of killing him are the best possible, then it is what a Utilitarian would do. However you ahve to make allowances for the fact that different people want different things, therefore not all Utilitarians want the same thing, since some believe more happiness is got from a different set of consequences.Smile
For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next
But he would think of something
"Hm. I suppose I should get my waffle a santa hat." - Kuciwalker
Comment
-
With time travel, the grandfather paradox is a four dimensional attempted solution that went horribly wrong, to a five dimensional problem, which is what happens when you mess about with time, you have to add another temporal constant, that being the fifth dimension. In that sense, the problem looks rather like the sum over histories, with the change in time branching off into a "parallel universe" of sorts, which the original now appearing curved to the news straight, and the original can carry on in the absense of the traveller.
Drogue, you are arguing beyond the Mill Limit, and thus for an absolute utilitarian system. However, that is an absolutist system, as subjective as those it would kill, and has no logically validity in doing so, as the logic used to back up its own desire to kill is as subjective as itself, and does not transfer across to the person who would be killed. Again, that falls down to the issue of "one can, thus one shall", and I dont believe that should be the case for any society. The barrier, the point where relativism should kick in over ones own utilitarian desires (and no-one is arguing against those desires, only whether they should be implimented in a util. society), I would argue would be the Mill Limit, although any other point of limit to societies powers would of course be applicable."I work in IT so I'd be buggered without a computer" - Words of wisdom from Provost Harrison
"You can be wrong AND jewish" - Wiglaf :love:
Comment
-
Vel: The value of a human life is a human life, IMHO.
would it still be okay if the man killed would have gone on to find and develop cures for the top ten diseases plaguing the world?
We humans only just barely understand the world around us, and this strikes me as a clumsy attempt at value assignment to justify whatever acts or actions one desires.
Until we can see into the future, we have no real means of judging the value of human life. At best, we can wildly speculateSmile
For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next
But he would think of something
"Hm. I suppose I should get my waffle a santa hat." - Kuciwalker
Comment
-
Originally posted by elijah
Drogue, you are arguing beyond the Mill Limit, and thus for an absolute utilitarian system.
I am not saying what is best for everyone, I am saying the framework I use for deciding what is best. I am assuming that different people want different things, which they do. Therefore just because I am a Utilitarian, does not mean I am for or against any particular action. It just means I want to maximise total happiness/utility.Smile
For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next
But he would think of something
"Hm. I suppose I should get my waffle a santa hat." - Kuciwalker
Comment
-
No. Utilitarianism involves us knowing all the consequencesjk
"I work in IT so I'd be buggered without a computer" - Words of wisdom from Provost Harrison
"You can be wrong AND jewish" - Wiglaf :love:
Comment
Comment