Originally posted by Azazel
It's simple multiplication: Even if we use the binary system, where unhappy people equal zero, and happy people equal 1, there is much more utility in a group of 500 people with 50% of them happy, than in a group of 200 people with 100% of them happy.
And this gets a whole lot more complex.
It's simple multiplication: Even if we use the binary system, where unhappy people equal zero, and happy people equal 1, there is much more utility in a group of 500 people with 50% of them happy, than in a group of 200 people with 100% of them happy.
And this gets a whole lot more complex.
So it can be utilitarian to make a proportionately larger number of people unhappy? I thought the idea was to sacrifice the few for the greater whole, not sacrifice the greater whole for the few.
To use your example above; You have society of 200 happy people. As they reproduce, their population reaches 300, but only half of them are happy now. That means the addition of the three hunred new people into their society resulted in 50 more happy people than there was before, and 250 more unhappy people.
That seems to go against everything utilitarianism stands for, from what I understand of it. Is a society where everyone is happy not preferable to a society where only half the people are happy?
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