What am I completely off base here and KH and Kuci don't think it worth their time to respond?
This is my problem. Let's say a particular human life is valued at $8 million. Now, in a slightly modified version of that original scenario, suppose this person is a vegetable or something and only possesses the intrinsic value and no instrumental value to society. If, by some scenario, this individual's death results, with no uncertainty, in $9 million of utility (defined by however), then, presumably, both of you would agree that the death of this person would be ethically correct, especially since KH said a machine can be more valuable than a human life.
My issue is that as soon as this situation is set up, you're making the value of the human life transferable (swapping the $8M life for the $9M in utility). Is inherent value transferable? How can it be? It seems to me that the moment that occurs, it can only be described as instrumental value as a human life was used/exchanged for a greater amount of utility.
Whether a human life starts out with inherent value does not change the fact that this utility calculus creates a situation in which human life is a means to an end and not an end in itself.
This is my problem. Let's say a particular human life is valued at $8 million. Now, in a slightly modified version of that original scenario, suppose this person is a vegetable or something and only possesses the intrinsic value and no instrumental value to society. If, by some scenario, this individual's death results, with no uncertainty, in $9 million of utility (defined by however), then, presumably, both of you would agree that the death of this person would be ethically correct, especially since KH said a machine can be more valuable than a human life.
My issue is that as soon as this situation is set up, you're making the value of the human life transferable (swapping the $8M life for the $9M in utility). Is inherent value transferable? How can it be? It seems to me that the moment that occurs, it can only be described as instrumental value as a human life was used/exchanged for a greater amount of utility.
Whether a human life starts out with inherent value does not change the fact that this utility calculus creates a situation in which human life is a means to an end and not an end in itself.
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