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Oh, dear. How inventive (that's the best spin adjective I can put to your post w/o being moderated) a mind you must have. Wherever did you come up with that? Show me by using the quote facility where that notion came from me. I'll wait for you to do so or retract.You claimed that my lack of belief in God could justify my actions.
Your demand for a bright line is a distraction. Ive showed you why. And Ive showed you clearly how theres no evidence for an infinite value on human life. Thats plenty.? I thought I just brought that question up. Haven't got an answer yet.
Thanks, for bringing to light your real world example of how some of these principles play out. Its pretty harrowing to consider, and reminds me of just how detached many of us in civilianland are from the consequences of our demands.I keep mentioning being involved with military targeting because it was a real-world application of this problem.
When we got the execution order that kicked off the Persian Gulf War, I was immensely sad because I had spent many, many hours doing bomb damage assessment during the Vietnam War...seeing all those craters, all those craters in populated areas.
The genius bombs we used in the Persian Gulf War mitigated that to a great extent most of the time. But the dumb bombs dropped by B-52 aircraft were just as dumb in Iraq as they had been in Vietnam. There was that oil tank "farm" that was set as a B-52 target because it was so large...how could they miss? But that oil tank farm was just across the river from an apartment complex...and they did miss the tank farm and raked right over the apartment complex. I'm glad I didn't identify that target and especially didn't "weaponeer" it (the "weaponeer" is the person who decides what kind of weapon to use).
The Persian Gulf war added a feature for my role that had been missing from the Vietnam War: We got the "bomb camera" videos, and many times we could actually see the people who got killed in the moment before their deaths. I need to insert an expletive here to explain how that felt, particularly when it was me who identified that target. Even when I could be sure it was an enemy soldier, it was still a man who would have lived that day if I hadn't put a cross on that bunker.
Like the guy with the trolley switch in front of him, someone upstream started that disaster. My role was how to manage it. I had to operate under the belief that Swartzkopf's plan--perfectly executed--would end the war with the fewest casualties, and all I cold do was to target accurately to reduce civilian casualties. And I couldn't just step away, because my replacement might not care.
Perhaps. But perhaps not. Part of the 'value' of some thing/idea isn't all placed into simply one's ability to value some singular aspect of a thing in an all too general way. Human valuation is a multifacted human mental act; it's not always, and not necessarily, a singular one. Some aspects of the valuation process may be subjective, but some aspects may be objective.OK, you might see some value in the coaster. But it would be your subjective value. Which was the point I was making.
I always wonder what's up when other people begin to tell me what I'm thinking and why.And you are still implying that an objective 'good' is somehow related to the decisions of, if not all people, then at least a sizeable majority. A concept which I reject entirely. You are literally proposing in this post doing what I suggested you might be proposing in your last post: Voting on what is good. You are saying that 'Hey, if so many people say it's good (and I agree with them) then...it must be what we describe as an absolute good.'
In light of what I've said just above, I'm going to have to pass the bucket on this one and not put in my dollar bill.Is it not an absolute good if less then half think it is but then somehow becomes an absolute good if we have 99.9% agreeing on it? Is it an absolute good if almost everyone believes it to be so but you disagree completely?
Is that an objective conclusion on your part?It simply doesn't, and can't, work like that.
Trying to be clever? Reading the post in question in context discloses this feeble attempt at misrepresenting my position.Yes, you have. Consistently, all along
I guess that means I'm not going to get a finite numeric answer.Your demand for a bright line is a distraction. Ive showed you why. And Ive showed you clearly how theres no evidence for an infinite value on human life. Thats plenty.
Stairs are a great example. They are quite dangerous and lots more people die on them than you'd think....When you finally get to "walking down a staircase" as risky behavior, be sure and let me know your new finite number.
No, not at all. Car companies do the same calculation when deciding whether or not to have a recall for a known defect. The cost of the recall is measured against the value of the lives lost as measured in the car company's estimate of the court's probable awards to victims.The building codes are always being amended to strike a balance between the value of human life, and ease of construction. If human life had infinite value, it would trump finite cost considerations every time.
That doesn't make sense. The reason they say it is good is because they agree it is good? Those are the same thing.You say it's not an objective good, but they say it is...because they all agreed that it is.
Just because there are no factual "ought" statements doesn't mean there are no factual statements at all.Is that an objective conclusion on your part?
if you don't like the fat man version you are free to revise it to allow a scenario when you have more direct involvement with killing someone to stop the trolley. the show "the Good place" kept bringing up the trolley problem and they have some humous videos. you can also have a doctor version where the organs of one person save the lives of 2 others that without them they would die so you choose to sacrifice the one to save the many.I cant play the fat man version because it defies intuition so badly. I cant shake the sense that a man wont derail the trolley. The hypothetical has crossed into the absurd.
As I said, in the game of rock-trolley-human, everyone knows trolley cuts human.
I do agree that any scenario is a losing situation. Thats because someone upstream of you started this disaster. Your role is just how to manage it. You cant wave it away.
I'm talking about the tired old "trolley problem". It goes like this:
Trolley problem - Wikipedia
Where's the "problem"? Pull the darn lever. Only a jerk wouldnt.
No you arent actively killing anyone. The death(s) are entirely built into the trolleys course.
So basically the question is: is it OK to steer danger toward less populated areas?
Or even: is it reprehensible not to?
The answer to both is YES, obviously. (Assuming we value people generally. If not then just steal the level handle.)
This is true. Some things we value because we have reasoned that they're valuable. But it begins with a subjective value. For instance, I love money. But I don't love money itself. I don't love pieces of paper with dead presidents printed on them. No, I love money because it buys happiness, and I like being happy so I've reasoned, logically, that more money brings more happiness and therefore value money.Perhaps. But perhaps not. Part of the 'value' of some thing/idea isn't all placed into simply one's ability to value some singular aspect of a thing in an all too general way. Human valuation is a multifacted human mental act; it's not always, and not necessarily, a singular one. Some aspects of the valuation process may be subjective, but some aspects may be objective.
Just because there are no factual "ought" statements doesn't mean there are no factual statements at all.
That doesn't make sense. The reason they say it is good is because they agree it is good? Those are the same thing.
The reason they say it is an objective good is because they like it a lot.
Yeah I dont understand "objective good".I personally don't think there is any such thing as an objective good, but where people claim there is such a thing as an objective good, it's only by reason of broad public agreement.
Wherever did you come up with that? Show me by using the quote facility where that notion came from me. I'll wait for you to do so or retract.
Sadly, you believe that this life is all there is so you can see circumstances that justify, in your mind, murder.
Agreeing to it doesn't make it so.
Perhaps. But perhaps not. Part of the 'value' of some thing/idea isn't all placed into simply one's ability to value some singular aspect of a thing in an all too general way. Human valuation is a multifacted human mental act; it's not always, and not necessarily, a singular one. Some aspects of the valuation process may be subjective, but some aspects may be objective.
I always wonder what's up when other people begin to tell me what I'm thinking and why.
Here, you've jumped from the notion of objectivity of a value to the notion of absoluteness of about the same. Where did I say that 'absoluteness' played any conceptual role in our discussion? You're imputing to my thoughts a quality I didn't actually express or intend to express. Objectivity and Absoluteness are two different concepts, but it almost seems like you're cojoining them.
In light of what I've said just above, I'm going to have to pass the bucket on this one and not put in my dollar bill.
Is that an objective conclusion on your part?
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