Talya wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
In what way is utilitarianism a "reliable indicator for personal morality"?
Take the example of the Queen vs. Dudley and Stephens given in the lecture.
Without consequential ethics, everyone on the boat dies. Yet some people would have you believe they were wrong for their acts...that the only "moral" action would be the one that results in them all dying.
That's just stupid. If the majority of humanity really thought that way, we'd have been extinct a hundred thousand years ago. But despite what we
like to think we would do, in reality, we're almost all consequentialist. People do what they have to do. And that's how it should be, if the species is to survive and prosper.
Or, to put it in "Vulcan" logic, for you trekkies, the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one.
1) It cannot be said that they would all have died without taking the life of Parker. They caught rainwater, and were rescued 4-5 days after killing Parker.
2) What "reliable indicator for personal morality" was shown by the actions of Dudley, Stephens and Brooks? What "reliable indicator for personal morality" is shown by "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one"?
3) If it can be said that necessity is a defense against a charge of murder, who is to say that the necessity of my child having food tonight isn't worth my killing whomever has money for me to buy food for my child? or a car so I can go to work? or a new dress for my wife?
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"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko