(Iâve made a bunch of edits to the following comment within 2 hours of posting it.)
You say that âsacrificing the welfare of just one person so that another could be born⌠seems wrongâ. But the Repugnant Conclusion is a claim about the relative value of two possible populations, neither of which is assumed to be actual. So I donât understand how you reach the conclusion that, in judging that one of these populations is more valuable, by bringing it about youâd be âsacrificingâ the welfare of the possible people in the other population. The situation seems perfectly symmetrical, so either you are âsacrificingâ people no matter what you do, or (what seems more plausible) talk of âsacrificingâ doesnât really make sense in this context.
If youâre a consequentialist whose views are transitive and complete, and satisfy the independence of irrelevant alternatives, then the RC implies what I wrote (ignoring other effects and opportunity costs). The situation is not necessarily symmetrical in practice if you hold person-affecting views, which typically require the rejection of the independence of irrelevant alternatives. Iâd recommend the âwide, hard viewâ in The Asymmetry, Uncertainty, and the Long Term by Teruji Thomas as the view closest to common sense that satisfies the intuitions of my answer above (that Iâm aware of), and the talk is somewhat accessible, although the paper can get pretty technical. This view allows future contingent good lives to make up for (but not outweigh) future contingent bad lives, but, as a âhardâ view, not to make up for losses to ânecessaryâ people, who would exist regardless. Because itâs âwideâ, it âsolvesâ the Nonidentity problem. The wide version would still reject the RC even if weâre choosing between two disjoint contingent populations, I think because âexcessâ (in number) contingent people with good lives wouldnât count in this particular pairwise comparison. Another way to think about it would be like matching counterparts across worlds, and then we can talk about sacrifices as the differences in welfare between an individual and their counterpart, although Iâm not sure the view entails something equivalent to this.
My own views are much more asymmetric than the views in Thomasâs work, and I lean towards negative utilitarianism, since I donât think future contingent good lives can make up for future contingent bad lives at all.
How are you not treating individuals as mere vessels/âreceptacles for value when, in deciding between two worlds both of which contain suffering but differ in the number of people they contain, you bring about the world that contains less suffering? What do you tell the person whom you subject to a life of misery so that some other person, who would be even more miserable, is not born?
I tell them that I did it to prevent a greater harm that would have otherwise been experienced. The foregoing of benefit caused by someone never being born would not be experienced by that non-existent person. I have some short writing on the asymmetry here that I think can explain this better.
You have said that you donât share the intuition that positive welfare has intrinsic value. But lacking this intuition, how can you compare the value of two worlds that differ only in how much positive welfare they contain?
Lives most people consider good overall can still involve disappointment or suffering, so the RC doesnât necessarily differ only in how much positive welfare there is, depending on how exactly weâre imagining it. If weâre only talking about positive welfare and no negative welfare, preferences arenât more frustrated/âless satisfied than otherwise, and everyone is perfectly content in the ârepugnantâ world, then I wouldnât object. If I had to make a personal sacrifice to bring someone into existence, I would probably not be perfectly content, possibly unless I thought it was the right thing to do (although I might feel some dissatisfaction either way, and less if Iâm doing what I think is the right thing).
Plus, itâs worth sharing my more general objection regardless of my denial of positive welfare, since it may reflect othersâ views, and they can upvote or comment to endorse it if they agree.
The Repugnant Conclusion arises also at the intrapersonal level, so it would be very surprising if the reason we find it counterintuitive, insofar as we do, at the interpersonal level has to do with factorsâsuch as treating people as mere receptacles of value or sacrificing peopleâthat are absent at the intrapersonal level.
Assuming intrapersonal and interpersonal tradeoffs should be treated the same (ignoring indirect effects), yes. Itâs not obvious that they should be, and I think common sense ethics does not treat them the same.
But even then, the intrapersonal version (+welfarist consequentialism) also violates autonomy and means I shouldnât do whatever I want in my world, so my objection is similar. I think âpreference-affectingâ views (person-affecting views applied at the level of individual preferences/âdesires, especially Thomasâs âhard, wide viewâ) would likely fare better here for structurally similar reasons, so the âsolutionâ could be similar or even the same.
Symmetric total preference utilitarianism and average preference utilitarianism would imply that itâs good for a person to create enough sufficiently strong satisfied preferences in them, even if it means violating their consent and the preferences they already have or will have. Classical utilitarianism implies involuntary wireheading (done right) is good for a person. Preference-affecting views and antifrustrationism (negative preference utilitarianism) would only endorse violating consent or preferences for a personâs own sake in ways that depend on preferences they would have otherwise or anyway, so you violate consent/âsome preferences to respect others (although I think antifrustrationism does worse than asymmetric preference-affecting views for respecting preferences/âconsent, and deontological constraints or limiting aggregation would likely do even better).
[ETA: You say youâve made edits to your post, so itâs possible some of my replies are addressed by your revisions. I am always responding to the text Iâm quoting, which may differ from the final version of your comment.]
If youâre a consequentialist whose views are transitive, complete and satisfy the independence of irrelevant alternatives, the RC implies what I wrote (ignoring other effects and opportunity costs). The situation is not symmetrical if you hold person-affecting views, which typically require the rejection of the independence of irrelevant alternatives. Iâd recommend the âwide, hard viewâ in The Asymmetry, Uncertainty, and the Long Term by Teruji Thomas as the view closest to common sense that satisfies the intuitions of my answer above (that Iâm aware of), and the talk is somewhat accessible, although the paper can get pretty technical. This view allows future contingent good lives to make up for (but not outweigh) future contingent bad lives, but, as a âhardâ view, not losses to ânecessaryâ people, who would exist regardless. Because itâs âwideâ, it âsolvesâ the Nonidentity problem.
I donât have time to look into this right now, but I also feel that this probably wonât provide an answer to the question I meant to ask. (Apologies if my wording was unclear.) Call the world with few, very happy people, A, and the world with lots of mildly happy people, Z. The question is, then, simply: âIf bringing about Z sacrifices people in A, why doesnât bringing about A sacrifice people in Z?â You say that youâd be sacrificing someone âeven if they would be far better off than the first personâ, which seems to commit you to the claim that you would indeed be sacrificing people in Z by bringing about A.
I tell them that I did it to prevent a greater harm that would have otherwise been experienced. The foregoing of benefit caused by someone never being born would not be experienced by that non-existent person. I have some short writing on the asymmetry here that I think can explain this better.
I donât understand how this answer explains why you are not treating the person as a value receptacle, given that you believe this is what the total utilitarian does in the Repugnant Conclusion. I can see why a negative utilitarian and/âor a person-affecting theorist would treat these two cases differently. What I donât understand is why the difference is supposed to consist in that people are being treated as value receptacles in one case, but not in the other. This just seems to misdiagnose whatâs going on here.
The comment you shared helps me understand the Asymmetry, but not your claim about value receptacles.
Lives most people consider good overall can still involve disappointment or suffering, so the RC doesnât necessarily differ only in how much positive welfare there is, depending on how exactly weâre imagining it.
I agree that you can have people with lifetime wellbeing just above neutrality either because they live their entire lives at that level or because they have lots of ups and downs that almost perfectly cancel each other out (and anything in between). I think discussions of the Repugnant Conclusion sometimes make the stronger assumption that peopleâs lives are continuously just above neutrality (âmuzak and potatoesâ), and that people may respond to the thought experiment differently depending on whether or not this assumption is made.
For a negative utilitarian, it seems that whether the assumption is made is in fact crucial, since the âmuzak and potatoesâ life is as good as it can be (it lacks any unpleasantness) whereas lives in other Repugnant Conclusion scenarios could contain huge amounts of suffering. I handnât appreciated this point when I wrote my previous comment, but now that I do, I feel even more confused.
Assuming intrapersonal and interpersonal tradeoffs should be treated the same (ignoring indirect effects), yes. Itâs not obvious that they should be, and I think common sense ethics does not treat them the same.
Oh, I wasnât saying they should be treated the same. Itâs pretty clear that commonsense morality treats them differently.
My point is that the phenomenology of the intuitions at the interpersonal and intrapersonal levels is essentially the same, which strongly suggests that the same factor is triggering those intuitions in both cases. Any explanation of the counterintuitiveness of the Repugnant Conclusion in terms of factors that are specific to the interpersonal case is therefore implausible.
Although Iâm not sure Iâm understanding you correctly, you then seem to be suggesting that your views can in fact vindicate the claim that people would also in some sense be sacrificed in the intrapersonal case. Is this what you are claiming? It would help me if you describe what you yourself believe, as opposed to discussing the implications of a wide variety of views.
[Of course, feel free to ignore any of this if you arenât interested, etc.]
(FWIW, I never downvoted your comments and have upvoted them instead, and I appreciate the engagement and thoughtful questions/âpushback, since it helps me make my own views clearer. Since I spent several hours on this thread, I might not respond quickly or at all to further comments.)
The question is, then, simply: âIf bringing about Z sacrifices people in A, why doesnât bringing about A sacrifice people in Z?â You say that youâd be sacrificing someone âeven if they would be far better off than the first personâ, which seems to commit you to the claim that you would indeed be sacrificing people in Z by bringing about A.
Sorry, I tried to respond to that in an edit you must have missed, since I realized I didnât after posting my reply. In short, a wide person-affecting view means that Z would involve âsacrificeâ and A would not, if both populations are completely disjoint and contingent, roughly because the people in A have worse off âcounterpartsâ in Z, and the excess positive welfare people in Z without counterparts donât compensate for this. No one in Z is better off than anyone in A, so none are better off than their counterparts in A, so there canât be any sacrifice in a âwideâ way in this direction. The Nonidentity problem would involve âsacrificeâ in one way only, too, under a wide view.
(If all the people in Z already exist, and none of the people in A exist, then going from Z to A by killing everyone in Z could indeed mean âsacrificingâ the people in Z for those in A, under some person-affecting views, and be bad under some such views.
Under a narrow view (instead of a wide one), with disjoint contingent populations, weâd be indifferent between A and Z, or theyâd be incomparable, and both or neither would involve âsacrificeâ.)
On value receptacles, hereâs a quote by Frick (on his website), from a paper in which he defends the procreation asymmetry:
For another, it feeds a common criticism of utilitarianism, namely that it treats people as fungible and views them in a quasi-instrumental fashion. Instrumental valuing is an attitude that we have towards particulars. However, to value something instrumentally is to value it, in essence, for its causal properties. But these same causal properties could just as well be instantiated by some other particular thing. Hence, insofar as a particular entity is valued only instrumentally, it is regarded as fungible. Similarly, a teleological view which regards our welfare-related reasons as purely state-regarding can be accused of taking a quasi-instrumental approach towards people. It views them as fungible receptacles for well-being, not as mattering qua individuals.29 Totalist utilitarianism, it is often said, does not take persons sufficiently seriously. By treating the moral significance of persons and their well-being as derivative of their contribution to valuable states of affairs, it reverses what strikes most of us as the correct order of dependence.30 Human wellbeing matters because people matter â not vice versa.
I havenât thought much about this particular way of framing the receptacle objection, and what I have in mind is basically what Frick wrote later:
any reasons to confer well-being on a person are conditional on the fact of her existence.
This is a bit vague: what do we mean by âconditionalâ? But there are plausible interpretations that symmetric person-affecting views, asymmetric person-affecting views and negative axiologies satisfy, while the total view, reverse asymmetric person-affecting views and positive axiologies donât really seem to have such plausible interpretations (or have fewer and/âor less plausible interpretations).
I have two ways in mind that seem compatible with the procreation asymmetry, but not the total view:
First, in line with my linked shortform comment about the asymmetry, a personâs interests should only direct us from outcomes in which they (the person, or the given interests) exist or will exist to the same or other outcomes (possibly including outcomes in which they donât exist), and all reasons with regards to a given person are of this form. I think this is basically an actualist argument (which Frick discusses and objects to in his paper). Having reasons regarding an individual A in an outcome in which they donât exist direct us towards an outcome in which they do exist would not seem conditional on Aâs existence. Itâs more âconditionalâ if the reasons regarding a given outcome come from that outcome than from other outcomes.
Second, thereâs Frickâs approach. Hereâs a simplified evaluative version:
All of our reasons with regards to persons should be of the following form:
It is in one way better that the following is satisfied: if person A exists, then P(A),
where P is a predicate that depends terminally only on Aâs interests.
Setting P(A)=âA has a life worth livingâ would give us reason to prevent lives not worth living. Plus, thereâs no P(A) we could use that would imply that a given world with A is in one way better (due to the statement with P(A)) than a given world without A. So, this is compatible with the procreation asymmetry, but not the total view.
It could be âwideâ and solve the Nonidentity problem, since we can find P such that P would be satisfied for B but not A, if B would be better off than A, so we would have more reasons for A not to exist than for B not to exist.
Itâs also compatible with antifrustrationism and negative utilitarianism in a few ways:
If we apply it to preferences instead of whole persons, with predicates like P(A)=âA is satisfiedâ
If we use predicates like âP(A)=if A has interest y, then y is satisfied at least to degree dâ
If we use predicates like âP(A)=A has welfare at least wâ, allowing for the possibility of positive welfare being better than less in an existing individual, but being perfectionistic about it, so that anything worse than the best is worse than nonexistence.
I think part of what follows in Frickâs paper is about applying/âextending this in a way that isnât basically antinatalist.
For a negative utilitarian, it seems that whether the assumption is made is in fact crucial, since the âmuzak and potatoesâ life is as good as it can be (it lacks any unpleasantness) whereas other lives could contain huge amounts of suffering.
Ya, this seems right to me.
My point is that the phenomenology of the intuitions at the interpersonal and intrapersonal levels is essentially the same, which strongly suggests that the same factor is triggering those intuitions in both cases.
What do you mean by âthe phenomenology of the intuitionsâ here?
One important difference between the interpersonal and intrapersonal cases is that in the intrapersonal case, people may (or may not!) prefer to live much longer overall, even sacrificing their other interests. Itâs not clear theyâre actually worse off overall or even at each moment in something that might âlookâ like Z, once we take the preference(s) for Z over A into account. We might be miscalculating the utilities before doing so. For something similar to happen in the interpersonal case, the people in A would have to prefer Z, and then similarly, Z wouldnât seem so objectionable.
Although Iâm not sure Iâm understanding you correctly, you then seem to be suggesting that your views can in fact vindicate the claim that youâd be sacrificing your future selves or treating them as value receptacles. Is this what you are claiming? It would help me if you describe what you yourself believe, as opposed to discussing the implications of a wide variety of views.
Itâs more about my interests/âpreferences than my future selves, and not sacrificing them or treating them as value receptacles. I think respect for autonomy/âpreferences requires not treating our preferences as mere value receptacles that you can just make more of to get more value and make things go better, and this can rule out both the interpersonal RC and the intrapersonal RC. This is in principle, ignoring other reasons, indirect effects, etc., so not necessarily in practice.
I have moral uncertainty, and Iâm sympathetic to multiple views, but what they have in common is that I deny the existence of terminal goods (whose creation is good in itself, or that can make up for bads or for other things that matter going worse than otherwise) and that I recognize the existence of terminal bads. Theyâre all versions of negative prioritarianism/âutilitarianism or very similar.
Thanks for the detailed reply. For now, I will only address your comments at the end, since I havenât read the sources you cite and havenât thought about this much beyond what I wrote previously. (As a note of color, Johann and I did the BPhil together and used to meet every week for several hours to discuss philosophy, although he kept developing his views about population ethics after he moved to Harvard; you have rekindled my interest in reading his dissertation.)
What do you mean by âthe phenomenology of the intuitionsâ here?
I mean that the intuitions triggered by the interpersonal and the intrapersonal cases feel very similar from the inside. For example, if I try to describe why the interpersonal case feels repugnant, Iâm inclined to say stuff like âit feels like something would be missingâ or âthereâs more to life than thatâ; and this is exactly what I would also say to describe why the intrapersonal case feels repugnant. How these two intuitions feel also makes me reasonably confident that fMRI scans of people presented with both cases would show very similar patterns of brain activity.
One important difference between the interpersonal and intrapersonal cases is that in the intrapersonal case, people may (or may not!) prefer to live much longer overall, even sacrificing their other interests. Itâs not clear theyâre actually worse off overall or even at each moment in something that might âlookâ like Z, once we take the preference(s) for Z over A into account. We might be miscalculating the utilities before doing so. For something similar to happen in the interpersonal case, the people in A would have to prefer Z, and then similarly, Z wouldnât seem so objectionable.
I think that supposed difference is ruled out by the way the intrapersonal case is constructed. In any case, what I regard as the most interesting intrapersonal version is one where it is analogous to the interpersonal version in this respect. Of course, we can discuss a scenario of the sort you describe, but then I would no longer say that my intuitions about the two cases feel very similar, or that we can learn much by comparing the two cases.
I have moral uncertainty, and Iâm sympathetic to multiple views, but what they have in common is that I deny the existence of terminal goods (whose creation is good in itself, or that can make up for bads or for other things that matter going worse than otherwise) and that I recognize the existence of terminal bads. Theyâre all versions of negative prioritarianism/âutilitarianism or very similar.
(Iâve made a bunch of edits to the following comment within 2 hours of posting it.)
If youâre a consequentialist whose views are transitive and complete, and satisfy the independence of irrelevant alternatives, then the RC implies what I wrote (ignoring other effects and opportunity costs). The situation is not necessarily symmetrical in practice if you hold person-affecting views, which typically require the rejection of the independence of irrelevant alternatives. Iâd recommend the âwide, hard viewâ in The Asymmetry, Uncertainty, and the Long Term by Teruji Thomas as the view closest to common sense that satisfies the intuitions of my answer above (that Iâm aware of), and the talk is somewhat accessible, although the paper can get pretty technical. This view allows future contingent good lives to make up for (but not outweigh) future contingent bad lives, but, as a âhardâ view, not to make up for losses to ânecessaryâ people, who would exist regardless. Because itâs âwideâ, it âsolvesâ the Nonidentity problem. The wide version would still reject the RC even if weâre choosing between two disjoint contingent populations, I think because âexcessâ (in number) contingent people with good lives wouldnât count in this particular pairwise comparison. Another way to think about it would be like matching counterparts across worlds, and then we can talk about sacrifices as the differences in welfare between an individual and their counterpart, although Iâm not sure the view entails something equivalent to this.
My own views are much more asymmetric than the views in Thomasâs work, and I lean towards negative utilitarianism, since I donât think future contingent good lives can make up for future contingent bad lives at all.
I tell them that I did it to prevent a greater harm that would have otherwise been experienced. The foregoing of benefit caused by someone never being born would not be experienced by that non-existent person. I have some short writing on the asymmetry here that I think can explain this better.
Lives most people consider good overall can still involve disappointment or suffering, so the RC doesnât necessarily differ only in how much positive welfare there is, depending on how exactly weâre imagining it. If weâre only talking about positive welfare and no negative welfare, preferences arenât more frustrated/âless satisfied than otherwise, and everyone is perfectly content in the ârepugnantâ world, then I wouldnât object. If I had to make a personal sacrifice to bring someone into existence, I would probably not be perfectly content, possibly unless I thought it was the right thing to do (although I might feel some dissatisfaction either way, and less if Iâm doing what I think is the right thing).
Plus, itâs worth sharing my more general objection regardless of my denial of positive welfare, since it may reflect othersâ views, and they can upvote or comment to endorse it if they agree.
Assuming intrapersonal and interpersonal tradeoffs should be treated the same (ignoring indirect effects), yes. Itâs not obvious that they should be, and I think common sense ethics does not treat them the same.
But even then, the intrapersonal version (+welfarist consequentialism) also violates autonomy and means I shouldnât do whatever I want in my world, so my objection is similar. I think âpreference-affectingâ views (person-affecting views applied at the level of individual preferences/âdesires, especially Thomasâs âhard, wide viewâ) would likely fare better here for structurally similar reasons, so the âsolutionâ could be similar or even the same.
Symmetric total preference utilitarianism and average preference utilitarianism would imply that itâs good for a person to create enough sufficiently strong satisfied preferences in them, even if it means violating their consent and the preferences they already have or will have. Classical utilitarianism implies involuntary wireheading (done right) is good for a person. Preference-affecting views and antifrustrationism (negative preference utilitarianism) would only endorse violating consent or preferences for a personâs own sake in ways that depend on preferences they would have otherwise or anyway, so you violate consent/âsome preferences to respect others (although I think antifrustrationism does worse than asymmetric preference-affecting views for respecting preferences/âconsent, and deontological constraints or limiting aggregation would likely do even better).
[ETA: You say youâve made edits to your post, so itâs possible some of my replies are addressed by your revisions. I am always responding to the text Iâm quoting, which may differ from the final version of your comment.]
I donât have time to look into this right now, but I also feel that this probably wonât provide an answer to the question I meant to ask. (Apologies if my wording was unclear.) Call the world with few, very happy people, A, and the world with lots of mildly happy people, Z. The question is, then, simply: âIf bringing about Z sacrifices people in A, why doesnât bringing about A sacrifice people in Z?â You say that youâd be sacrificing someone âeven if they would be far better off than the first personâ, which seems to commit you to the claim that you would indeed be sacrificing people in Z by bringing about A.
I donât understand how this answer explains why you are not treating the person as a value receptacle, given that you believe this is what the total utilitarian does in the Repugnant Conclusion. I can see why a negative utilitarian and/âor a person-affecting theorist would treat these two cases differently. What I donât understand is why the difference is supposed to consist in that people are being treated as value receptacles in one case, but not in the other. This just seems to misdiagnose whatâs going on here.
The comment you shared helps me understand the Asymmetry, but not your claim about value receptacles.
I agree that you can have people with lifetime wellbeing just above neutrality either because they live their entire lives at that level or because they have lots of ups and downs that almost perfectly cancel each other out (and anything in between). I think discussions of the Repugnant Conclusion sometimes make the stronger assumption that peopleâs lives are continuously just above neutrality (âmuzak and potatoesâ), and that people may respond to the thought experiment differently depending on whether or not this assumption is made.
For a negative utilitarian, it seems that whether the assumption is made is in fact crucial, since the âmuzak and potatoesâ life is as good as it can be (it lacks any unpleasantness) whereas lives in other Repugnant Conclusion scenarios could contain huge amounts of suffering. I handnât appreciated this point when I wrote my previous comment, but now that I do, I feel even more confused.
Oh, I wasnât saying they should be treated the same. Itâs pretty clear that commonsense morality treats them differently.
My point is that the phenomenology of the intuitions at the interpersonal and intrapersonal levels is essentially the same, which strongly suggests that the same factor is triggering those intuitions in both cases. Any explanation of the counterintuitiveness of the Repugnant Conclusion in terms of factors that are specific to the interpersonal case is therefore implausible.
Although Iâm not sure Iâm understanding you correctly, you then seem to be suggesting that your views can in fact vindicate the claim that people would also in some sense be sacrificed in the intrapersonal case. Is this what you are claiming? It would help me if you describe what you yourself believe, as opposed to discussing the implications of a wide variety of views.
[Of course, feel free to ignore any of this if you arenât interested, etc.]
(FWIW, I never downvoted your comments and have upvoted them instead, and I appreciate the engagement and thoughtful questions/âpushback, since it helps me make my own views clearer. Since I spent several hours on this thread, I might not respond quickly or at all to further comments.)
Sorry, I tried to respond to that in an edit you must have missed, since I realized I didnât after posting my reply. In short, a wide person-affecting view means that Z would involve âsacrificeâ and A would not, if both populations are completely disjoint and contingent, roughly because the people in A have worse off âcounterpartsâ in Z, and the excess positive welfare people in Z without counterparts donât compensate for this. No one in Z is better off than anyone in A, so none are better off than their counterparts in A, so there canât be any sacrifice in a âwideâ way in this direction. The Nonidentity problem would involve âsacrificeâ in one way only, too, under a wide view.
(If all the people in Z already exist, and none of the people in A exist, then going from Z to A by killing everyone in Z could indeed mean âsacrificingâ the people in Z for those in A, under some person-affecting views, and be bad under some such views.
Under a narrow view (instead of a wide one), with disjoint contingent populations, weâd be indifferent between A and Z, or theyâd be incomparable, and both or neither would involve âsacrificeâ.)
On value receptacles, hereâs a quote by Frick (on his website), from a paper in which he defends the procreation asymmetry:
I havenât thought much about this particular way of framing the receptacle objection, and what I have in mind is basically what Frick wrote later:
This is a bit vague: what do we mean by âconditionalâ? But there are plausible interpretations that symmetric person-affecting views, asymmetric person-affecting views and negative axiologies satisfy, while the total view, reverse asymmetric person-affecting views and positive axiologies donât really seem to have such plausible interpretations (or have fewer and/âor less plausible interpretations).
I have two ways in mind that seem compatible with the procreation asymmetry, but not the total view:
First, in line with my linked shortform comment about the asymmetry, a personâs interests should only direct us from outcomes in which they (the person, or the given interests) exist or will exist to the same or other outcomes (possibly including outcomes in which they donât exist), and all reasons with regards to a given person are of this form. I think this is basically an actualist argument (which Frick discusses and objects to in his paper). Having reasons regarding an individual A in an outcome in which they donât exist direct us towards an outcome in which they do exist would not seem conditional on Aâs existence. Itâs more âconditionalâ if the reasons regarding a given outcome come from that outcome than from other outcomes.
Second, thereâs Frickâs approach. Hereâs a simplified evaluative version:
Setting P(A)=âA has a life worth livingâ would give us reason to prevent lives not worth living. Plus, thereâs no P(A) we could use that would imply that a given world with A is in one way better (due to the statement with P(A)) than a given world without A. So, this is compatible with the procreation asymmetry, but not the total view.
It could be âwideâ and solve the Nonidentity problem, since we can find P such that P would be satisfied for B but not A, if B would be better off than A, so we would have more reasons for A not to exist than for B not to exist.
Itâs also compatible with antifrustrationism and negative utilitarianism in a few ways:
If we apply it to preferences instead of whole persons, with predicates like P(A)=âA is satisfiedâ
If we use predicates like âP(A)=if A has interest y, then y is satisfied at least to degree dâ
If we use predicates like âP(A)=A has welfare at least wâ, allowing for the possibility of positive welfare being better than less in an existing individual, but being perfectionistic about it, so that anything worse than the best is worse than nonexistence.
I think part of what follows in Frickâs paper is about applying/âextending this in a way that isnât basically antinatalist.
Ya, this seems right to me.
What do you mean by âthe phenomenology of the intuitionsâ here?
One important difference between the interpersonal and intrapersonal cases is that in the intrapersonal case, people may (or may not!) prefer to live much longer overall, even sacrificing their other interests. Itâs not clear theyâre actually worse off overall or even at each moment in something that might âlookâ like Z, once we take the preference(s) for Z over A into account. We might be miscalculating the utilities before doing so. For something similar to happen in the interpersonal case, the people in A would have to prefer Z, and then similarly, Z wouldnât seem so objectionable.
Itâs more about my interests/âpreferences than my future selves, and not sacrificing them or treating them as value receptacles. I think respect for autonomy/âpreferences requires not treating our preferences as mere value receptacles that you can just make more of to get more value and make things go better, and this can rule out both the interpersonal RC and the intrapersonal RC. This is in principle, ignoring other reasons, indirect effects, etc., so not necessarily in practice.
I have moral uncertainty, and Iâm sympathetic to multiple views, but what they have in common is that I deny the existence of terminal goods (whose creation is good in itself, or that can make up for bads or for other things that matter going worse than otherwise) and that I recognize the existence of terminal bads. Theyâre all versions of negative prioritarianism/âutilitarianism or very similar.
Thanks for the detailed reply. For now, I will only address your comments at the end, since I havenât read the sources you cite and havenât thought about this much beyond what I wrote previously. (As a note of color, Johann and I did the BPhil together and used to meet every week for several hours to discuss philosophy, although he kept developing his views about population ethics after he moved to Harvard; you have rekindled my interest in reading his dissertation.)
I mean that the intuitions triggered by the interpersonal and the intrapersonal cases feel very similar from the inside. For example, if I try to describe why the interpersonal case feels repugnant, Iâm inclined to say stuff like âit feels like something would be missingâ or âthereâs more to life than thatâ; and this is exactly what I would also say to describe why the intrapersonal case feels repugnant. How these two intuitions feel also makes me reasonably confident that fMRI scans of people presented with both cases would show very similar patterns of brain activity.
I think that supposed difference is ruled out by the way the intrapersonal case is constructed. In any case, what I regard as the most interesting intrapersonal version is one where it is analogous to the interpersonal version in this respect. Of course, we can discuss a scenario of the sort you describe, but then I would no longer say that my intuitions about the two cases feel very similar, or that we can learn much by comparing the two cases.
Makes sense. Thanks for the clarification.