In “Against neutrality...,” he notes that he’s not arguing for a moral duty to create happy people, and it’s just good “others things equal.” But, given that the moral question under opportunity costs is what practically matters, what are his thoughts on this view?: “Even if creating happy lives is good in some (say) aesthetic sense, relieving suffering has moral priority when you have to choose between these.” E.g., does he have any sympathy for the intuition that, if you could either press a button that treats someone’s migraine for a day or one that creates a virtual world with happy people, you should press the first one?
(I could try to shorten this if necessary, but worry about the message being lost from editorializing.)
In “Against neutrality...,” he notes that he’s not arguing for a moral duty to create happy people, and it’s just good “others things equal.” But, given that the moral question under opportunity costs is what practically matters, what are his thoughts on this view?: “Even if creating happy lives is good in some (say) aesthetic sense, relieving suffering has moral priority when you have to choose between these.” E.g., does he have any sympathy for the intuition that, if you could either press a button that treats someone’s migraine for a day or one that creates a virtual world with happy people, you should press the first one?
(I could try to shorten this if necessary, but worry about the message being lost from editorializing.)