You haven’t factored in the impact of saving a life on fertility. Check out this literature review which concludes the following (bold emphasis mine):
I think the best interpretation of the available evidence is that the impact of life-saving interventions on fertility and population growth varies by context, above all with total fertility, and is rarely greater than 1:1 [meaning that averting a death rarely causes a net drop in population]. In places where lifetime births/woman has been converging to 2 or lower, family size is largely a conscious choice, made with an ideal family size in mind, and achieved in part by access to modern contraception. In those contexts, saving one child’s life should lead parents to avert a birth they would otherwise have. The impact of mortality drops on fertility will be nearly 1:1, so population growth will hardly change.
Also you’re assuming neuron count should be used as proxies for moral weight but I’m highly skeptical that is fair (see this).
You haven’t factored in the impact of saving a life on fertility. Check out this literature review which concludes the following (bold emphasis mine):
Also you’re assuming neuron count should be used as proxies for moral weight but I’m highly skeptical that is fair (see this).