I agree annoying and excruciating pain have very different properties. However, it does not follow that an arbitrarily short time in excruciating pain is much worse than an arbitrarily long time in annoying pain? Liquid water and ice have different properties, but, for example, their mass and temperature can still be quantitatively compared. I do not think analogies with physics illustrate that some pain intensities cannot be quantitatively compared.
Would you prefer 10 years in annoying pain over a probability of 10^-100 of 0.1 s in excruciating pain? If so, what do you think about the questions I asked here?
Thanks for the thoughts, Elif.
I agree annoying and excruciating pain have very different properties. However, it does not follow that an arbitrarily short time in excruciating pain is much worse than an arbitrarily long time in annoying pain? Liquid water and ice have different properties, but, for example, their mass and temperature can still be quantitatively compared. I do not think analogies with physics illustrate that some pain intensities cannot be quantitatively compared.
Would you prefer 10 years in annoying pain over a probability of 10^-100 of 0.1 s in excruciating pain? If so, what do you think about the questions I asked here?
Elif replied.