I just meant that my impression was that person-affecting views seem fairly orthogonal to the Repugnant Conclusion specifically. I imagine that many person-affecting believers would agree with this. Or, I assume that it’s very possible to do any combination of [strongly care about the repugnant conclusion] | [not care about it], and [have person-affecting views] and [not have them].
The (very briefly explained) example I mentioned is meant as something like,
Say there’s a trolly problem. You could either accept scenario (A): 100 people with happy lives are saved, or (B) 10000 people with sort of decent lives are saved.
My guess was that this would still be an issue in many person-affecting views (I might well be wrong here though, feel free to correct me!). To me, this question is functionally equivalent to the Repugnant Conclusion.
I’m pretty confident you’re wrong about this. (Edit: I mean, you’re right if you call it “repugnant conclusion” whenever we talk about choosing between a small very happy population and a sufficiently larger less happy one; however, my point is that it’s no coincidence that people most often object to favoring the larger population over the smaller one in contexts of population ethics, i.e., when the populations are not already both in existence.)
I’ve talked to a lot of suffering-focused EAs. Of the people who feel strongly about rejecting the repugnant conclusion in population ethics, at best only half feel that aggregation is altogether questionable. More importantly, even in those that feel that aggregation is altogether questionable, I’m pretty sure that’s a separate intuition for them (and it’s only triggered when we compare something as mild as dust specks to extremes like torture). Meaning, they might feel weird about “torture vs dustspecks,” but they’ll be perfectly okay with “there comes a point where letting a trolley run over a small paradise is better than letting it run over a sufficiently larger population of less happy (but still overall happy) people on the other track.” By contrast, the impetus of their reaction to the original repugnant conclusion comes from the following. When they hear a description of “small-ish population with very high happiness,” their intuition goes “hmm, that sounds pretty optimal,” so they’re not interested in adding costs just to add more happiness moments (or net happy lives) to the total.
To pass the Ideological Turing test for most people who don’t want to accept the repugnant conclusion, you IMO have to engage with the intuition that it isn’t morally important to create new happy people. (This is also what person-affecting views try to build on.)
I haven’t done explicit surveys of this, but I’m still really confident that I’m right about this being what non-totalists in population ethics base their views on, and I find it strange that pretty much* every time totalists discuss the repugnant conclusion, they don’t seem to see this.
(For instance, I’ve pointed this out here on the EA forum at least once to Gregory Lewis and Richard Yetter-Chappell (so you’re in good company, but what is going on?))
*For an exception,this post by Joe Carlsmisth doesn’t mention the repugnant conclusion directly, but it engages with what I consider to be more crux-y arguments and viewpoints in relation to it.
My guess is that, even then, there’ll be a lot of people for whom it remains counterintuitive. (People may no longer use the strong word “repugnant” to describe it, but I think many will still find it counterintuitive.)
Which would support my point that many people find the repugnant conclusion counterintuitive not (just) because of aggregation concerns, but also because they have the intuition that adding new people doesn’t make things better.