Any action you take prevents the birth of an infinite number of counterfactual future humans. If you’re going to analyze things this way, you’ll have to estimate e.g. whether the total number of people born, and their utilities, in scenario 1 (people with X are born in 1900) are greater than in scenario 2 (people with X not born).
Any action you take prevents the birth of an infinite number of counterfactual future humans. If you’re going to analyze things this way, you’ll have to estimate e.g. whether the total number of people born, and their utilities, in scenario 1 (people with X are born in 1900) are greater than in scenario 2 (people with X not born).
That’s certainly true, but I don’t understand how it relates to the policy I was referring to (Pavitra’s in the great-grandparent).