Mild updating of my original position due to this conversation:
I still don’t have many moral qualms about allowing parents to kill children, but realize that actually legalizing it in our current society would lead to some unintended consequences, due to considerations such as the Schelling point, and killing infants as a gateway to further sociopathic behaviours.
Part of my difficulty is that some humans, such as infants, have less blicket than animals. If its ok to kill animals, then there’s no reason to say it’s not ok to kill blicket-less humans. Then I realize that even though it’s legal to kill animals, it’s still something I can’t do for anything except certain bugs. Even spiders I let be, or take outside.
So maybe a wiser way to reconcile these would be to say that since infants have less blicket than animals, and we don’t kill infants, that we also shouldn’t kill animals. It’s what I live by anyway, and seems to cause less disturbance than saying that since infants have less blicket than animals and we kill animals, that it’s ok to kill infants.
Part of my difficulty is that some humans, such as infants, have less blicket than animals. If its ok to kill animals, then there’s no reason to say it’s not ok to kill blicket-less humans. Then I realize that even though it’s legal to kill animals, it’s still something I can’t do for anything except certain bugs. Even spiders I let be, or take outside.
Don’t worry, there would probably be a baby killing service if it were legal. Just like we have other people to kill animals for us.
If its ok to kill animals, then there’s no reason to say it’s not ok to kill blicket-less humans.
I just want to point out this alternative position: Healthy (mentally and otherwise) babies can gain sufficient mental acuity/self-awareness to outstrip animals in their normal trajectory—i.e. babies become people after a while.
Although I don’t wholeheartedly agree with this position, it seems consistent. The stance that such a position would imply is that babies with severe medical conditions (debilitating birth defects, congenital diseases etc.) could be killed with parental consent, and fetuses likely to develop birth defects can be aborted, but healthy fetuses cannot be aborted, and healthy babies cannot be killed. I bring this up in particular because of your other post about the family with the severely disabled 6-year-old.
I think it becomes a little more complicated when we’re talking about situations in which we have the ability to impart self-awareness that was previously not there. On the practical level I certainly wouldn’t want to force a family to either face endless debt from an expensive procedure or a lifetime of grief from a child that can’t function in day to day tasks. It also brings up the question of whether to make animals self-aware, which is… kind of interesting but probably starting to drift off topic.
Mild updating of my original position due to this conversation:
I still don’t have many moral qualms about allowing parents to kill children, but realize that actually legalizing it in our current society would lead to some unintended consequences, due to considerations such as the Schelling point, and killing infants as a gateway to further sociopathic behaviours.
Part of my difficulty is that some humans, such as infants, have less blicket than animals. If its ok to kill animals, then there’s no reason to say it’s not ok to kill blicket-less humans. Then I realize that even though it’s legal to kill animals, it’s still something I can’t do for anything except certain bugs. Even spiders I let be, or take outside.
So maybe a wiser way to reconcile these would be to say that since infants have less blicket than animals, and we don’t kill infants, that we also shouldn’t kill animals. It’s what I live by anyway, and seems to cause less disturbance than saying that since infants have less blicket than animals and we kill animals, that it’s ok to kill infants.
Don’t worry, there would probably be a baby killing service if it were legal. Just like we have other people to kill animals for us.
I just want to point out this alternative position: Healthy (mentally and otherwise) babies can gain sufficient mental acuity/self-awareness to outstrip animals in their normal trajectory—i.e. babies become people after a while.
Although I don’t wholeheartedly agree with this position, it seems consistent. The stance that such a position would imply is that babies with severe medical conditions (debilitating birth defects, congenital diseases etc.) could be killed with parental consent, and fetuses likely to develop birth defects can be aborted, but healthy fetuses cannot be aborted, and healthy babies cannot be killed. I bring this up in particular because of your other post about the family with the severely disabled 6-year-old.
I think it becomes a little more complicated when we’re talking about situations in which we have the ability to impart self-awareness that was previously not there. On the practical level I certainly wouldn’t want to force a family to either face endless debt from an expensive procedure or a lifetime of grief from a child that can’t function in day to day tasks. It also brings up the question of whether to make animals self-aware, which is… kind of interesting but probably starting to drift off topic.
Are you aware that in many countries it’s illegal to kill animals without good reason, and that wanting to get rid of a pet does not qualify?