All three situations are roughly equivalent, in that someone is offered something that they are currently primed to accept for some reason, but that they would reject normally in a typical mental state.
Many people seem to consider this ethically dubious, especially when the one offering has participated in priming the offeree to be receptive.
Sex, dessert, and cigarettes are “roughly equivalent”? Remind me not to come over to your house for dinner. ;-)
Edit to add: Wow, some people have no sense of humor. Or at least were unable to see past the humor to the actual point. That is, that it stretches the analogy too far to equate “emotionally complicated” and “fattening” with a dependency-forming drug that will then proceed to give you cancer and kill you. Bit of a negative applause light, eh?
If someone who is trying to quit smoking complains about a craving, and you offer them a cigarette, are you doing them a favor?
I’m sorry, I don’t understand the connection.
All three situations are roughly equivalent, in that someone is offered something that they are currently primed to accept for some reason, but that they would reject normally in a typical mental state.
Many people seem to consider this ethically dubious, especially when the one offering has participated in priming the offeree to be receptive.
Sex, dessert, and cigarettes are “roughly equivalent”? Remind me not to come over to your house for dinner. ;-)
Edit to add: Wow, some people have no sense of humor. Or at least were unable to see past the humor to the actual point. That is, that it stretches the analogy too far to equate “emotionally complicated” and “fattening” with a dependency-forming drug that will then proceed to give you cancer and kill you. Bit of a negative applause light, eh?