Quickly, ’cuz I’ve been spending too much time here lately...
One. If my other values actively conflict with having more than a certain given number of people, then they may overwhelm the considerations were talking about here and make them irrelevant.
Three. It’s not that you can’t do it precisely. It’s that you’re in a state of sin if you try to aggregate or compare them at all, even in the most loose and qualitative way. I’ll admit that I sometimes commit that sin, but that’s because I don’t buy into the whole idea of rigorous ethical philsophy to begin with. And only in extremis; I don’t think I’d be willing to commit it enough for that argument to really work for me.
Four. I’m not sure what you mean by “distribution of happiness”. That makes it sound like there’s a bottle of happiness and we’re trying to decide who gets to drink how much of it, or how to brew more, or how we can dilute it, or whatever. What I’m getting at is that your happiness and my happiness aren’t the same stuff at all; it’s more like there’s a big heap of random “happinesses”, none of them necessarily related to or substitutable for the others at all. Everybody gets one, but it’s really hard to say who’s getting the better deal. And, all else being equal, I’d rather have them be different from each other than have more identical ones.
Quickly, ’cuz I’ve been spending too much time here lately...
One. If my other values actively conflict with having more than a certain given number of people, then they may overwhelm the considerations were talking about here and make them irrelevant.
Three. It’s not that you can’t do it precisely. It’s that you’re in a state of sin if you try to aggregate or compare them at all, even in the most loose and qualitative way. I’ll admit that I sometimes commit that sin, but that’s because I don’t buy into the whole idea of rigorous ethical philsophy to begin with. And only in extremis; I don’t think I’d be willing to commit it enough for that argument to really work for me.
Four. I’m not sure what you mean by “distribution of happiness”. That makes it sound like there’s a bottle of happiness and we’re trying to decide who gets to drink how much of it, or how to brew more, or how we can dilute it, or whatever. What I’m getting at is that your happiness and my happiness aren’t the same stuff at all; it’s more like there’s a big heap of random “happinesses”, none of them necessarily related to or substitutable for the others at all. Everybody gets one, but it’s really hard to say who’s getting the better deal. And, all else being equal, I’d rather have them be different from each other than have more identical ones.