The ethics here are within Bella’s mind, not within the wolf’s. The ethical dilemma is that to realize the value of her continue life, she needs to destroy other things of value. The ethical problem is to minimize the value she destroys. And the fact that value depends on scarcity is a fundamental economic principle.
It’s a value calculation. Don’t confuse things by inventing a new category of “ethical value”.
The ethical problem is to minimize the value she destroys.
Yes.
And the fact that value depends on scarcity is a fundamental economic principle.
No. You’re claiming that Bella should place a higher value on members of scarce species than on members of more common species. But she could instead assign value to other entities based on their intelligence, or in inverse proportion to their tastiness, or by any other standard. Economics doesn’t have anything normative to say about ethics.
Economics doesn’t have anything normative to say about ethics.
But the descriptive part of economics definitely pairs up with ethic’s normative statements. It seems like if wolves are more valued by others than deer, the statement “destroy as little of what other people value as you can” needs to have an answer of the economic question “how much do other people value my options?” to function properly.
I disagree with PhilGoetz that wolves are valuable due solely to their scarcity- I think that some things, like smallpox or mosquitoes, should be endangered or extinct—but I think it’s pretty trivial to put together the argument that killing a wolf for pleasure is much, much more wrong than killing a deer for pleasure.
We’re talking past each other by using differing definitions of “value”. Economic value is affected by scarcity (and other factors).
But I have been talking about ethical value—the thing that classical utilitarians talk about when they say that happiness is valuable. A classical utilitarian doesn’t care about whether wolves are common or scarce; they care about how the relative scarcity of wolves makes people feel.
Put another way, I’ve been talking about terminal values, which are not in any way fungible. I think you’ve been talking about instrumental values, which are. Is that at all right?
The ethics here are within Bella’s mind, not within the wolf’s.
Excellent reply. Upvoted. But there several problems with the position you are staking out. One is your over-the-top claim that it is more ethical to hunt a human. Agreed, the wolf has more value as a carrier of biodiversity, but that is not the only kind of value to be considered.
A second is your acceptance of “scarcity” as the word for the characteristic making the wolf valuable. As if the value arises by the same process as does the value in a rare coin. Supply and demand. No, actually the wolf is valuable as a carrier of information. Killing one of only a handful of wolves probably extinguishes several dozen alleles from the species gene pool and greatly increases the risk that the entire species will be extinguished. At least in Washington State.
And therein lies your third mistake. If you had been quoting wildlife populations in the entire Pacific Northwest, including B.C., then they might mean something. But the last wolf in Washington state has almost no biodiversity value if there are still plenty of wolves in Idaho or in Canada. Conducting a wildlife census based on human political boundaries makes no sense at all.
Don’t confuse things by inventing a new category of “ethical value”.
I think you’re confusing things by conflating ethical value and economic value.
Edit: Also, even assuming you want to equate ethical and economic value, a human still has more value since he can create things of value much better then a wolf.
I reversed my vote when I saw the edit. While the conflation point is undeniable the ‘can create value’ is not especially relevant to Phil’s discussion of scarcity and changed my impression of the comment to ‘just throw soldiers for the Rah Humans side’.
It is by no means assured that the eaten human from the margin would have created more value than is lost by damaging a hypothetical endangered animal. In fact, someone who particularly values biodiversity the net value that would have been created by the human is almost certainly negative.
It is by no means assured that the eaten human from the margin would have created more value than is lost by damaging a hypothetical endangered animal.
Since we’re equating ethical value and economic value here, there’s a simple way to test this: how much could you get paid to save the human vs. the wolf. Given that this is Norway and not some third world country, the human presumably has a decent amount of money he’d be willing to pay to save his life, not to mention his family and friends and the potential to take out a loan against future earnings. As for the wolf, you might be able to get something out of an animal-lover but not nearly as much as from the human.
In fact, someone who particularly values biodiversity the net value that would have been created by the human is almost certainly negative.
Except PhilGoetz is trying to use this argument to justify valuing biodiversity.
Since we’re equating ethical value and economic value here, there’s a simple way to test this: how much could you get paid to save the human vs. the wolf.
I’m not. That’s why I said I agree with your pre-edit point.
(Indirectly relevant: I am equating ethical value with personal utility which is something not everyone does.)
I think you’re supposing that when I say “value”, I mean dollars. I didn’t say that.
You use economic principals to justify assigning value to biodiversity when you said “the fact that value depends on scarcity is a fundamental economic principle.”
I think the most reasonable interpretation of that sentence is: more me biodiversity/scarcity is an instrumental value and my terminal values are based on economic/market value.
If this is incorrect could you explain what you meant, since the only other explanation I can think of is that it was a flimsy attempt to rationalize your valuing biodiversity.
Value is value. You can’t have two separate types of value if you’re going to make a decision. You can’t say, “I’m going to use economic value for economic decisions, and ethical value for ethical decisions”, because decisions don’t break down nicely for you into those categories.
Economic value and ethical value need to be merged. And the result will look more like economic value, because economic value is well-studied and quantified, while the main point of the category “ethical value” is to be vague and slippery, so that people can avoid actually getting answers about ethics.
“Ethical value”?
The ethics here are within Bella’s mind, not within the wolf’s. The ethical dilemma is that to realize the value of her continue life, she needs to destroy other things of value. The ethical problem is to minimize the value she destroys. And the fact that value depends on scarcity is a fundamental economic principle.
It’s a value calculation. Don’t confuse things by inventing a new category of “ethical value”.
Yes.
No. You’re claiming that Bella should place a higher value on members of scarce species than on members of more common species. But she could instead assign value to other entities based on their intelligence, or in inverse proportion to their tastiness, or by any other standard. Economics doesn’t have anything normative to say about ethics.
But the descriptive part of economics definitely pairs up with ethic’s normative statements. It seems like if wolves are more valued by others than deer, the statement “destroy as little of what other people value as you can” needs to have an answer of the economic question “how much do other people value my options?” to function properly.
I disagree with PhilGoetz that wolves are valuable due solely to their scarcity- I think that some things, like smallpox or mosquitoes, should be endangered or extinct—but I think it’s pretty trivial to put together the argument that killing a wolf for pleasure is much, much more wrong than killing a deer for pleasure.
Not completely fundamental, but derived very quickly from the fundamentals, hundreds of years ago.
Value depends on scarcity. If you don’t agree with this, I’m not going to continue this conversation.
Economics is the study of value decisions, and so is ethics.
We’re talking past each other by using differing definitions of “value”. Economic value is affected by scarcity (and other factors).
But I have been talking about ethical value—the thing that classical utilitarians talk about when they say that happiness is valuable. A classical utilitarian doesn’t care about whether wolves are common or scarce; they care about how the relative scarcity of wolves makes people feel.
Put another way, I’ve been talking about terminal values, which are not in any way fungible. I think you’ve been talking about instrumental values, which are. Is that at all right?
Excellent reply. Upvoted. But there several problems with the position you are staking out. One is your over-the-top claim that it is more ethical to hunt a human. Agreed, the wolf has more value as a carrier of biodiversity, but that is not the only kind of value to be considered.
A second is your acceptance of “scarcity” as the word for the characteristic making the wolf valuable. As if the value arises by the same process as does the value in a rare coin. Supply and demand. No, actually the wolf is valuable as a carrier of information. Killing one of only a handful of wolves probably extinguishes several dozen alleles from the species gene pool and greatly increases the risk that the entire species will be extinguished. At least in Washington State.
And therein lies your third mistake. If you had been quoting wildlife populations in the entire Pacific Northwest, including B.C., then they might mean something. But the last wolf in Washington state has almost no biodiversity value if there are still plenty of wolves in Idaho or in Canada. Conducting a wildlife census based on human political boundaries makes no sense at all.
I think you’re confusing things by conflating ethical value and economic value.
Edit: Also, even assuming you want to equate ethical and economic value, a human still has more value since he can create things of value much better then a wolf.
I reversed my vote when I saw the edit. While the conflation point is undeniable the ‘can create value’ is not especially relevant to Phil’s discussion of scarcity and changed my impression of the comment to ‘just throw soldiers for the Rah Humans side’.
It is by no means assured that the eaten human from the margin would have created more value than is lost by damaging a hypothetical endangered animal. In fact, someone who particularly values biodiversity the net value that would have been created by the human is almost certainly negative.
Since we’re equating ethical value and economic value here, there’s a simple way to test this: how much could you get paid to save the human vs. the wolf. Given that this is Norway and not some third world country, the human presumably has a decent amount of money he’d be willing to pay to save his life, not to mention his family and friends and the potential to take out a loan against future earnings. As for the wolf, you might be able to get something out of an animal-lover but not nearly as much as from the human.
Except PhilGoetz is trying to use this argument to justify valuing biodiversity.
I’m not. That’s why I said I agree with your pre-edit point.
(Indirectly relevant: I am equating ethical value with personal utility which is something not everyone does.)
My point was that even if we grant PhilGoetz’s equation of ethical and economic value, it still doesn’t imply what he wants it to.
I think you’re confusing things by postulating the existence of two different kinds of values.
If you had two kinds of values, how would you ever make a decision?
I think you’re supposing that when I say “value”, I mean dollars. I didn’t say that.
Data point: I maintain both concepts and yet don’t feel confused.
You use economic principals to justify assigning value to biodiversity when you said “the fact that value depends on scarcity is a fundamental economic principle.”
I think the most reasonable interpretation of that sentence is: more me biodiversity/scarcity is an instrumental value and my terminal values are based on economic/market value.
If this is incorrect could you explain what you meant, since the only other explanation I can think of is that it was a flimsy attempt to rationalize your valuing biodiversity.
Value is value. You can’t have two separate types of value if you’re going to make a decision. You can’t say, “I’m going to use economic value for economic decisions, and ethical value for ethical decisions”, because decisions don’t break down nicely for you into those categories.
Economic value and ethical value need to be merged. And the result will look more like economic value, because economic value is well-studied and quantified, while the main point of the category “ethical value” is to be vague and slippery, so that people can avoid actually getting answers about ethics.
Economic value, a.k.a., market value, is how much something would be worth on the market. Ethical value is my personal utility function.