I don’t think it’s the key question if you evaluate the ethics of the MIT administration, as opposed to the consequences for Lewin’s lessons’ popularity.
I don’t think (even) in consequentialism you include unforeseeable consequences into the ethical assessment of an agent. If someone plans to kill their neighbor but instead their polonium-laden coffee turned the neighbor into spider-man, they are still just as immoral, even if the act itself can be retroactively deemed good. You might even hail the agent for helping save the human race from the evil Doctor Octopus, but you certainly would not want to be their neighbor, no matter how consequentialist you are.
True, but then if it was foreseen and used intentionally to bolster Lewin’s viewership, then the ethics of the administration is even more questionable. Also, it feels like you are now arguing for the sake of arguing.
I don’t think it makes sense to do things for a single reason. It’s better to look at the likely effects of a decision and then decide whether or not you want to go the road that leads there.
It’s still punishment for Lewin to stop hosting his videos. It’s likely perceived by Lewin that way. It’s perceived by the media as a symbol for it. All the social justice people feel good because of the symbolic act. It still puts the video outside of MIT.
The professor probably has hidden all sort of sexual suggestions in his lectures that MIT doesn’t want to be associated with.
Scott Aarasson writes that “Prof. Lewin tells the students that they’re about to lose their “Maxwell’s equations virginity.””
The old professor toyed the line of what can be said in todays world of politcal correctness.
That pitch might just work to get people interested.
The key question is whether this action increases or reduces the amount of people that watch the lectures. Has anybody any guesses?
I don’t think it’s the key question if you evaluate the ethics of the MIT administration, as opposed to the consequences for Lewin’s lessons’ popularity.
Getting a bunch of people who otherwise wouldn’t watch physics lectures to watch them because they are “banned” might be a high utillity act.
I mean what more can they do to make physics exicting?
It’s like you didn’t read my reply…
As far as I understand some form of consequentialism is the default ethical system on LW.
If the action has positive consequences, why should it be unethical?
I don’t think (even) in consequentialism you include unforeseeable consequences into the ethical assessment of an agent. If someone plans to kill their neighbor but instead their polonium-laden coffee turned the neighbor into spider-man, they are still just as immoral, even if the act itself can be retroactively deemed good. You might even hail the agent for helping save the human race from the evil Doctor Octopus, but you certainly would not want to be their neighbor, no matter how consequentialist you are.
The streisand effect is not a unforeseeable consequence.
True, but then if it was foreseen and used intentionally to bolster Lewin’s viewership, then the ethics of the administration is even more questionable. Also, it feels like you are now arguing for the sake of arguing.
I don’t think it makes sense to do things for a single reason. It’s better to look at the likely effects of a decision and then decide whether or not you want to go the road that leads there.
It’s still punishment for Lewin to stop hosting his videos. It’s likely perceived by Lewin that way. It’s perceived by the media as a symbol for it. All the social justice people feel good because of the symbolic act. It still puts the video outside of MIT.
Rule 34, of course. It’s all physics, dontcha know? :-D
The professor probably has hidden all sort of sexual suggestions in his lectures that MIT doesn’t want to be associated with.
Scott Aarasson writes that “Prof. Lewin tells the students that they’re about to lose their “Maxwell’s equations virginity.”” The old professor toyed the line of what can be said in todays world of politcal correctness.
That pitch might just work to get people interested.