Submitted by PrettyText t3_yjhwap in philosophy
The problem
Suppose someone forced you to press exactly one of the following two buttons:
- A random human dies. You do not know beforehand who will die and you will not learn afterwards who died.
- All pandas die. It will not be possible to somehow recreate the panda species in the future in any way.
Let's assume further that pandas perform zero essential habitat / ecology functions. I'm not sure if this is actually true in real life, but let's assume that it is, to make the decision a bit clearer and more demarcated.
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My thesis
My thesis is: it's better to have one random human die in this case.
From a utilitarian perspective, one random human brings at most a bit of happiness / utility to the world (and possibly a neutral or negative amount).
Meanwhile all pandas bring a lot of happiness / utility to the world, because people love looking at pandas.
Therefore one random human dying maximizes happiness from a utilitarian perspective.
Also, having pandas around on Earth increases genetic diversity on Earth, which might be good in the future if we want to e.g. have people be able to grow panda-coloured fur. Meanwhile 1 random human provides a negligible amount of new genetic diversity.
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Addressing counterarguments
- "human life is divine, panda life isn't." If we're going to argue from a religious point of view, didn't the creator create pandas too?
- "what if it was your loved one who happened to die?" Well yeah, every death is a tragedy, but realistically speaking we do allow people in society to engage in risk-taking behaviours and accept that some people will die.
- "do you want to have a death on your conscience?" Well I'd rather not, but I'd want to have the death of the pandas species on my conscience even less.
- "the person who gets chosen at random didn't consent to dying." True, but well, I also never signed a contract saying I consented to paying taxes. There's more areas in life where we accept some damage to individuals for the greater good, even if they didn't consent.
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Related philosophical questions
What if you have to look the human in the eye / watch their death / talk to the person's loved ones afterwards?
What if instead of 1 human vs the panda species, the question is 1 human vs 1 obscure insect species that most people haven't heard of (and which also doesn't perform habitat / ecology functions)?
If the deaths are incredibly painful, does that change your answer? Or if one of the buttons causes a painful death and the other doesn't, does that change your answer?
If you can choose which specific human dies (but it can't be someone who wishes to die), does that change your answer?
Instead of a random person dying, suppose it's one random elderly person dying, aged 65+. Does that change your answer? Or if it's a person under 40 dying, does that change your answer?
Dear_Copy_351 t1_ius7zbh wrote