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So ? Utils represent human suffering. Your objection is like saying 'a million deaths is just a statistic'. Just because it's a number doesn't mean it has no moral and emotional value.
And you can? Why is utilitarianism alone held to this prohibitive standard?
There's a large overlap between moral systems, virtue ethics, deontology, golden rule, utilitarianism,etc . You don't need utils to come to the conclusion that slavery and mass murder is wrong.
Ok, great. Although I did not stipulate 'my exact morality'. They should use their morality before legality, obedience, etc; too.
You're throwing this out like it's supposed to mean anything, meanwhile millions of people died 'doing their duty' for an evil cause, including in the example under discussion, or a more infamous one, closer to my family history.
I said trivial, if this is all he meant.
Problem is you have no way of telling which action results in less suffering. For all we know slavery maximized utlity
No, but I don't go by utils.
Because that's the standard it sets for itself.
I does mean something. You are again assuming that "not following orders" will mean people doing what you want them to, rather then what they want to.
Sorry, I glossed over that. It's not trivial. Demanding perfection is a road to hell, and a lot of the absurdities we see today stems exactly from that impulse.
It's certainly easier to check, with a confidence high but lesser than 1, whether an action results in suffering than whether it's inherently Virtuous or whether God approves of it.
I don't care if you're religious or not, just that you think certain things are bad in themselves. If you insist on utilitarianism, I want to see your utila spreadsheet where you arrived at you conclusion.
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