Which is defined by human well-being.
If you're not suffering, then my job is done, I'd argue. Now, just because you're not suffering, doesn't necessarily mean that you're "well"--while the absence of pain is good, the absence of pleasure isn't bad.
EDIT: I'd also argue that gratuitous, or dysteleological suffering, is the issue. Some suffering might actually contribute to human well-being in the long-run.
This has nothing to do with ethics. It's not about "increasing wellbeing", whatever that even means. It's about doing the right thing.
I'm saying it absolutely is.
This is my argument, though. There ARE no selfless deeds. That's what I've been saying from the beginning. That's why I think it nullifies the thread, because even though it's physically impossible to be selfless, you can still try your best. That's our cause.
I discuss how we can go about it all the time--that's why I argue veganism and anti-natalism so often here, because I believe they represent the most ethically salient truths in the universe. I'm sure you have some ideas of your own--you're a vegan, and you've discussed veganism on two or three occasions here already.
given that we basically live in a dysteleological universe, i'm gonna need a few examples
How much more ethical is donating $101 to charity over donating $100?$1.
And besides, if you honestly don't think selfishness is unethical, then you're contradicting yourself here. Why didn't you donate more? Well, because you have to sustain yourself, so that you may be able to donate more in the future, or something.
It's there, but it's too complex for us to define. That's my argument. Fortunately, I feel like a lot of the ethical judgments we make on a day-to-day basis are intuitively obvious.
Assume that:1. Pleasure can be measured on a linear scale, i.e. in units2. The greater the units of pleasure, the more ethical the actionSo there's you, a stranger, and a slice of cake. You can either choose to give the cake to the stranger or eat yourself. (You can't split it.) You will get 100 units of pleasure from eating the cake; the stranger will get 75.Now on this basis alone (not accounting for other variables such as how the person will feel if you deny the cake to them etc) the answer clearly looks to be that eating the cake yourself is the most ethical option -- as long as you make the decision for that reason. I really don't see how it could be any other way.
If you're aiming for an empirically verifiable system of ethics, then presupposing that you have to exclude yourself directly conflicts with that aim:1. Ethical propositions are reducible to facts about experience.2. If certain experiences are good, and other experiences are bad, it follows logically that it is better to increase the good than increase the bad, and better to minimize the bad than minimize the good3. It is only ethical to increase the good in others; to increase your own good has no place in ethics.#3 is the only one that can't be empirically verified. Rather it's an arbitrary ruling suited to a categorical conception of ethics.
Well, that's where I think you've got a problem, because if all acts are inherently selfish, there's no clear distinction to make between altruistic/ethical and selfish/unethical.
Why do consequences that affect others matter more than the consequences that affect yourself?
it's entirely contingent on circumstance
That's assuming that $100 was your absolute limit and anything over would make sustaining yourself difficult. Which isn't what I meant.
...You must include these variables. Otherwise, it just looks like you're setting up the experiment in such a way that would conveniently help your argument.
So, I already covered this, on the paragraph beginning with "because you are not worth..."
However, it's possible for the selfishness to be outweighed, so as to make the selfishness nearly invisible. Even though it's selfish to do good deeds because they make you feel good, you're still doing good deeds, and that's what matters.
Now, if you instead worded the question like, "do consequences that affect an other matter more than the consequences that affect you?" that would've worked better to illustrate your point.
If we're dealing with only one other person, then neither one matters more than the other, assuming they're both Joe Sixpack. Whether one has his leg broken, or the other has his leg broken, there's no distinction. These are not the types of scenarios that I'm referring to, however.
However much money you think you need to get yourself by is the amount you would keep, quite obviously. That's the point.
Daily reminder that morality is subjective and if you don't think so you might as well just remove yourself from the gene pool you waste of space
Daily reminder that morality is subjective