Quote:
Originally Posted by chezlaw
It's a fundamental mistake to think you can quantify harms in a way that allows equating small harms with big harms. They are qualititively different.
It's why trolley problems have to try to equate majot harms with other major harm.
It's a fundamental mistake to quantify harms for different people and confront them, unless there is clear way to assess then financially.
You cannot balance or confront stuff like "is Alice worse off because she lost her mother at a young age than Bob who became paraplegic at 49".
It's not that we differ in opinions about how those bad events affect people. It's not that we lack data about what those events caused in their lives.
It is epistemologically absurd to confront the 2 because there is no "utility" in the Ethereum which people gain or lose.
It's already pretty hard to do it for a specific individual across time.
So when playing the tradeoff game, about non-monetary damage, it's impossible to define a function you want to maximize.
It's not about opinions: there is no way to assess the damage (or benefit) of a higher divorce rate in the population vs a better treatment of homosexuals.
You can have your own opinion of which of the 2 societies are better sure. But that's not predicated on people benefits or losses, only on your personal preferences.