andyandy
anthropomorphic ape
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2006
- Messages
- 8,377
We have the following 2 premises;
1) at age X, it is permissible to do Y.
2) in an arbitrarily short period of time, an individual is sufficiently similar to his/her previous self for any changes to his/her self to be negligible
however from these two premises, induction leads to a permissibility to do Y at any age. Such a method does not account for cumulative change, and yet it appears logically pretty sound. The obvious premise to attack is (2) - and to argue that even in an arbitrarily short period of time an individual is sufficiently affected so as to alter the considerations as to the permissibility of Y. However as t (time) gets smaller, this argument gets increasingly strained. One could possibly attack (1) from some kind of libertarian perspective - insofar as it implies a permissive/non-permissive dichotomy dependant upon the state....
but neither seem especially fruitful.....so i wonder how such problems are [and have been] dealt with in philosophy...
cheers
1) at age X, it is permissible to do Y.
2) in an arbitrarily short period of time, an individual is sufficiently similar to his/her previous self for any changes to his/her self to be negligible
however from these two premises, induction leads to a permissibility to do Y at any age. Such a method does not account for cumulative change, and yet it appears logically pretty sound. The obvious premise to attack is (2) - and to argue that even in an arbitrarily short period of time an individual is sufficiently affected so as to alter the considerations as to the permissibility of Y. However as t (time) gets smaller, this argument gets increasingly strained. One could possibly attack (1) from some kind of libertarian perspective - insofar as it implies a permissive/non-permissive dichotomy dependant upon the state....
but neither seem especially fruitful.....so i wonder how such problems are [and have been] dealt with in philosophy...
cheers
Legally.