Ivor the Engineer
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2006
- Messages
- 10,646
To those who contend that concern with human wellbeing is an arbitrary standard, consider this thought experiment:
Suppose we figure out how the brain creates consciousness and we build a conscious machine. But not being the product of evolution, this machine doesn't care whether or not it continues to exist or if it is properly maintained.
To that machine, "killing" other similar machines or committing "suicide" by shutting itself down would be a task like any other. They would in fact be arbitrary actions.
But humans are the product of evolution, and evolution has built into us a very strong primal concern for our wellbeing. The evidence for this fact permeates human thoughts, actions, and cultures. And of course it could be no other way, because a conscious creature that doesn't care if it dies or suffers or slaughters its kin will not be successful in the long run.
The standard of human wellbeing is not arbitrary. It's rooted deeply in our biology.
That's not a basis for morality, that's a basis for selfishness. I can say with a very high level of confidence that I value my 'wellbeing' more than I value yours and the wellbeing of most of the other several billion people on the planet. Therefore my actions should always put my wellbeing ahead of the wellbeing of virtually everyone else.