poolerboy
Sex God
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Suppose your neighbor comes to you and asks you for a vial of medicine capable of saving the life of his wife. Your husband (or boyfriend, take your pick), however, is suffering from a similar life-threatening problem. Objectively, we could say both humans are equally worthy of being saved, but subjectively you value your husband more and thus, out of self-interest, give the vial to him. Ayn Rand would call this selfishness a virtue and most of us would probably not see much of a problem with such a move.
But what your neighbor's wife was at the brink of discovering a cure for HIV/AIDS or cancer? Objectively, both your wife and his wife have equal value as human qua human, but in terms of human wellbeing, saving his wife rather than your husband could potentially lead to an increase in wellbeing overall since she could save more lives (greatest good for the greatest number; see Utilitarianism). So if you decide to help her instead of your husband you'd accomplish this goal and thus maximize wellbeing; but you, in turn, killed your wife in the process. Most of us would intuitively see this as immoral.
What do you decide and why? Would you consider your choice morally superior?
But what your neighbor's wife was at the brink of discovering a cure for HIV/AIDS or cancer? Objectively, both your wife and his wife have equal value as human qua human, but in terms of human wellbeing, saving his wife rather than your husband could potentially lead to an increase in wellbeing overall since she could save more lives (greatest good for the greatest number; see Utilitarianism). So if you decide to help her instead of your husband you'd accomplish this goal and thus maximize wellbeing; but you, in turn, killed your wife in the process. Most of us would intuitively see this as immoral.
What do you decide and why? Would you consider your choice morally superior?









