How to Mug a Utilitarian (And Get Away With It)

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  • Опубликовано: 26 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @miffedmeff7302
    @miffedmeff7302 Год назад +5003

    The implicit joke is that to a utilitarian, any bodily harm to a deontologist is a net positive

    • @sakesaurus
      @sakesaurus Год назад +171

      touché

    • @falseprofit9801
      @falseprofit9801 Год назад +129

      Philosophy warr!! Ideological violence always goes great, right guys?

    • @boom-jr8vi
      @boom-jr8vi Год назад +151

      @@falseprofit9801Why you pressed; type of person to cut off their finger is not gonna be useful to anyone…

    • @somedood9989
      @somedood9989 Год назад +164

      @@falseprofit9801 Bro did NOT read the "joke" part of implicit joke

    • @falseprofit9801
      @falseprofit9801 Год назад +11

      @@somedood9989 lol

  • @seekthuth2817
    @seekthuth2817 Год назад +1852

    Me spending years proving to people that I always keep my promises so I can force someone with a very particular school of thought to give me 10 pounds

    • @idontwantahandlethough
      @idontwantahandlethough Год назад +78

      the long con
      edit: looooooonnnnnggggggg

    • @NerdOracle
      @NerdOracle Год назад +11

      On a mathematical level nobody should ever have any reason to put faith in that

    • @DudeSoWin
      @DudeSoWin Год назад +28

      Jokes on you if they got friends who would pay more to see you lose a finger.

    • @oilyfrog5022
      @oilyfrog5022 Год назад +3

      @@NerdOracle well its not exactly random, its not as though a dice is being rolled and the outcome of their promise will be random each time they make a promise

    • @NerdOracle
      @NerdOracle Год назад

      @@oilyfrog5022 You can certainly look at it that way, but from my perspective, (assuming the observer is the mugee) It is entirely arbitrary how much trust you can place on their words alone, even if they've never been on record breaking a promise, or have developed a seemingly consistant track record of upholding promises, logic dictate that you can never rule out the possibility of the Mugger changing spontaneously. It is entirely analog to flipping a coin from the victim's perspective and assumes, or insists that people are so inherently classifiable that their response to a circumstance is naught but deterministic, without acknowledging that we are all actively growing, changing, and adapting to the world around us. And a crazy pickle like this one definitely might be cause for introspection from either party if it ever transpired, or had a reason to. As I see it.

  • @cariyaputta
    @cariyaputta Год назад +4510

    This is actually a real problem with people manipulating other's emotions with suicide threats.

  • @tickytickytango5634
    @tickytickytango5634 Год назад +710

    You can also mug a utilitarian by telling them that you'll cut off _their_ finger unless they give you 10 pounds.

    • @Evelyn80264
      @Evelyn80264 Год назад +273

      they don't even have to be a utilitarian for that tactic!

    • @morgancody6752
      @morgancody6752 Год назад +6

      Pretty much everyone would take that deal if there wasn't another option how is this utilitarian?

    • @Jamiree7
      @Jamiree7 Год назад +98

      ⁠@@morgancody6752 the joke went so far above your head a bird hit it

    • @morgancody6752
      @morgancody6752 Год назад +8

      @@Jamiree7 jokes are supposed to be funny

    • @danielcrafter9349
      @danielcrafter9349 Год назад +10

      ​@@morgancody6752- who says?

  • @TheGlenn8
    @TheGlenn8 Год назад +2594

    Alright. Here's my response. Tell me if this would work.
    The utilitarian lets her cut off her finger and then makes it public what the deontologist just attempted, using the cut finger as proof. The utilitarian takes this opportunity to discourage future deontologists from coming up with the same mugging plan and mugging a potentially infinite number of future utilitarians.

    • @KaneB
      @KaneB  Год назад +1168

      Unfortunately, the Mugger has planted a bomb in the core of the Earth that will destroy the whole planet if you ever reveal anything about the interaction ;)

    • @KaneB
      @KaneB  Год назад +986

      More seriously, this does seem like a plausible way out for the utilitarian. She can use this particular interaction to reduce the probability of muggings in the future, which would maximise utility, but presumably that's only going to work if she refuses to pay up.

    • @TheGlenn8
      @TheGlenn8 Год назад +135

      @@KaneB
      I mean at this point basically every moral system should pay up right ;P

    • @charizard25.
      @charizard25. Год назад +125

      @@KaneB Well, if the Mugger has planted a bomb in the core of the earth then wouldn't it be much more utilitarian to not pay her and let her cut off her finger? Because she is a real threat to cause a huge presence of pain by exploding the planet and by cutting her finger she is obviously less of a threat. Even if she continue to do this kind of deal with other act utilitarins, it would be better with every denial of paying up the 10 Pounds.

    • @antor2471
      @antor2471 Год назад +10

      This is what the true (self-aware) utilitarian does.

  • @vanillawaffle7303
    @vanillawaffle7303 Год назад +850

    But what if the utilitarian also was a sadist? Could he argue that his satisfaction seeing the mugger cut off their finger balances out their pain and therefore makes both options are equally good?

    • @sakesaurus
      @sakesaurus Год назад +124

      asking the real questions my man

    • @Cecilia-ky3uw
      @Cecilia-ky3uw Год назад +33

      Coolest scenario

    • @daddyoftheabyss4992
      @daddyoftheabyss4992 Год назад +52

      Owning and satisfying such strong sadistic tendencies is generally conflicting with utilitarianism, so the right thing to do would be for the utilitarian to work on himself to not be such a sadist anymore, i. e. by seeking therapy. Being a sadist will also make him tend to do more sadistic things in the future and will generally make him more unhappy with making benevolent decisions.

    • @maaikevreugdemaker9210
      @maaikevreugdemaker9210 Год назад +20

      ​@@daddyoftheabyss4992it really asks 'what is utility anyway?'. If we take personal preferences into account such as sadism, would utility become personal as well? Would it have any value anymore? Probably not.

    • @daddyoftheabyss4992
      @daddyoftheabyss4992 Год назад +6

      @@maaikevreugdemaker9210 Which interest is not personal preference anyway? Personal preference should always be taked into account, just like discussions of utilitarian ethics always point to an discussion and understanding of the human being, its psyche in particular because it is the medium through which pleasure and value are perceived and defined.
      Sadism is something that works against the interests of utilitarianism, but is not a human condition / a necessary need that MUST be fulfilled. Instead, it is a personal interest that can be cultivated and reduced by working on oneself and there lies the path of happiness maximization.
      All these discussions are pointless if we don't have a good understanding of (depth) psychology, imho

  • @Arcessitor
    @Arcessitor Год назад +1198

    This entire problem is predicated on the fact I wouldn't get far more joy from seeing someone cut off their finger than they would from $10.

    • @andiralosh2173
      @andiralosh2173 Год назад +131

      Right. If you experience tremendous pleasure from causing pain, perhaps the most happiness you can create is yours at the expense of another. You're SO HAPPY

    • @grmpf
      @grmpf Год назад +46

      rule vs act utilitarianism

    • @anything4660
      @anything4660 Год назад

      @@andiralosh2173 I think liveleak redditors would definitely enjoy that and would film it properly it isn't that far fetched though there are some sick people out there.

    • @vasileseicaru8740
      @vasileseicaru8740 Год назад +20

      I'm not sure that you can be utilitarian and hedonistic (or sadistic) at least surely not to the fullest extent. Second of all, the "greater good" sought by utilitarianism is not morally relativistic. It relies, as many pre-postmodern philosophical systems, on a shared basic knowledge of good and bad, where physical harm falls squarely under the latter category. So, a utilitarian who is, in his spare time, sadistic, will have to forego the pleasure of seeing harm come to other people if he wants to stand by his utilitarian principles and will actively prevent this from happening whenever possible, unless he's actually not a utilitarian.

    • @fatalos6855
      @fatalos6855 Год назад

      What about consensual BDSM ?@@vasileseicaru8740

  • @tracyh5751
    @tracyh5751 Год назад +1978

    I don't think anyone is a utilitarian. Whenever someone tries to talk to me about utilitarianism, I tell them that discussing utilitarianism causes me immense, unpreventable pain. And yet! This does not seem to stop so called utilitarians from talking to me about utilitarianism.

    • @adisca2k
      @adisca2k Год назад +515

      If they don't talk about it, they lose happiness while you gain it. If they talk about it, you lose happiness while they gain it. Both actions are equal with a net income of 0 happiness so they choose their preferred one :))

    • @ncedwards1234
      @ncedwards1234 Год назад +149

      @@adisca2k
      Which increases autonomy which is also good

    • @AHAHAHHAHA
      @AHAHAHHAHA Год назад +110

      However if you hearing them talk about it is better for society in general and is more helpful that’s hurtful,they will choose it

    • @jordan3636
      @jordan3636 Год назад +42

      this pain is you having to face reality, likely.

    • @randomotaku5500
      @randomotaku5500 Год назад +9

      Laughed a little too hard at this 😂

  • @sweepea38
    @sweepea38 Год назад +187

    You forgot to say that the added bonus of NOT giving the mugger the cash is that they get to practice their right to be a deontologist.

  • @santagonewrong
    @santagonewrong Год назад +167

    I'm not even a strict utilitarian, but I don't really see this as a challenge to utilitarianism, because I think the utilitarian conclusion here is pretty clearly correct.
    Moral decisions happen in context. If someone is so desperate to get $10 that they're going to go to these sorts of extreme lengths to get it, as well as *legitimately* commit to never doing it again, it's reasonable to conclude that they need that $10 a lot more than I do. At that point, I'm pretty okay with giving it to them (assuming I have $10 I can spare). Hell, I might give them more than $10 at that point.

    • @paula194
      @paula194 Год назад +36

      Honestly, yes. I think people get too caught up in trying to "beat the game" and don't consider that if someone is this desperate in real life for an amount as little $10, it's not at all an absurd thing to just give them the money.

    • @ZeroPlayerGame
      @ZeroPlayerGame Год назад +19

      Yeah, if there's really no negative consequences down the line, I'd just pay the Mugger and tell her to bugger off (and not invite her to my parties anymore, probably). It's whatever, it's 10 pounds, I was forced during my life to expend a lot more effort to placate hysterical people.

    • @swagmund_freud6669
      @swagmund_freud6669 Год назад +6

      Bro you have fallen for their trick

    • @theflyingspaget
      @theflyingspaget 11 месяцев назад +16

      ​@@swagmund_freud6669it's not a trick in this case though, the mugger is sincere.

    • @TheArmin
      @TheArmin 11 месяцев назад

      Hey, I was born with glass bones and paper skin. Every morning I break my legs and every afternoon I break my arms. At night I lie awake in agony until my heart attacks put me to sleep. Should I just send you my paypal?

  • @bathl
    @bathl Год назад +193

    Promise the deontologist £10 if they talk through what the hell led them down this dark path of mugging utilitarians.
    You get a probably interesting story, they get a chance to reflect on their actions and the £10 becomes a gesture of goodwill.

    • @obamagaming3802
      @obamagaming3802 Год назад +18

      The deontologist refuses

    • @mrscsi6472
      @mrscsi6472 Год назад +4

      “we broke out here”

    • @Tzizenorec
      @Tzizenorec 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@obamagaming3802 What deontological sense does it make to refuse that?

    • @obamagaming3802
      @obamagaming3802 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@Tzizenorec he believes accepting compromises with utilitarians is inherently evil

  • @drstrangecoin6050
    @drstrangecoin6050 Год назад +145

    As a utility monster, my enjoyment utility of having or disposing of 10£ is infinitely more than that of any other party :3

    • @drstrangecoin6050
      @drstrangecoin6050 Год назад +48

      She should pay me 10 fingers, actually.

    • @adrycough
      @adrycough Год назад

      @@drstrangecoin6050 fair enough

  • @emmettfountain8658
    @emmettfountain8658 Год назад +21

    This has the same problem as the trolley problem, and really, a lot of hypothetical ethical dilemmas. Ethics is essentially an empirical field, we notice we have some set of things we think are good and we think are bad, we notice people give reasons for them, so we try to build a framework around that to give us a way to make coherent arguments and reasoning around human decisions and actions within society.
    When you start trying to use ethical frameworks to reason about situations outside of the problem space you get nonsensical results. Stating definitely that “the mugger isn’t lying” is not a situation that can happen. Stating definitely that “this won’t affect their future actions” is not possible (if you extorted someone for 10£ by threatening to cut off your finger, do you think it would affect your future actions or thought processes?).
    Hypotheticals are great and useful, but actively distorting or limiting the problem space in ways that fundamentally change the how humans operate is outside the realm of the system. It doesn’t mean there’s something wrong with the tool, it means you’re trying to use a hammer to slice a tomato.

    • @NerdOracle
      @NerdOracle Год назад

      Brilliance in effect.

    • @globglogabgalabyeast6611
      @globglogabgalabyeast6611 11 месяцев назад +4

      By the time they had enough caveats to make the utilitarian advocate for the result that they thought was incorrect, you have a mugger who always tells the truth, will somehow not let this affect their future actions in any way, and no one else will ever learn about the situation. At that point, it seems entirely reasonable to sacrifice $10 to let them keep their finger. Hypotheticals are very interesting to consider, but when they get so far removed from reality, they often get pretty useless

  • @DarkPrject
    @DarkPrject Год назад +730

    What a weird scenario. If the deontologist were desperate enough to even consider this, I'd give them the money without the threat.

    • @Strogman25
      @Strogman25 Год назад +84

      Yes exactly! If they're mugging people at all, they probably need it way more than the other person. Unless the utilitarian is on the brink of homeless or something

    • @phylocybe_
      @phylocybe_ Год назад +141

      @@Strogman25I need all of your money more than you do. Give it to me now.

    • @treecko7424
      @treecko7424 Год назад +21

      I take it this is your first time coming across a thought experiment then?

    • @DarkPrject
      @DarkPrject Год назад +61

      @@treecko7424 it's not. It's just a bad thought experiment that makes assumptions about what's good, and bad that I don't share. If I had to guess, some rich conservative with no understanding of what drives people to desperate actions came up with it.

    • @treecko7424
      @treecko7424 Год назад +47

      @@DarkPrject The point of a thought experiment is to test moral systems. The system that's being tested is utilitarianism, and the scenario is constructed specifically to be a difficult scenario for utilitarianism. Since that's our goal, we can essentially say that the mugger is doing it because they think they can get away with it.
      Obviously that's not why people actually commit crimes, but that's a totally separate discussion. The thought experiment isn't supposed to be an accurate reflection of reality, just a way to test a moral system. If you don't hold that system, obviously you'll come to different conclusions - but that doesn't mean you can't get something out of the exercise of seeing what you'd do if you did hold that view.

  • @kennethferland5579
    @kennethferland5579 Год назад +186

    The falacy of the excluded middle is at play here, the Utilitarian has more then just 2 choices. The proper thing to do is to report this person to law enforcement to have them put in phyciatric care for their obviously deranged deontology (a clearly irrational and destructive ideology), with proper care she could be re-educated to a proper utilitairan (which would itself be highly utilitarian as you now have another person acting in a utilitarian manor). Note that this can be done AFTER giving the money and is far more impactful then the money or finger. The Utilitarian is compelled to act for the greater good amoungst all the options they actually have and over the full breath of time, and modifying the belif systems of others is an act available to them.

    • @KangMinseok
      @KangMinseok Год назад +18

      If two one-time murderers want to kill you and the only way to survive for you would be to kill them both in that moment (i.e. you can only shoot them in the head because the rest of their body is armoured), would you let them kill you, because two lives are more valuable than one (what if there is evidence that they would never kill again and never get caught)?
      My point being, act utilitarianism shouldn't be applied to a scenario where forced sacrifice is involved in the first place, it's a false premise.
      Plus, someone not having a finger is not necessarily a meaningful loss of utility (esp. to society), because you can just pick the cut finger up, put it in an ice-bag, and let doctors stitch it back on or on the hand of someone else who lost a finger.

    • @josiahfresnel
      @josiahfresnel Год назад +24

      @@KangMinseok presumably being a utilitarian you would bring about better consequences then the 1 time murderers over your lifetime, so it would be justified putting your life over theirs

    • @mathguy97
      @mathguy97 Год назад +4

      @@josiahfresnel Criminals can be reformed, and people with good moral frameworks can still be lazy. You could have a scenario where the utilitarian is a lazy rich guy, while the murderers, if reformed, will be able to contribute more to society.

    • @ethanduncan1646
      @ethanduncan1646 Год назад +13

      ​@@mathguy97*CAN* be reformed. I rather take that bet thank you very much the societal cost even then is alot more then the lead and brass of a bullet.

    • @mathguy97
      @mathguy97 Год назад +10

      @@ethanduncan1646 Dude you do know that people aren't inherently good or bad, right? Crime mostly exists because of poor socio-economic conditions. Multiple studies have found that simply giving people money for free drastically reduces crime in an area.
      We were talking about edge cases here. The person I replied to argued that "presumably a utilitarian will bring better consequences", and my counterargument is that there's a very significant chance of the opposite being true.

  • @FrenchyMcToast
    @FrenchyMcToast Год назад +326

    While we're entertaining impossible scenarios for the sake of a thought experiment: I, as the utilitarian in this situation, would simply shoot the mugger with my ray gun of finger impermeability. Now you might think to counter this by using your finger impermeability shield, however what you couldn't account for is that there are 100 divination wizards nearby and they all rolled one's this morning...

    • @connorcriss
      @connorcriss Год назад +33

      Entertaining hypotheticals is important because it’s the best way to ensure a philosophy holds up under unforeseen scenarios. The fact that it doesn’t work in hypothetical situations implies the possibility of real situations where it won’t hold up.

    • @FrenchyMcToast
      @FrenchyMcToast Год назад +65

      @@connorcriss Entertaining hypotheticals doesn't work if the scenario is entirely unreasonable, especially if you keep piling on caveats until your argument is "unassailable." My point is that you're as likely to encounter someone who's mentally unstable enough to threaten self harm in an attempt to manipulate others, while simultaneously never breaking their word, as you would obtaining a device that makes fingers and only fingers impenetrable to cutting and only cutting. An honest manipulator is a contradiction by nature.

    • @connorcriss
      @connorcriss Год назад +14

      @@FrenchyMcToast it isn’t about this scenario in specific though. It’s about utilitarianism being incapable of producing a morally coherent result.
      The fact it doesn’t work in this(admittedly unlikely) scenario means that there is some significant discrepancy between broad social standards of morality and the metric for morality that is defined by utilitarianism - ideally, we can find a philosophy that closes that gap.

    • @e4arakon
      @e4arakon Год назад +3

      @@connorcriss FrenchyMcFrenchfrench doesn't like to hurt their head while thinking. They might be wrong in touting this information about themself, but why take it on you to reason with someone who clearly has better things to do then watch a video that is not in their interest? My proposal is therefore: let Frenchy keep their opinion, no matter how unreasonable, while not engaging them. I believe that this is the best outcome for this whole ordeal ^^

    • @Bob13454
      @Bob13454 Год назад +19

      @@connorcriss Utilitarianism doesn't work for this thought experiment? Is giving them the money not a valid answer? I get that the mugger is a terrible person and is exploiting you and all but I still wouldn't want them to lose a finger.

  • @RelativelyBest
    @RelativelyBest Год назад +23

    What about negotiating with the mugger? She'd presumably want to keep her finger but apparently _really_ needs those ten pounds for something. That means she would probably be open to an alternative transaction as long as she gets the money, and since she always keeps her promises she can be trusted to honor any deal you make with her. So, you could offer to give her the ten pounds if she promises to do some good deed or favor in return, thereby increasing the utility of you having to part with your money. Note that she would technically still be keeping her promise.
    I mean, _my_ reaction to all of this would be to ask: "Are you okay? Do you need help?" Like, find out why she's that desperate. This sorta sounds like an individual who really needs someone to talk to, and if we're talking about making the correct moral choice, perhaps start with showing some basic concern for the seemingly disturbed mugger?

    • @logangustavson
      @logangustavson 11 месяцев назад +1

      Of all the comments I've scoured, you have made the most sense

    • @Tzizenorec
      @Tzizenorec 11 месяцев назад

      The scenario explicitly headed this off by saying the mugger has already made a promise to follow her specific crazy ultimatum and will not waver even slightly.
      ...but yeah, the correct response might be to just disbelieve that and treat the mugger like she's perfectly capable of changing her mind.

  • @obkyrush
    @obkyrush Год назад +188

    The "why trust the mugger" argument and "a finger or a life" argument do not stack. You cannot interact with suicidal deontologist twice. So the utilitarian can have both the second and the third counter-arguments.

    • @KaneB
      @KaneB  Год назад +28

      Good point!

    • @sibanbgd100
      @sibanbgd100 Год назад +73

      More suicidal deontologists = Fewer suicidal deontologists?

    • @warptens5652
      @warptens5652 Год назад +16

      suppose the mugger is a group of 100 muggers who threaten to torture themselves for 1 year, and they already did it once

    • @crusatyr1452
      @crusatyr1452 Год назад +6

      Would it work if they're holding someone for ransom, like "give my 10 pounds or I kill this person"?

    • @malte3756
      @malte3756 Год назад +12

      @@crusatyr1452 I think it's very hard for a deontologist to hold the belief that killing someone is moral. In general this is an issue I have with this, how does the deontologist justify any of their actions, and if they don't, why do they keep to the principle of keeping promises?

  • @utilitymonster8267
    @utilitymonster8267 Год назад +64

    I don’t see why it’s an objection: if you’re 100% sure that someone is that psychothic to cut off her own finger, wouldn’t it be insane to not give the 10£?
    But the story doesn’t end there; such a person would not ‘get away with it’ in a utilitarian society. She should be treated as there is something obviously wrong with her. But of those two options, giving and not giving, it would be insane to not give her the 10£.

  • @simonscience5846
    @simonscience5846 Год назад +111

    The way this situation is set up, is basically identical to if there was someone trapped in a finger-cutting-off machine and you had to pay 10$ to free them. Just give them the money

    • @xXevilsmilesXx
      @xXevilsmilesXx Год назад

      Nah. Rather keep my $10

    • @thrilllight
      @thrilllight Год назад +37

      They trapped themselves in the machine, explicitly to extort me to free them. Saying yes reinforces abusive behavior, and if they mug more people, eventually the harm caused by mental distress and losing money would exceed losing a finger. So we say no to minimize future harm.

    • @simonscience5846
      @simonscience5846 Год назад

      But the situation was basically always altered until it became effectively equivalent to my scenario. The person is never going to do it again, and we will be the only people that ever know of it, etc. This scenario is practically building the machine I described out of a very specific and impossible scenario of the human making the threat being just as ineviteable and uncompromising as a plain finger cutting off machine.@@thrilllight

    • @vasileseicaru8740
      @vasileseicaru8740 Год назад +18

      @@thrilllight you didn't pay attention to all of the details. The problem also states that the mugger (who is unable to tell lies) promises that this interaction would stay between the two of you and it will not be attempted again by the mugger or any people that might imitate her MO, therefore, potential copycats wouldn't know that it took place and by extension they certainly wouldn't know if it succeeded.
      So, thinking about how this may influence future similar interactions can be eliminated from the process.

    • @Greyz174
      @Greyz174 Год назад

      ​@@vasileseicaru8740hypotheticals becomes less and less useful the more unrealistic details you add
      Having 100% certainty that there will never ever be any future repercussions of allowing this behavior is not something based in this reality.

  • @eggflaireon7918
    @eggflaireon7918 Год назад +15

    The simple solution is to say no by saying no you get to be happy by keeping your £10 and she gets to be happy by keeping her promise

    • @KangMinseok
      @KangMinseok Год назад +1

      Even better than, there is actually a utility gain, because I'll put the finger in an ice bag and let doctor's stitch it onto a person who just lost their finger in an accident.

    • @2bfrank657
      @2bfrank657 Год назад +2

      Yes, if she's prepared to chop off her own finger for a mere 10 pound, she clearly doesn't value that finger much, so any harm done is minimal. Perhaps her finger has gangrene and she was going to chop it off anyway!

    • @Graypalks
      @Graypalks Год назад

      She clearly values getting the money over keeping her promise or she wouldn't be making the threat

  • @1shotcountz
    @1shotcountz Год назад +106

    Amazing title Kane. I love when you incorporate your humor into these videos

    • @KaneB
      @KaneB  Год назад +22

      The original article is already pretty funny I think.

    • @dumbledorelives93
      @dumbledorelives93 Год назад +14

      ​@@KaneBIt is, but I'm not reading the original article right now(and may never have), I'm watching your video about it because you're great at explaining philosophical topics in an engaging way (and the title was funny and engaging). You're increasing the amount of utils in the world my dude, give yourself some credit

    • @KaneB
      @KaneB  Год назад +6

      @@dumbledorelives93 Thank you!

  • @nickwilliams8302
    @nickwilliams8302 Год назад +35

    The situation breaks down pretty quickly.
    For example, the objection that giving in would encourage repetition is dealt with by adding the information that the mugger promises this will be a one-time thing. But the objection that we can't know that the mugger will go through with their threat of self-harm is dealt with by adding the information that the mugger _pulled this crap last week._
    At the end of the day, the primary reason most people find the conclusions of Utilitarianism so counter-intuitive is that most people just aren't Utilitarians.

    • @tylerian4648
      @tylerian4648 Год назад +5

      Utilitarianism makes a lot more sense when you don't weight the happiness of all humans equally. When you give more weight to the happiness of one's self and family and friends and less weight to people who have a tendency to reduce the happiness of others (even if their happiness has no impact on that propensity) then you get a system that more accurately tracks with what most people consider moral.

    • @guul66
      @guul66 Год назад +1

      that is the basis of the argument, that she never breaks her promises.

    • @nickwilliams8302
      @nickwilliams8302 Год назад +3

      @@guul66 So how can she claim it's a one-time thing when she pulled the same crap last week?

    • @guul66
      @guul66 Год назад +6

      @@nickwilliams8302 she didn't claim it was a one time thing last week.

    • @tcarrotgaming1639
      @tcarrotgaming1639 Год назад +1

      @@guul66how do we know that she’ll keep her promise that it’s a one-time thing?

  • @SpeartonMan
    @SpeartonMan Год назад +5

    When I see stuff like this I can't avoid but think "only philosophers deal in absolutes"

  • @SHRUGGiExyz
    @SHRUGGiExyz Год назад +58

    Ah yes, but have we considered the outcome of including "mo' money, mo' problems" in the utilitarian's calculations? 🤔

    • @ncedwards1234
      @ncedwards1234 Год назад +9

      Yeah, ideally the utilitarian doesn't have the unnecessary £10 anyway because their income goes straight from their employer to pre-allocated charities, bills, and whatnot. Also you can carry a credit card instead of cash, which changes the dilemma. If you pay with your phone then we get into a whole other can of works because I'm not even sure it's moral to use the phone I'm currently using because it was probably made through slave labor and I set bad precedent by using it.

    • @Torgan454
      @Torgan454 Год назад +3

      @@ncedwards1234 But you already bought it, did you? Not using it would make their sacrifice less worthwhile

  • @Tehom1
    @Tehom1 Год назад +24

    To me the most striking thing about the premise is that you have both "She never breaks her promises" and "She promises to cut off her finger contingent on a condition she doesn't control". Why'd she make that promise then? It seems like it's an attempt to put her future decision (to cut or not) into the past (to promise or not). And I think that's the point, so that she can create this threat but simultaneously lack the agency over this same threat. So it's brinksmanship.
    And I think the best answer is to reject that attempt. Behave as if her choice to cut or not is under her control, regardless of her promise. If she really never breaks her promises, she'll be wiser about making them.

    • @metarmask
      @metarmask Год назад +9

      She knows she is talking to a utilitarian. But unlike how you know she is going to keep her promises, she doesn't know if you'll actually follow it. While your point about teaching a lesson is interesting, I think depending on how permanent cutting off the finger will be, it would be better to pay and then get her psychiatric help for wanting to risk it for such a low amount.

    • @Tehom1
      @Tehom1 Год назад

      @@metarmask I see your point, but I also think that if the original premise resembled a position that people might actually hold or at least think they do, it'll no longer does. Now it is more like that logic problem where the 100 grey eyed monks kill themselves on the 100th day.

    • @NerdOracle
      @NerdOracle Год назад +6

      @@metarmask She *thinks* she's talking to a Utiliatarian.
      What does a Utilitarian look like, act like? How do you pick one out off the street? How can you be certain this person abides by the diction of Utilitarianism, rather than simply ascribing to it in some incomplete or bastardized form? It's just as ridiculous for the Mugger to know their target as it is for the victim to trust the Mugger at face value.

    • @Cookiekeks
      @Cookiekeks Год назад +1

      She doesn't need to control your decision to keep her promise that if you do decide to not pay, she'll cut her finger off. In case you decide to pay, she doesn't cut it off, and has still kept all her promises, because the trigger condition was never fulfilled.

  • @AdderMoray
    @AdderMoray Год назад +146

    She only has ten fingers or one life to lose. Refusing the mugging means she can only attempt it 11 times if everyone refuses, making her and the people immediately surrounding her in life very unhappy. So either she reevaluates doing this after losing the first finger, or she continues for a finite number of times.
    But if you accept then she can go on to make an infinite number of people unhappy as she still has 10 fingers and 1 life.

    • @nickwhright5848
      @nickwhright5848 Год назад +22

      this thought experiment is inherently flawed and doesnt consider any real life factors that the author doesnt want to be included.

    • @ethanduncan1646
      @ethanduncan1646 Год назад +12

      ​@@nickwhright5848So like almost all philosophy questions lol: does not factor in the nuances of real life and cares more about owning their strawmem in classrooms

    • @lirimiri7034
      @lirimiri7034 Год назад +5

      5:20

    • @fastcow7013
      @fastcow7013 Год назад +3

      Imagine cutting off your last finger..

    • @AdderMoray
      @AdderMoray Год назад

      ​@@lirimiri7034 5:20 has nothing to do with anything I said

  • @Alice_Fumo
    @Alice_Fumo Год назад +10

    Since you'd expect 10 bux continuing being worth more than a finger, you'd also expect for the mugger to continue robbing you the same way until you can't cough up 10 more bux, then cut off their finger, so in the end, the utilitarian would starve and the other person would still lose the finger. Therefore, just letting them lose the finger immediately maximizes happiness.
    Disregarding that, I believe to propose this the mugger would have to value their finger at or below 10 bux.

    • @kirboman5175
      @kirboman5175 Год назад

      Based on the example of once per week it has happened, it is only 40 bux a month. If you can keep Netflix, you can keep this person from cutting off their finger.
      That is to say, that has been covered already.
      Yeah, 10 bux is fairly arbitrary, but a thought experiment is a thought experiment.

  • @alexnikols8996
    @alexnikols8996 Год назад +11

    If she promises to never mug someone again than you should give her $10. I mean it’s total assurance that a person will never commit a mugging again, or never mug a utilitarianist again. Either way it’s a net positive.
    Additionally if it’s the latter and they can never mug a utilitarianist again than in order to keep their promise they would have to convince those they wish to mug to reveal their philosophical beliefs prior to attempting a mugging, thus essentially ensuring they never mug anyone ever again.

    • @Tzizenorec
      @Tzizenorec 11 месяцев назад

      Paying someone to not do something bad that they wouldn't have wanted to do anyway is generally a bad idea.
      Why the heck does this deontologist not consider mugging an evil act from the start?

  • @Itzarzky
    @Itzarzky Год назад +4

    this is like a 2012 philosophy channel in the wrong world
    its so nostalgic-like

  • @emberreed6374
    @emberreed6374 Год назад +29

    It doesn’t feel counter intuitive to me at all that you should pay the mugger. Setting utilitarianism aside my intuition is simply that anyone should pay the mugger. That person’s probably going through a rough time and needs the money, they just threatened to cut off there finger for god sake.

    • @KaneB
      @KaneB  Год назад +22

      I'm inclined to pay up just because I find his scheme so funny. He deserves the £10 for ingenuity.

  • @CrystaTiBoha
    @CrystaTiBoha Год назад +3

    My favorite is when people give me a gift expecting to create a sense of reciprocity or obligation. If I yield to somebody else's wish for me to accept a gift, that means the gifter has received a favor and is indebted to me.

  • @Racnive
    @Racnive Год назад +8

    I think you successfully illustrate why telling other people the exact process you use to make decisions is a bad idea.

    • @Tzizenorec
      @Tzizenorec 11 месяцев назад

      Telling people you're a deontologist actually seems really useful, even if it's a lie.

  • @Greyz174
    @Greyz174 Год назад +7

    Expecting people to be held hostage leads to negative utility, even if the hostage holder promises to be quiet about it

  • @BigDBrian
    @BigDBrian Год назад +11

    With the mugger keeping it secret and promising to never do it again, with you knowing for sure that it is true, I'd just give her the 10 pounds, like it's not that big of a deal to be honest.

    • @cbunny6671
      @cbunny6671 Год назад +1

      well thats the issue though. lets say she came from some crazy deontologist cloning factory, and theres just thousands of her running around, and each one of them has been taught to seek out utilitarians.
      the problem isn't so much a "as a one off thing should you give the $10", it's "as a rule, should you say yes or no."

    • @KingOpenReview
      @KingOpenReview Год назад +2

      ​@@cbunny6671That basically takes us back to the situation in the beginning where the utilitarian lets her cut off her finger to avoid the bad habit of letting demonologists exploit the utilitarian's systems.

  • @augustday9483
    @augustday9483 Год назад +4

    So I'm only at 5:30, but here's my counter argument: giving a mugger $10 to avoid them committing self-harm does not, in my opinion, carry more utility. It is not the obvious choice to me in this situation, and here is why.
    A mugger is an immoral person and a criminal. By attempting to use coercion to streal money from others, they've demonstrated that they put their own gain above the stability of society. As such, for such a person to gain money would be inherently bad and most likely lead to further negative consequences in the future. I think it'd be better for society overrall if that person went through with cutting off their own finger.

  • @inoroth2001
    @inoroth2001 Год назад +5

    The mugger chose to make the promise in order to manipulate people, and under no duress. They clearly are willing to lose that finger over a pittance of money. If they would rather mutilate themselves than find an alternate way to make about an hours' worth of minimum wage income, the Utilitarian thing to do is to ensure they obtain medical mental help.

  • @yhwh9778
    @yhwh9778 11 месяцев назад +1

    I read the title and thought this was some crazy thought provoking experiment, when its just "would you give someone 10 dollars for them to not cut their fingers?"

  • @aarvlo
    @aarvlo Год назад +45

    I don't consider myself a utilitarian but they would argue that following social rules such as "people are not individually responsible for the well being of strangers" is necessary to increase happiness in the whole of society while sacrificing edge cases like this

    • @KangMinseok
      @KangMinseok Год назад

      Exactly, otherwise if two people wanted to murder you and you could only survive if you'd kill them, then you'd have to let them kill you, because two lives are more valuable than one blablabla

    • @Laezar1
      @Laezar1 Год назад +14

      A true utilitarians knows it's unethical to be utilitarian

    • @ItsAsparageese
      @ItsAsparageese Год назад +3

      ​@@Laezar1 I've never felt so validated and so attacked at the same time

    • @KangMinseok
      @KangMinseok Год назад +1

      @@extremepayne I guess the example can be ignored then because act-utalitarianism was already shown to be non-utilitarian so to speak, since any moral theory that rewards immoral actions is pretty useless 😂 This video is basically the equivalent of "Act-utalitarianism, which has been shown to reward immoral behavior and is therefore not a useful moral theory, has no defence against certain immoral actions."... tell us something new.

    • @thek2despot426
      @thek2despot426 Год назад +2

      ​@@Laezar1 I get this is meant to be a joke, but arguing that utilitarians should consider moral decision making with more long-term consequences in mind isn't self-defeating to anything but naive caricatures of utilitarianism that are, erroneously, denied the ability to be more sophisticated in its expectations about utility.

  • @pianoman7753
    @pianoman7753 Год назад +2

    What interesting conversations have spawned from what seemed to be a simple scenario!
    Well done, intruiging.

  • @KenGroth-ts6ge
    @KenGroth-ts6ge Год назад +3

    The mugger better be missing a finger or two before they make a threat like that

  • @defeatSpace
    @defeatSpace Год назад

    thank you for the white text and black screen, so much easier on the eyes than the other way around

  • @leastfavorite
    @leastfavorite Год назад +5

    honestly i think if someone went up to me and said “give me £10 or i promise i will cut off my finger” i would probably give them £10? i feel like that’s not an unreasonable amount for me to give up

    • @NerdOracle
      @NerdOracle Год назад

      In that case, I do need £10

  • @ncedwards1234
    @ncedwards1234 Год назад +2

    Mugger: You a utilitarian?
    You: Not anymore
    QED

  • @karl-erikvik3400
    @karl-erikvik3400 Год назад +3

    I feel like something often missed about utalitarianism is that one needs to define what goals we want to maximize.
    Relevamt to this situation is a belief in the right to not be coerced, really just an extrapolation in a wish to maximize freedom.
    As a rule-utalitarian, I'd say a system where one can expect to coerce others to act as you will by threats that are on a case-by case worse imposes indue force upon the individual.
    And regarding the whole impartiality-thing, one should strive to be 100% impartial. This is does ofc not mean one needs to flip a coin to decide between buying random ppl dinner or going out with friends. However, when faced with the trolley-problem with 1 friend vs 5 strangers, one must understand that your personal relationsip does not impart more inherent value onto the 1 person.
    Ofc no utalitarian, including me, can act with perfect rationality, but that does not make the lens of analysis less valuable.

  • @TheUntamedNetwork
    @TheUntamedNetwork 11 месяцев назад +1

    I think this is a better demonstration of how any ideological system with which you can derive ought statements can be either demonstrated to be paradoxial OR can be exploited under arbitrarily specific circumstances.

  • @theblakwarior
    @theblakwarior Год назад +5

    Tbh, my problem was exactly what was adressed. The bad precedent. After that. I found myself being very happy with giving the mugger the money. I tryed finding a way in which I am biased, but still, I feel satisfaction with the outcome. Idk.

    • @Omnicide101
      @Omnicide101 Год назад +1

      Yeah, once we're certain no precedent is set I don't think there's anything all that unintuitive about paying an obvious mentally unwell person ten bucks to make sure they keep all their digits.

    • @theblakwarior
      @theblakwarior Год назад

      @@Omnicide101 eh, not quite. I think the experiment becomes a bit useless, if your premises dont include that the mugger recieving money has no (or almost no) moral value.

    • @Omnicide101
      @Omnicide101 Год назад

      @@theblakwarior Sorry, I don't quote follow, could you rephrase?

    • @theblakwarior
      @theblakwarior Год назад +1

      @@Omnicide101 like, the answer becomes too obvious if you would want to give your money in the first place. So this one only becomes interesting if it would have no utility for the mugger to recieve money. Like if they dont really need the money, technically.
      Its not a very realistic scenario, but its still an interesting question.

    • @Omnicide101
      @Omnicide101 Год назад +1

      @theblakwarior Ahhhh right, I mean I don't think whatever utility the mugger gets from the money matters because anything £10 can buy is overshadowed by the suffering of cutting off a finger.

  • @maxmyzer9172
    @maxmyzer9172 Год назад +1

    This reminds me of Pascal's Mugging! Basically, any mugger can claim they are a deity, and if you don't hand over your money, you will burn forever, and if you do, you will have eternal paradise. Since you cannot prove whether they are or are not a deity, their best course of action is always to hand over your money.

  • @pninnabokov3734
    @pninnabokov3734 Год назад +3

    This is a intriguing conundrum and brings to mind a similar situation in the marvelous film, "The Banshees of Inisherin."

    • @pninnabokov3734
      @pninnabokov3734 Год назад

      @@boncedestroya834 Thank you! It's a pleasure to receive a reply - any reply - as YT censors most of my comments. 1984

  • @TaraBryn
    @TaraBryn Год назад +2

    I mean, wouldn't the obvious and most utilitarian response be to recognize that the mugger is unwell and a danger to herself, especially if she's already followed through with cutting off 1 finger, and to help her get the professional help she needs.

  • @zenunity98
    @zenunity98 Год назад +3

    10:20 you mention giving the mugger money being a counterintuitively moral choice? I feel like I'm missing something like I don't really consider myself a utilitarian, but like I wouldn't hesitate to give the mugger money, I don't see how someone could see a mugger threatening to cut of their finger for $10 and decide to just let that happen, I feel soo confused

  • @propoppop9866
    @propoppop9866 Год назад +2

    This feels like a "demon comes out of a portal" scenario where a demon comes out of a portal and tells you they will do something horrific unless you do something slightly less horrific. The two scenarios are essentially the same if we don't care who dose the action. I think that just happened in a black mirror episode but whatever

  • @GottfriedLeibnizYT
    @GottfriedLeibnizYT Год назад +26

    What kind of utilitarian am I if I don't give the mugger £10 to enjoy seeing him cut off his finger?

    • @ZachTheHuman
      @ZachTheHuman Год назад +9

      as long as you get more joy than the mugger does pain, then technically...

    • @kennethferland5579
      @kennethferland5579 Год назад +8

      Then you have invented Sadotarianism in which you maximize happiness after adjustment for your own Sadism, so long as you enjoy the other guys suffering more the they suffer your still a net possitive.

    • @Cup-of-kaif
      @Cup-of-kaif Год назад +4

      Edgelord utilitarian

    • @thewizard1
      @thewizard1 Год назад +4

      Unimaginablely based.

  • @imacds
    @imacds Год назад +17

    The Act Utilitarian shoots her with a sleep dart and then admits her into a psychiatric asylum.
    The Act Utilitarian makes her promise to return the money immediately after receiving it.

    • @rateeightx
      @rateeightx Год назад +1

      How would you make her promise to return the money immediately after receiving it, Unless you threaten her with something, In which case she might be disinclined to believe you as any sort of major bodily harm against her would likely lead to less utility than your loss of 10 pounds?

  • @luszczi
    @luszczi Год назад +7

    Nice, the idea is more clever than I expected from the title.

  • @NStripleseven
    @NStripleseven Год назад +1

    The correct response to Bentham’s Mugging is “oh crap I calculated wrong, shouldn’t have let this happen”

  • @hrc7715
    @hrc7715 Год назад +36

    1 minute into the video
    As a utilitarian I might keep my money and let them learn a valuable lesson about trying to maliciously abuse utilitarianism for personal gain, and reduce the likelihood of them carrying out such a thing in the future, or anyone being subjected to it

    • @mitchellcouchman1444
      @mitchellcouchman1444 Год назад +2

      Exactly, he doesn't seem to count dissuading future harm as an offset of harm
      My first question would be are you currently considering doing this to other people, or me again, if no, then give the £10. If yes, then don't give the £10

    • @Bob13454
      @Bob13454 Год назад +5

      Keep watching

    • @cbunny6671
      @cbunny6671 Год назад

      yeah. you've reduced the amount of times they are capable of mugging people by their odd ideology by 1.
      i think that would be more valuable a lesson than 10 dollars.

    • @hrc7715
      @hrc7715 Год назад

      @cbunny6671 On second thought, remembering that it's only $10 bucks, I'm just gonna give the crazy person 10 bucks so I can go about my day and not get shanked or involved in some shennanigans

    • @Cookiekeks
      @Cookiekeks Год назад

      That doesn't work, because the mugger promised she'd never do it again, and she'd keep it a secret.

  • @johnmarston2616
    @johnmarston2616 Год назад

    So glad I found this channel. Great video friend

  • @orelyosif5852
    @orelyosif5852 Год назад +6

    To get away from this scenario with your money in your pockets you just need to accept that mugger loosing their finger isn't actually harming them(if they are in sane concious and want to do it to themself, then they must have a reason). If they want to do it, then the joy of doing it would overwrite the pain. Boom.

    • @KangMinseok
      @KangMinseok Год назад +2

      I'd just put the finger in an ice bag and let doctors stitch it on the hand of someone who lost their finger. Utility pretty much restored.

  • @smile--
    @smile-- 11 месяцев назад +2

    Imagine 10 deontologist muggers pull out knives and say, "If you don't give one of us 10 bucks we will all kill ourselves" 💀

  • @scottygagnon4287
    @scottygagnon4287 Год назад +4

    So, about the setting a precident example, what stops the mugger from making the exact same promise immediately after you give them the 10 pounds? Would you not also be obligated to give the mugger your money again and again? Are all of your material posessions worth a single finger? I consider the cost to me of losing all of my posessioms as higher than the value of a finger. In my reading, a utilitarian must decline if they view the sum value of all of their posessions as greater than that of a finger.

  • @elliott6158
    @elliott6158 Год назад +2

    Honestly, if somebody came up to me and was like, "I will cut off my finger if you don't pay me 10 dollars." I would probably pay them 10 dollars.

  • @heikkipaasi1279
    @heikkipaasi1279 Год назад +7

    This charity must be quite effective indeed if it can buy nets so fine that can they catch malaria itself for under 2 pounds.

  • @vedqiibyol
    @vedqiibyol Год назад +1

    AHA! Yes! An utilitarian would decide not to inform individual that they are utilitarian because by doing that they avoid those problems which is more benefical than disclosing it in which case these issues could occur!

  • @azaleacolburn
    @azaleacolburn Год назад +6

    I think the problem you’re running into is that people aren’t morally perfect or consistent. Saying all deontologists who believe promises should be kept always keep their promises or all utilitarians must donate most of their money to charity, is like saying all Christians always follow the teachings of god and Jesus. It’s silly, people pick and choose what they want from a framework and moral system, and even if they believe in it 100%, people still go against their own morals.

    • @nathanharvey8570
      @nathanharvey8570 Год назад

      This isn't about people in practice, this is about how internally consistent the theory itself is under scrutiny

    • @azaleacolburn
      @azaleacolburn Год назад +3

      @@nathanharvey8570Exactly, he's trying to apply moral theory to practical application/docrine. That's not what utilitarianism or deontology are. It's like arguing that Christianity is good because it preaches loving your neighbor, thus Christians must all love their neighbors. Philisophical moral theory is not the same as theory that is meant to be applied to your life.

  • @the1exnay
    @the1exnay Год назад +1

    before watching the full video, here's my thought:
    you must split it into two possible circumstances, either this is a regular occurrence or it is a one-off occurrence. If it is a singular occurrence that implies the person is so desperate that they are willing to risk their finger, in which case they could have just asked and a true utilitarian (presuming they believed the story) would likely give them 10 dollars.
    The other possibility is that it is a repeat problem, in which case the act-utilitarian must consider the long term implications of the action. To repeatedly refuse is to, at least eventually, stop the muggings from continuing, which removes all the negative affects that such muggings have on society. But repeatedly giving them the money is to eventually spend thousands of dollars and enormous amounts of time and emotional energy to preserve a single finger.
    On a separate note, this hypothetical is not purely hypothetical. Comparable situations are unfortunately somewhat common. Such as boyfriends/girlfriends threatening suicide should their counterpart break up with them. Though one could imagine the threatener being an act utilitarian themselves, thinking that should they not get what they want then the negative in their life will exceed the positive. Which then makes suicide a way to maximize global utility. But one could argue they would be mistaken in that belief

  • @nathanwycoff4627
    @nathanwycoff4627 Год назад +4

    utilitarian argument for kane's patreon: the more people know about utilitarianism, the more it will be practiced.

    • @KaneB
      @KaneB  Год назад +10

      Utilitarian argument for Kane's patreon: because people are terrible at assessing consequences, it would minimise utility if everybody became utilitarian and tried to maximise utility, and Kane encourages people not to be utilitarian.

  • @ozymandiasramesses1773
    @ozymandiasramesses1773 Год назад +1

    This is also a great way of understanding asymmetric warfare and gorilla tactics. Where one side only cares for logistical might and the other cant possibly win on a level field. This may cost me a finger (small regimen) but youll lose 10$ (tanks, rations, equipment, etc.)

  • @resiknoiro7506
    @resiknoiro7506 Год назад +7

    What a great video. I fell like most hypothetical situations which are designed to make utilitarian arguments counterintuituve are just weirdly exaggerating the consequences.
    the cutting off of fingers is like the example with the demon: The description of the hypothetical situation "artificially" sets the negative consequences so extremely high, that a utilitarian would have no other choice than acting to avoid that. With this "strategy", you can force an utilitarian to a counterintuitive answer.
    But this is actually the very reason why i like utilitarianism: It doesn't just ignore extreme situations. An extreme consequence (even if just hypothethical) has extreme influence on the moral evaluation. And i think that's how it should be.

  • @siyustuff213
    @siyustuff213 Год назад

    i love how the thought experiment just kept getting more and more extreme

  • @justus4684
    @justus4684 Год назад +9

    13:53
    Smoothest self-advertising transition in a Kane B video yet

  • @briansinger5258
    @briansinger5258 Год назад

    The bike meme explains this concept instantaneously.

  • @moonblaze2713
    @moonblaze2713 Год назад +72

    You know, being a virtue ethicist is difficult. There is a lot I have to consstantly struggle with. But having watched this video, Im incredibly grateful that I don't have to struggle with this.

    • @frimi8593
      @frimi8593 Год назад +41

      uh oh it looks like someone is asking for a virtue ethicist oriented moral dilemma

    • @FishSticker
      @FishSticker Год назад +1

      Virtue ethics are dumb 🗣️💯

    • @galacticguardian2783
      @galacticguardian2783 Год назад +2

      Virtue ethicism still has a better grounding than whatever this is

    • @FishSticker
      @FishSticker Год назад

      @@galacticguardian2783 me when I kill a group of small children (it’s okay because I felt bad about it therefore I’m growing as a person)

    • @brutusthebear9050
      @brutusthebear9050 Год назад +1

      ​@@frimi8593No such thing, at least with my moral framework. All of those exist outside of normal reality, and so are irrelevant to discussions of morality.

  • @theoriginalrandomman
    @theoriginalrandomman Год назад +1

    "the problem with this response is we can completely change the original hypothetical"

    • @theoriginalrandomman
      @theoriginalrandomman Год назад

      hey, maybe I don't trust that these people are going to kill themselves for 10 bucks.
      "Well, you know they'll do it because you've interacted with them before and they've already killed themselves."
      idk sounds like the problem solved itself george

  • @ConsciousExpression
    @ConsciousExpression Год назад +35

    As a utilitarian myself, I see all kinds of problems with this. One of the things that tends to unite utilitarians is that we think life is messy and we ought to use reasoning skills rather than unbreakable imperatives.
    Sorry to attack the premise just as you anticipated, but there's no such thing as someone who always keeps their promises. So, if we're imagining an impossible scenario, perhaps this is rational. But the idea that you can trust the mugger to cut off their finger and never to mug you again and to never mug anyone else again, etc, is just out of the realm of reality.
    If they are unethical enough to blackmail you, then by definition they are not ethical enough to be trusted not to pull this stunt again on you or someone else.
    I might give the mugger $10 anyway, one time, because it's a small amount of money and certainly worth not losing a mugger finger over. But I would cut ties with that person immediately, because they're obviously a manipulative psychopath, so I would have no way of knowing if they fulfill their promise to not do it to anyone else, and I would expect that they actually will. So that would bother me, that I encouraged them, and potentially led to their victimization of others. In the real world, rather than the fantasy world where there is a monkey who can always be trusted to keep a promise their entire life.
    It seems like the author is trying to break utilitarianism, which is born of pragmatism, by suggesting very unrealistic scenarios. But part of pragmatism is also realizing you can't get it exactly right every time, and just doing your best. So suggesting unrealistic scenarios to try to "break" the idea of using your brain and rationality to navigate difficult moral landscapes really misses the point a lot.
    Nobody has these crystal balls that give us the perfect knowledge which is always at the heart of utilitarian philosophical dilemmas. They always seem to assume perfect knowledge of circumstances and outcomes, which aren't available in the real world. And it's the real world which is the very reason that utilitarianism exists. It wasn't born of ivory tower philosophy, it was born as a reaction to ivory tower philosophy - e.g. Kantianism.
    So it strikes me as interesting, if not even tendentious, that most of if not all of the thought experiments designed to critique utilitarianism compel us to assume counterfactual, unrealistic conditions as a prerequisite. This seems very obvious to me, so it bothers me that it's not obvious to people like the author.

    • @bort6414
      @bort6414 Год назад +3

      Utilitarianism falls folly to a deeply destructive moral imperative which can be summated as "without boundaries, there can be no good or evil". The entire premise of the utilitarian pretending to be moral or ethical is a joke. You *cannot* be a moral utilitarian, as you define your set of values on what is most beneficial, not what is "right".
      This doesn't seem like a problem at first, until you realize that this leaves the proverbial ethical goalposts of society completely floating. So long as anyone can justify enough benefits at a low enough cost, literally *anything* is now suddenly permissible within an exclusively utilitarian framework. Sexual assault, theft, genocide, murder, blackmail, literally all of it can be done under the right circumstances because utilitarianism does not, nor can it, recognize them as "wrong" in the first place.
      So the only rational thing you can do ends up being irrational in the first place. Within the confines of the cold nihilism of an uncaring universe, of course murder cannot be wrong, and therefore if it brings enough benefit we can justify it. But if we establish a set of rules as immutable and absolute, set forth by forces beyond our individual autonomy and authority, we now have a framework upon which we can make rules. By escaping the overwhelming chaos of lawlessness, we can establish the necessary order needed to form a functioning society, and we can do this by arbitrarily and irrationally holding some values or virtues sacred. The value of human life, the sanctity of human freedom, the respect of another human's property, all things we generally recognize to be "good", born not from logic, but irrational belief in good or evil.
      After that foundation is built, of course it is useful to apply a healthy dose of logic and utilitarianism. But utilitarianism itself is only useful or effective on a short timescale and a small scope. Two individuals making decisions in the moment with an immutable foundation that they base their ethics on can apply utilitarian thinking to make things much more efficient. But humans are not capable of thinking on the truly cosmic scale that would be required to make utilitarian decisions on a generational timescale, and I haven't even touched on the inherent mental biases and vices that plague us as inherently irrational creatures that ultimately preclude a just outcome from attempts at purely logical thinking.

    • @ConsciousExpression
      @ConsciousExpression Год назад +5

      @@bort6414 well it's good that utilitarianism is not a religion and it's not mutually exclusive with consequentialism or secular humanism then.

  • @leonemaledetto1500
    @leonemaledetto1500 Год назад +1

    I swear if this is a 25 minute takedown of that bike stealing meme about happiness

  • @ezekielrauch3703
    @ezekielrauch3703 Год назад +16

    I get the idea of the hypothetical, but there is a very easy solution.
    The mugger could ask for the $10, and if they don't give it then they cut off the victims finger rather than their own. Or, the mugger could kill them.
    That would be a lot more effective for pretty much every theoretical response, and far less ridiculous. Plus applicable for non-utilitarian's too!

    • @ayandragon2727
      @ayandragon2727 Год назад +21

      That's not a thought experiment that's just a mugging

    • @noahjones9833
      @noahjones9833 Год назад +2

      Wouldn't the utilitarian response be to take action to prevent this from occurring while minimizing sadness and maximizing happiness

    • @schwingedeshaehers
      @schwingedeshaehers Год назад +1

      Then you can run

    • @jatelitherius9842
      @jatelitherius9842 Год назад

      In point of fact you could then ask for a much greater amount of money

  • @tickytickytango5634
    @tickytickytango5634 Год назад +2

    7:05 If the mugger did the same thing last week, obviously I can't trust her when she says that she won't do it again this time and suddenly the previous objection is valid again.

  • @martinbennett2228
    @martinbennett2228 Год назад +11

    For an act utilitarian, the utilitarian has to assess all the consequences, so it is not only about how else the £10 could be used by himself, but also about how the mugger might use the money, which could be to produce a lot of misery.
    A promise can only be fulfilled if whoever promises is able to fulfil the promise. A mugger could say give me the money or I shall sell my soul to the devil. This could be promised in all earnestness but if the utilitarian does not think this is possible, that alone could allow him to dismiss the demand. In your case the utilitarian needs to know not only that the mugger will carry out her pledge, but also that she has the capability.
    Another possibility is that unknown to both the utilitarian and the mugger is that the finger harbours a malignant tumour, in which case cutting off the finger could be a life saver.
    Your odd scenario highlights a generally acknowledged problem with act utilitarianism at least for the actual time of the act in that it is impossible to calculate the consequences. As a means for assessing past actions when the immediate and secondary consequences are known act utilitarianism works much better. This is why rule utilitarianism seemed more plausible as a guide for current actions, though this leads to problems with the formulation of the rules (how do you prevent them dissolving into act utilitarianism?).

    • @KaneB
      @KaneB  Год назад +9

      Although I don't think that Bentham's Mugging really presents any difficulty for utilitarianism, I've always felt that the more general problem you discuss there -- the impossibility of calculating the consequences -- is about as close as we've ever come to a knock-down problem for a philosophical position. Actually, the problem isn't just about calculating the long-term consequences, it's that it seems to me that there's no way to make sense of the idea that there's even any fact of the matter about the long-term consequences of various possible actions. We can, perhaps, trace the causal chains from the action that is actually performed. But we have to compare the consequences of that action to the consequences of possible alternative actions that were never performed, and once we run the tape onwards, say, 1000 years from those merely possible actions, it's going to be totally indeterminate what would have happened.

    • @frimi8593
      @frimi8593 Год назад

      @@KaneB the thing about that is that we can know some things without needing to know the net utility of an action 1000 years down the line. That's because no one action exists in a vacuum. Rule utilitarianism is useful because rather than going off of pure causality chains that are unknowable, we can make decisions based on predictable trends that, even if they aren't predictive all the time, will result in net positives. And as long as we are always upholding and updating our code of conduct in accordance with the observable trends of the present, we will always be doing a utilitarian good. This is because a single action now has vastly more effect on the world today than a single action 1000 years ago in almost all cases. As a utilitarian all I really need to do to ensure that my actions will have a positive effect on the world 1000 years from now is promote the long standing preservation of utilitarian thought; as long as people 1000 years from now are utilitarian as well than my actions as a whole, not just an individual action whose causal chain is unknowable, have created a net good in the world.

  • @agdaboss3281
    @agdaboss3281 Год назад +2

    I love how philosophers are like what’s the most absurd situation we could possibly imagine that would totally never happen and then people are like oh yah threatening self harm to exploit others just a regular Tuesday

    • @theflyingspaget
      @theflyingspaget 11 месяцев назад

      Cutting off a finger over £10? Absurd. Self harming to exploit others? That is a regular Tuesday in my book. It works well on everyone, not just utilitarians, as long as you make sure to show them the consequences of their choice. =)

  • @AexisRai
    @AexisRai Год назад +27

    what would you call a moral strategy where I "precommit to never giving in to blackmail"? that's where my instinct goes in this case, so I'm probably not an act-utilitarian.

    • @ncedwards1234
      @ncedwards1234 Год назад +14

      Make a promise that if you ever give in to blackmailing you will have to kill yourself after, which is like the mugger's position but more extreme lol.

    • @frimi8593
      @frimi8593 Год назад +1

      What you’ve described is probably closest to a deontological framework. The logic following that “if everyone were to give in to blackmail them society would fall apart therefor one ought not ever give in to blackmail.” As opposed to the act utilitarian whose logic is generally “I will weigh the consequences of giving in vs not giving in and pick the most optimal one on a case by case basis; there is no universally correct response to blackmail”

    • @deeznoots6241
      @deeznoots6241 Год назад +3

      @@ncedwards1234 the fun thing about moral thought experiments is one-upping people lol

    • @AexisRai
      @AexisRai Год назад +2

      @@frimi8593 Thanks.
      When I interrogate my feelings on this, I don't exactly see a universalizing argument about "what if everybody did it", even if I might think nobody should do it. It's more like this:
      I would personally commit to never giving in to blackmail, to constrain reality to those universes where people who would use it against me will never gain concessions by using it.

    • @electra_
      @electra_ Год назад

      When thinking about precommiting to things, neither player is really *truly* bound to precommiting, so I think it sort of comes down to a game of chicken in this case.
      You sort of have 3 outcomes.
      Deontologist breaks their promise: -D | 0 (where D = the loss in value from breaking a promise in Deontology)
      Utilitarian breaks their promise: M | -M (where M is the amount of money being mugged)
      Punish state (both players break their promise and get punished for it): -F | -U (where F is the physical pain of losing a finger, and U is the loss in value from letting a finger be cut off in utilitarianism)
      In any one interaction, it may be that both players keep their promise, leading to a state that is worse for everyone. But in the "limit", you expect at least one player to chicken out, as this will give them value infinitely into the future. (The interaction won't literally happen an infinite number of times, but it sets a precedent for future actors as well)
      Here, the Deontologist goes from "losing a finger" to "breaking a promise", gaining F - D.
      The Utilitarian goes from "seeing a finger lost" to "losing the money", gaining U - M.
      I think whoever gains the greater value from this interaction will be the one to break it in the limit (though, i don't like, have a proof of this, that just seems like what should make sense game-theoretically)
      If the utilitarian values the loss of someone else's finger truly equivalent to the pain the finger-loser would feel, then all that the mugger would need to get away with the interaction would be to ask for an amount of money less than the loss in value for breaking a promise. Thus, as long as they ask for an amount of money that would *not* normally cause them to break a promise (given the promise didn't precommit to not doing it if not given money) then they should be fine (which is a bit counterintuitive, but like... if they ask for too much money, the utilitarian will refuse.)
      Of course, does the utilitarian even care about this amount of money? Theoretically, if the utilitarian cared about both parties truly equally, an amount of money transferred would not be a negative at all, and the utilitarian would be completely neutral on giving money away (or well, they would want to equal out money with anyone they met, to maximize diminishing returns?)
      Perhaps they might value the money being with themself instead of the thief more, as they would be using the money for a better cause...
      Anyways, in an actual practical scenario, the decision seems like it would come down to the exact value propositions of each person which would probably be different and not exactly perfectly aligned. It seems likely that in reality, the pain of losing a finger (F) would be far greater than the utilitarian's negative value proposition since it's real pain and not just a moral theory, and so F - D would be far greater than U - M, even if the money asked for was minimal.
      I suppose that the fact that the game can be repeated can sort of screw things up. If only some small amount of money is sufficient, but a large amount is not, what's to stop the thief from immediately asking for the deal to be resolved again once it occurs successfully? I suppose actually this just requires the utilitarian to specify that the finger-cutter's promise should also include "and i won't do this again" since well, you can't keep holding the same threat up or the promise doesn't really become meaningful.
      Edit: After thinking on this theory further (that whoever has more to gain from breaking their promise will do so) I no longer think it is a complete theory, there has to be something more to it. Consider this scenario.
      Alice, Bob, and Charlie are playiing a board game. We will consider the value to be defined as "percentage chance to win the game" so it is well defined, unlike morality which is very much not.
      At the start of the turn, all players are equally likely to win (33%).
      Charlie has a way to win on the next turn, but Alice has a card that stops this.
      So Alice threatens Bob, saying "if you don't give me half of your resources, I'll let Charlie win." (assume that resources are directly correlated with win% in this case.)
      So Alice would stand to make the scenario 50% - 16% - 33%.
      But Charlie has precommitted to not falling for these deals. If he indeed goes through with this, it will be 0% 0% 100% because Charlie will win.
      So here, Alice stands to gain 33% by breaking her promise (she has a 1/3 chance of winning and she'd be giving that up.)
      Meanwhile, Bob only stands to gain 16% by breaking his promise (if he gives in to the deal, he'll still have a 16% chance to win instead of nothing.)
      So, by my theory, Alice would not be able to get away with the deal, since she stands to gain more by not going through with it.
      But, say that instead Alice gives Bob all her resources (except what is needed to prevent Charlie from winning.)
      Say this makes the game 0% - 66% - 33% - Alice has made it impossible for herself to win.
      But now she makes a similar deal, asking for Bob to give her all those resources back, plus half of his original stuff.
      Now, Bob still stands to gain 16% by going through with the deal, but Alice stands to gain nothing by letting Charlie win, as she has already given up everything - she has nothing to lose. Thus, by my theory, she would now be able to extort Bob.
      This seems completely absurd. How could Alice give away resources to Bob and only through this be able to extort him? Something's gotta be wrong here.

  • @wesleyewert1023
    @wesleyewert1023 Год назад +2

    honestly, if they need £10 bad enough to threaten to cut off their own finger they probably need it more than me

  • @gearaddictclimber2524
    @gearaddictclimber2524 Год назад +4

    Seems to me that these responses to the Utilitarian’s objections just keep moving the goal posts ad hoc to adjust for cases in which the Utilitarian logic gives good reason not to give up the 10 pounds.

    • @frimi8593
      @frimi8593 Год назад +4

      in fairness, adjusting the terms of the thought experiment is technically moving the goalposts but also isn't fallacious. It's simply admitting "yes the utilitarian does have an adequate answer to that particular construction, but what if instead it looked like this?" Altering your thought experiment to account for objections is a perfectly fine argument to make because a utilitarian ought to believe that utilitarianism is the correct lens of analysis in any hypothetical one could possibly come up with

    • @gearaddictclimber2524
      @gearaddictclimber2524 Год назад

      @@frimi8593 But not adequate enough in the one shifted away from when an objection is levied. It becomes fallacious when the parameters are shifted *because* the logic of Utilitarianism faltered in that particular situation and required the parameters being shifted in order to maintain validity.

  • @the1exnay
    @the1exnay Год назад +1

    12:25
    it is not an extremely unlikely scenario. People threatening self-harm if they don't get what they want is common enough that even if you haven't encountered it, i guarantee that you know someone who has been threatened in that way. My sister used to hold her breath until she passed out because she liked the attention it got her (she was rather young at the time). Some people threaten suicide if they get broken up with. Others can be relied upon to resort to self-destructive vices without continual support.

  • @silverharloe
    @silverharloe Год назад +8

    You got through the patreon plug without mentioning the proposed future disposition of your fingers. Thanks for not trying to mug me.

  • @tututututututu1681
    @tututututututu1681 Год назад +1

    Honestly if a person is making promises they plan on keeping about cutting their own fingers for no valid reason their fingers wouldnt be that valuable if their behaviour is to continue, the only reason an utilitarian would agree to pay the mugger is to make time for an intervention which would drastically change the mugger's behavior

  • @synchronium24
    @synchronium24 Год назад +10

    I'm not committed to act or rule utilitarianism, but consideration of higher-order consequences generally pushes me in the direction of rule utilitarianism. Provided that the transaction is secret and that we have good reason to believe the mugger can be trusted not to repeat the behavior in the future, I would indeed say that you ought to pay the 10 quid. In the real world I think the second assumption is absurd (who is simultaneously manipulative enough to concoct such a blackmail-y scheme and trustworthy?) and the first one is questionable but plausible.

  • @GamerTime_2002
    @GamerTime_2002 Год назад +2

    I think the problem with the premise is if you are going to be truly utilitarian you have to know all factors within the system
    So to invite a premise with only three or four stipulations is not enough info to go on to make a utilitarian decision

  • @t.fwingproductions3636
    @t.fwingproductions3636 Год назад +11

    As a utilitarian, I think the loss of a finger would absolutely be worse than a loss of £10 - however, by giving her the money, you’re setting a precedent that people can mug others by threatening to cut off their finger. So in the long-term, it would ultimately be a net gain to happiness to not give her the money

  • @gabitheancient7664
    @gabitheancient7664 Год назад +2

    not only is this a real personal problem (threats of self-harm) but a real socio-political problem, like with capitalitsts threatening to lower everyone's salaries or unemploying and everything in case any worker right is given (morally the problem is similar bcs threat of harm in case you don't obey them in a way)
    for a less controversial examples: "don't liberate the slaves! otherwise the owners will protest and break everything down!"
    or another controversial "obey the law even if it's not just! think of the consequences police action will do!" which I have seen before

  • @jkid1134
    @jkid1134 Год назад +7

    This is neat. You covered a lot of the initial squirmy questions I had (by NO means to the level of rigor that I can no longer squirm, but frankly such a depth might be impossible in philosophy; a little hand waving is to be expected). The addition I would like the most is what you believe the moral choice is here, not "as a utilitarian", but in general. There's sort of this framing of this thing like it puzzles the simple utilitarian, but it's not like this interaction would be particularly easy for anyone.
    Also, I'm sure it's been mentioned, but this is not just some funny thought experiment, this comes up all the time. Plenty of people who suffer immensely without their codependent. Your buddy who is like for sure gonna relapse if you don't sacrifice some afternoons. Etc. Etc.

    • @userequaltoNull
      @userequaltoNull Год назад +1

      Quick question, do you really think this is a difficult question for the average non-utilitarian? The only difficult thing about this hypothetical is that the mugger has a knife, and most people don't want to be stabbed. But I have no moral issue refusing to give $10, and frankly would probably laugh in the muggers face if she actually cut off her finger.

    • @jkid1134
      @jkid1134 Год назад +1

      @@userequaltoNull with a couple qualifiers, yeah. firstly, I mean anyone in genuine pursuit of virtue. if you're gonna say "I like my $10 and I don't care what happens to this guy", then sure, it's not a hard problem, but you also haven't even tried to ask what the right thing to do is, just what you want to. secondly, I mean the general version of the problem. there should be some version of it where you voice your complaints and he tweaks the setup and then you have a moral quandry. like, if you've supposed the mugger is evil, try supposing he is mentally ill, or maybe even totally ethically sound (maybe he has 3 minutes to pay the loan shark back or he'll kill his son or something). I think the meat of this is "if my $10 is worth his finger to me, why, is that okay, and when is it not?", and I don't think any of those questions are easy. and then thirdly but probably least importantly, you did the role-playing thing I tried to ward against :P i don't think anyone really in practice is utilitarian or non-utilitarian absolutely, and I don't like the underlying implication that dogma is more important than context.

  • @melesioruvalcaba332
    @melesioruvalcaba332 Год назад +1

    The muggers finger is only worth £10, by the muggers own admission. So the 1st and 2nd choice have the same net value

  • @spongbobsquarepants3922
    @spongbobsquarepants3922 Год назад +12

    Is this not only a problem if other people know you are a utilitarian? If not, then the mugger is making a big gamble on this random person being a utilitarian. Maybe this argument shows that you should lie to everyone you know about being a utilitarian. EDIT: never mind, this was talked about in the next minute.

  • @Natediggetydog
    @Natediggetydog Год назад

    I quite enjoyed the hypothetical solutions to the objections getting more and more ridiculous as the video went on

  • @jacobxa
    @jacobxa Год назад +4

    If you’re an act-utilitarian you could still believe that the best route is for the mugger to lose a finger because then that’s less resources (minus one finger) for the totality of bad-act-causing people.

  • @obamagaming3802
    @obamagaming3802 Год назад

    8:17 the existence of ten muggers observing this transaction breaks with the original mugger's promise of maintaining this transaction secret

  • @falco566
    @falco566 Год назад +6

    Thankyou fot this! I work for an international humanitarian organization and this exercise resonates strongly with me. I’m convinced over the years the necessary conversation between deontological, utilitarian and virtuous has been hijacked by Utilitarianism. Add to the equation that the money you give to the mugger a) comes from donors’ pockets by means of convincing p.c. narratives and b) makes you a bigger, more competitive actor in the political economy of relief, and you have a case for the two other schools of ethical thought. Then it is semantics: ‘impartiality’, in humanitarian terms, is not merely giving everyone the same, it is giving what is needed as per specific needs AND actual capacity devised through the organization’s ontology/doctrine. Thx again...

    • @frimi8593
      @frimi8593 Год назад +11

      considering you complain about "p.c. narratives" in this comment, I can see why you're not a utilitarian. In my opinion an international humanitarian organization can ONLY be considered successful if it creates positive utility; if it tosses utility to the wind in favor of deontological or virtuous posturing then it has no purpose beyond expensive virtue signaling. While not humanitarian, PETA is a good example of an organization that has a stated doctrine-based goal (the ethical treatment of animals) yet fails spectacularly at achieving those goals on account of their strict non-utility-driven ethics leading them to euthanize vastly more animals than any comparable shelters or organizations.

    • @thek2despot426
      @thek2despot426 Год назад

      Deontology and Virtue Ethics *_should_* be hijacked by Utilitarianism. Deontology is only worth following if the reason we give a damn about universalization in the first place is because they prioritize more positive-sum interests in the general population, which are the only interests that, when satisfied, can bring about _more_ well-being in the world than what came before, and are thus the only way to maximize utility. A similar, if not identical, case applies to Virtue Ethics when it comes to what counts as a virtue and why we should care to have them.

    • @frimi8593
      @frimi8593 Год назад

      @@thek2despot426 While I partially agree with what you've said here, I can't say that it describes all deontologists or virtue ethicists. There ARE derivations of Kantian Deontology (which is not the only form of Deontology but is the one you're referring to when referencing universalization) and Virtue Ethics that don't stem from an analysis of utility. Kant himself largely argued for his ethics as "how to preserve society" in essence. This is not a measure of utility, as the universalization argument is essentially binary in outcome; either society is preserved or it isn't. In addition, while I think it's a horrible philisophy, both Deontology and Virtue Ethics can and often are derived straight from Divine Command Theory, a philosophy of ethics and metaphysics held by billions today. And lastly, there is of course the most obvious workaround (in my opinion) which is simply that the Virtue Ethicist's values aren't derived from anything, but are simply chosen arbitrarily, taken as axiomatic principles. Note that this is also necessarily where a Utilitarian derives their primary value. Similarly, the axiomatic belief of Kantians that society ought to be preserved is also an arbitrarily chosen axiom of value. Any moral system must arbitrarily assign a value to care about at some stage, as they cannot be derived from observing the world (unless you think your ethics are derived from the universe in which I would actually be extremely interested to hear how you arrived at that, unless it's divine command in which case I'm extremely uninterested). Typically, as far as I can tell, the values we choose tend to come from nothing more than intuition or having been raised to have a certain set of values from childhood. I disagree with all Deontologists and Virtue Ethicists, but I always hated when people of any belief look at another belief and say "actually you do hold my belief deep down, but don't realize it."

  • @tacticalninja7096
    @tacticalninja7096 Год назад

    Here’s my idea of the perfect response:
    Say that you will pay the mugger, but some time in the future. The mugger might then promise that they will cut their finger off if they don’t get the money within a certain time, but then if they do that and you pay them afterwards, you can claim they broke their promise and cut off their finger despite being paid. (This is assuming that the inverse statement “if you do pay, I won’t cut off my finger” is true as well, as the original statement can be interpreted that way)

  • @kecskemetib
    @kecskemetib Год назад +6

    1. It doesn't matter if the Mugger keeps the interaction secret. If she can find out about our values, others could, too.
    2. It is indeed wise to not to announce one's utilitarianism. This could be true in general for any theory that can be exploited.
    3. Agents who observe our repeated actions might be able to conclude that we are in fact behaving like utilitarians, even if we don't openly tell.
    4. The issue strikes me as non-trivial and such exploitation might actually be rather common.

  • @Kyryyn_Lyyh
    @Kyryyn_Lyyh Год назад +1

    Two answers before two minutes elapsed, academics do waste a great deal of time.
    1 - There is no scenario where you can be assured of the promise, word wiggles don’t work. 2 - a society where the threat of violence and mugging is encouraged, creates more suffering than simply denying the initial threat.
    It’s like a physics question where “no air resistance, no gravity” etc are used, perhaps a good leisure activity but mechanically worthless.