Wowbagger wrote:Without sentience, there's no point of view. Things can only be good / bad *for* something experiencing it. Suffering is intrinsically awful by its very nature, that's an axiological truth. A world with less suffering is a better world.
That makes sense. One last question? Do you think suffering or (painless) death is worse?
What does it mean for something to deserve to have its welfare considered when making ethical decisions and resolving ethical dilemmas? Namely, it's the words deserve[/i and ethical that I think need to be defined. For instance, what's the difference between an ethical decision and a non-ethical (by this I do not mean unethical) one? I'm not really interested in some other person's definition or what a dictionary says or even what you think is the common meaning of these words because it is my position that in terms of the general lexicon these moral/ethical terms are very equivocal. Rather, I'm interested in what you meant when you said them in the previous posts.
In my definition? By ethical I meant: "a decision which has a moral obligation to choose one way over another". By deserve I meant something like "compelled to be given". e.g. The correct ethical framework implies that an actor is compelled to give certain things moral consideration.
I'm not really sure why your asking this, and therefor what kind of answer you're looking for, so I hope that helped.
So this is a subjective quality?
Moral consideration? I guess you could say that people assign it in different ways. The question was when does something [i]deserve moral consideration, implying that there is a right way to assign it. Which way is right (and whether or not there is a right way I guess) is left up to you, the person answering the question.