AbusedInnocent
Enemy brain ain't cooperating
- Apr 5, 2024
- 255
I would like to discuss the significance of the right to bodily autonomy and how that equates to the morality of murdering conscious beings, sorry if I'm missing something here but this is the only place I can discuss something like this and I created my account mainly to discuss philosophy.
For the first example I'll assume they are an average adult human being with full cognitive abilities (they won't cure cancer or start WW3), here are the reasons I see against murdering them:
1. It will most likely cause more suffering for those grieving their death and those dependent on them financially.
2. Murder becoming normalized would make everyone live in fear thus creating a lot of unnecessary suffering.
3. It infringes on their right to bodily autonomy, as a human with equivalent cognitive abilities their choice to continue living should be respected as it is just as valid as our choice to kill them.
Whether these reasons are enough to say that in most cases murder is immoral seems to me to be quite subjective, also if these are the only reasons then technically killing an orphaned baby while making it look like an accident would be moral, nobody would grieve for their death, nobody would know they were murdered, and considering the cognitive abilities of a baby they have no more right to bodily autonomy than a dog that you would put down if they have a chronic/incurable condition or a cow you would turn into a burger, and you would be saving them a lifetime of suffering and saving others the work of having to provide for their needs (farming food, manufacturing products, providing services, etc.).
What if we knew beyond reasonable doubt the subject would cause significant harm to others? surely it would be moral to murder Hitler to save millions of people a lot of suffering, but at what point exactly could we say that the suffering they would create outweighs their right to bodily autonomy?
As for an animal of low/moderate cognitive ability like a dog (not a human, primate, dolphin, octopus, etc.) I can't see how any of the previous reasons would apply, as humans with superior cognitive abilities we know more about what is best for these animals so we have a right to make decisions on their behalf, if death really is the end of all suffering would it not be moral to kill as many of these animals as possible assuming the ecological damage could not affect us? would like to hear how this applies to veganism as well.
Would like to hear your thoughts on each example:
Subject 1. Average adult human.
Subject 2. Orphaned baby
Subject 3. Adult Hitler
Subject 4. Animal of moderate cognitive ability (dog/cat/cow)
For the first example I'll assume they are an average adult human being with full cognitive abilities (they won't cure cancer or start WW3), here are the reasons I see against murdering them:
1. It will most likely cause more suffering for those grieving their death and those dependent on them financially.
2. Murder becoming normalized would make everyone live in fear thus creating a lot of unnecessary suffering.
3. It infringes on their right to bodily autonomy, as a human with equivalent cognitive abilities their choice to continue living should be respected as it is just as valid as our choice to kill them.
Whether these reasons are enough to say that in most cases murder is immoral seems to me to be quite subjective, also if these are the only reasons then technically killing an orphaned baby while making it look like an accident would be moral, nobody would grieve for their death, nobody would know they were murdered, and considering the cognitive abilities of a baby they have no more right to bodily autonomy than a dog that you would put down if they have a chronic/incurable condition or a cow you would turn into a burger, and you would be saving them a lifetime of suffering and saving others the work of having to provide for their needs (farming food, manufacturing products, providing services, etc.).
What if we knew beyond reasonable doubt the subject would cause significant harm to others? surely it would be moral to murder Hitler to save millions of people a lot of suffering, but at what point exactly could we say that the suffering they would create outweighs their right to bodily autonomy?
As for an animal of low/moderate cognitive ability like a dog (not a human, primate, dolphin, octopus, etc.) I can't see how any of the previous reasons would apply, as humans with superior cognitive abilities we know more about what is best for these animals so we have a right to make decisions on their behalf, if death really is the end of all suffering would it not be moral to kill as many of these animals as possible assuming the ecological damage could not affect us? would like to hear how this applies to veganism as well.
Would like to hear your thoughts on each example:
Subject 1. Average adult human.
Subject 2. Orphaned baby
Subject 3. Adult Hitler
Subject 4. Animal of moderate cognitive ability (dog/cat/cow)