“If you could have saved ten children, but you only saved seven, that’s like you killed three.”
I suspect that this is in practice also joined with the Copenhagen interpretation of ethics, where saving zero children is morally neutral (i.e. totally not like killing ten).
So the only morally defensible options are zero and ten. Although if you choose ten, you might be blamed for not simultaneously solving global warming...
The version that I’m thinking of says that doing nothing would be killing ten. Everyone is supposed to be in a perpetual state of appall-ment at all the preventable suffering going on. Think scrupulosity and burnout, not “ooh, you touched it so it’s your fault now”.
“If you could have saved ten children, but you only saved seven, that’s like you killed three.”
I suspect that this is in practice also joined with the Copenhagen interpretation of ethics, where saving zero children is morally neutral (i.e. totally not like killing ten).
So the only morally defensible options are zero and ten. Although if you choose ten, you might be blamed for not simultaneously solving global warming...
The version that I’m thinking of says that doing nothing would be killing ten. Everyone is supposed to be in a perpetual state of appall-ment at all the preventable suffering going on. Think scrupulosity and burnout, not “ooh, you touched it so it’s your fault now”.