Really? Screw that. If my existence makes other people unhappy, I’m entirely fine with that. It’s not any of their business anyway. We can resolve the ethical question the old-fashioned way. They can try to kill me, and I can try to kill them right back.
If things that make me unhappy aren’t my business, what is my business?
But whether your existence makes me unhappy or not, you are, of course, free not to care. And even if you do care, you’re not obligated to alleviate my unhappiness. You might care, and decide to make me more unhappy, for whatever reasons.
And, sure, we can try to kill each other as a consequence of all that. It’s not clear to me what ethical question this resolves, though.
Really? Screw that. If my existence makes other people unhappy, I’m entirely fine with that. It’s not any of their business anyway. We can resolve the ethical question the old-fashioned way. They can try to kill me, and I can try to kill them right back.
If things that make me unhappy aren’t my business, what is my business?
But whether your existence makes me unhappy or not, you are, of course, free not to care.
And even if you do care, you’re not obligated to alleviate my unhappiness. You might care, and decide to make me more unhappy, for whatever reasons.
And, sure, we can try to kill each other as a consequence of all that.
It’s not clear to me what ethical question this resolves, though.