Hi,
(first post, hope I'm doing everything more or less right).
You’re probably familiar with the phrase (I don’t know who framed it this way) that “we care about making people happy, but we’re indifferent to making happy people.” I nicely summarizes the idea that while it is important to provide currently living people with as much wellbeing as possible (because they are here), creating more humans doesn’t really matter morally, even if they would be very happy, because the unborn can’t care about being born (I hope I'm doing an okay job at paraphrasing).
I share this view (I'm pretty indifferent about making happy people - except if more people has an impact on people already existing). In fact, I can’t intuitively understand why someone could have the opposite opinion. But clearly I must be missing something, because it seems in the EA community many or most people do care about creating as many (happy) people as possible.
I have wrestled with this topic for a long time, and watching a new Kurtzgesagt video on longtermism made me want to write this post. In that (wonderfully made) video, the makers clearly are of the opnion that making happy people is a good thing. The video contains things like
“If we screw up the present so many people may not come to exist. Quadrillions of unborn humans are at our mercy. The unborn are the largest group of people and the most disenfranchised. Someone who might be born in a thousand or even a million years, deeply depends on us today for their existence.”
This doesn’t make that much sense to me (except in the context when more people means more happiness for everyone, not just additional happiness because there’s more people), and I don't understand how the makers of this video present the “making happy people” option as if it is not up for debate. Unless... it is not up for debate?
My questions, if you want:
1. how do you estimate is the division within the EA community? How many people are indifferent to making happy people, and how many care about making happy people?
2. if you are of the opposite opinion: what am I not seeing if I'm indifferent to making happy people? Is this stance still a respectable opinion? Or is it not at all?
Thank you!
just simply, shouldn't we measure impact by averages, rather than in an additive way? i.e. what is the mean wellbeing of people, instead of adding up everyone's wellbeing scores out of 10.
The former encourages making people happy, the latter making happy people.
The thing you're looking to maximise is the happiness of people, rather than the abstract of "happiness". The latter treats humans as just vessels to carry this "happiness" around in the world, rather than something which is worthwhile because of the effect that it has on people.
If you're maximising making happy people then surely you would also be for having as many children as possible, against abortion etc. (talking about welfare of "the unborn" is also...uncomfortable.)
Totalism does have some of these issues, at least under certain circumstances, but I don't think averagism does any better. Arguably it has all of these same problems as totalism, plus some worse ones. On the point of interfering with reproductive choices for instance, totalism might be used to justify telling people to have more kids, but averagism will likewise tell people that if a child they want is expected to have a life even a little worse than average, then they are obligated not to have the child, and if they can expect to have a child with a life... (read more)