Singular Intellect wrote:So why are the negative utilities of a continued existence arbitrarily dismissed from consideration? Indeed, isn't that very assessment the reason one would expect an individual to contemplate suicide?
They are not; merely that they have to be pretty high for continued existence to have a greater negative utility than death. This is why I specifically mentioned "constant pain" as a reasonable qualifier. Euthanasia is actually human-assisted suicide (or killing, name as you will) rationalized on the base of greater negative utility of a time of torment. Same goes for terminally diseased, etc.
What I am saying is that the considerations to allow euthanasia have to be pretty strong to even begin to consider it; average psychological issues are very weak forms of suffering compared to the forms described above; ergo, very serious considerations should prevent assisting humans in ending their life at a whim; or rather, wasting our resources on assisting it. Because humans can, actually, kill themselves any time.
But the expenditure of the resources of the living (like meds for euthanasia, etc) better have some very solid reasons other than "IT'S MY CHOICE AND FUCK YOU ALL".
Singular Intellect wrote:Just as I would consider it morally acceptable to outlaw suicide if one pretended potential negative utility didn't exist for individuals contemplating suicide either; I fail to see the point in such speculations though
See above. Just like you can't treat all abortions as a "lump category" (which is why degrees of allowance exist depending on abortion terms), you can't just treat all suicides as being equally reasonable and therefore devise universal rules for the entire
category of suicide! This is what I'd call a very unwelcome generalization.
Singular Intellect wrote:Doesn't the existence of the anti abortionist movement itself and it's antics (people are willing to kill for the cause after all) demostrate that despite your claim suffering is only 'potential' during an abortion, many people think otherwise?
The intellect has not come to self-awareness, as a matter of fact. What you are talking about is perception and extended empathy. The fact that some people have empathy for potential human beings, not just for the actually living, just demonstrates some of our biological instincts are rather strong and can have an impact on the norms of human reproduction. That is all.
Singular Intellect wrote:When comparing positive and negative utility with regards to a individual's life, it strikes me these are entirely subjective points of view. Especially with regards to the assessment of the negative utility of death.
They are not completely subjective. You could derive a purely biological component of utility, i.e. the biological well-being of a human scale, to first exclude the emotional factors. This biological scale would be objective - a well-off, well-fed, clothed and sheltered human would have positive utility, factors like physical pain, malnourishment, lack of food and shelter an objectively negative one. So there is one objective component.
Pscychology is, to a large degree, subjective, but psychological distress does correlate to physical conditions - a more biologically safe and provided-for being would also have, as a general rule, better psychological condition than the one tortured, in pain, or malnourished, all of which produces enormous emotional stress.
It is very objective that death produces enormous emotional AND biological damage (the biological damage is absolute) to the dying man, and some (subjectively measured, but clearly existing) emotional damage to other beings in society.
So it's not as entirely subjective as you try to say. This is why just declaring "well, it's up to the human to decide" is greatly simplifying a complex question.