Beneficence, Numbers, and the Procreation Asymmetry

Abstract According to the Weak Procreation Asymmetry, there are weighty reasons not to create miserable people and only weaker reasons to create happy people. This view has several advantages over the Strong Procreation Asymmetry, which holds that there are no reasons to create happy people. Nonethe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hanna, Jason (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Brill 2021
In: Journal of moral philosophy
Year: 2021, Volume: 18, Issue: 6, Pages: 597-619
Further subjects:B saving lives
B Asymmetry
B Procreation
B procreative ethics
B Beneficence
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Summary:Abstract According to the Weak Procreation Asymmetry, there are weighty reasons not to create miserable people and only weaker reasons to create happy people. This view has several advantages over the Strong Procreation Asymmetry, which holds that there are no reasons to create happy people. Nonetheless, it faces a serious problem: according to some critics, it suggests that our reasons to create lives are as strong as our reasons to save lives. In response, this essay draws on the intuition that we have reason to maximize the number of lives saved, even when doing so would not secure a greater benefit. Numbers are not comparably relevant, however, to choices involving the creation of people. Taken together, these judgments show that there is typically an “extra” consideration that favors saving lives over creating lives. They thereby help to defuse a common objection to the Weak Procreation Asymmetry.
ISSN:1745-5243
Contains:Enthalten in: Journal of moral philosophy
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1163/17455243-20213472