I think we need some meatier discussions so here's a moral problem to chew over.
This came up in a conversation I had recently about the pros and cons of GM crops, so I'll use that to illustrate. GM crops may have the potential to feed a lot of starving people, by producing hardier crops with higher yields, but on the other hand their impact on the ecosystem could be unpredictable and irreversible. So which is more important, human life or the environment?
Common morality would say that human life is more important, particularly if you can save millions from starvation. But the moral principles underlying this are unworkable. We try to preserve and prolong human life as much as possible, and to combat anything which destroys human life, such as disease, hunger, disaster and war. Even old age is under attack. Our morality directs us to allow the human population to increase unchecked, and technology gives us the means to do so. But our success in doing so is clearly unsustainable. Measures such as GM crops provide not a solution, but a short term means to shoehorn yet more human beings into this world. Ultimately we must exceed the capacity of this planet to support human life.
Until we have the technology to populate other planets, the human population must stabilize. People are going to have to start dying in as great a quantity as they are being born.
How will this come about? Enforced birth control seems the most humane means, but is an abhorrent attack on freedom.
The only other way is that people are going to have to die in greatly increased numbers. The dream of living to a ripe old age and doing away with disease and hunger cannot be offered to everyone. It isn't mathematically possible.
This raises the question of whether we do any good by contributing to charities which fight disease and starvation. Are we not just postponing the day when we have to say "live and let die". By so doing we allow the world to become a more overcrowded place. Eventually a harsher morality will be forced on us. By that time the world will be a miserable and polluted place. The sooner we recognize this inevitability, the sooner we can work towards a better world with fewer people in it. But that means stabilizing the population sooner. Either we enforce population control, or accept that we must let those less fortunate than ourselves die, and give up trying to preserve every life on the planet.
I'm sure by now some people reading this will be furious. I am to some extent playing Devil's advocate, but this problem is real and ugly, and it's genuinely something that makes me think twice about the whole concept of charity. So let's have your comments!
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I think we need some meatier discussions so here's a moral problem to chew over.
This came up in a conversation I had recently about the pros and cons of GM crops, so I'll use that to illustrate. GM crops may have the potential to feed a lot of starving people, by producing hardier crops with higher yields, but on the other hand their impact on the ecosystem could be unpredictable and irreversible. So which is more important, human life or the environment?
Common morality would say that human life is more important, particularly if you can save millions from starvation. But the moral principles underlying this are unworkable. We try to preserve and prolong human life as much as possible, and to combat anything which destroys human life, such as disease, hunger, disaster and war. Even old age is under attack. Our morality directs us to allow the human population to increase unchecked, and technology gives us the means to do so. But our success in doing so is clearly unsustainable. Measures such as GM crops provide not a solution, but a short term means to shoehorn yet more human beings into this world. Ultimately we must exceed the capacity of this planet to support human life.
Until we have the technology to populate other planets, the human population must stabilize. People are going to have to start dying in as great a quantity as they are being born.
How will this come about? Enforced birth control seems the most humane means, but is an abhorrent attack on freedom.
The only other way is that people are going to have to die in greatly increased numbers. The dream of living to a ripe old age and doing away with disease and hunger cannot be offered to everyone. It isn't mathematically possible.
This raises the question of whether we do any good by contributing to charities which fight disease and starvation. Are we not just postponing the day when we have to say "live and let die". By so doing we allow the world to become a more overcrowded place. Eventually a harsher morality will be forced on us. By that time the world will be a miserable and polluted place. The sooner we recognize this inevitability, the sooner we can work towards a better world with fewer people in it. But that means stabilizing the population sooner. Either we enforce population control, or accept that we must let those less fortunate than ourselves die, and give up trying to preserve every life on the planet.
I'm sure by now some people reading this will be furious. I am to some extent playing Devil's advocate, but this problem is real and ugly, and it's genuinely something that makes me think twice about the whole concept of charity. So let's have your comments!
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