Submitted by ADefiniteDescription t3_10k8y95 in philosophy
XiphosAletheria t1_j5qmvnv wrote
Reply to comment by Ill_Department_2055 in On Whether “Personhood” is a Normative or Descriptive Concept by ADefiniteDescription
I mean, only homo sapiens would be capable of formulating your question, or of providing an answer to it, which is the answer in and of itself
Ill_Department_2055 t1_j5qtgl1 wrote
Only some homo sapiens. And certainly not all the homo sapiens we would want to include under the category of persons. So the definition of a person needs to be a different one.
MouseBean t1_j5rby5r wrote
Yes, the definition should be expansive enough to include rivers and mountains and individual viruses and whole herds of deer.
Ill_Department_2055 t1_j5rfe9m wrote
I'm not a deep ecologist, so I don't ascribe to that. You do you though!
XiphosAletheria t1_j5s3kyx wrote
I don't know that it does, really. We include certain groups of humans that that doesn't apply to - namely very young children and the mentally deficient - largely because they tend to matter very greatly to one or more people to whom it does apply.
Ill_Department_2055 t1_j5tq2jm wrote
You don't think disabled people and children are inherently valuable/have personhood?
XiphosAletheria t1_j5uwxnh wrote
No, of course not. I don't believe the idea of an inherent value is even coherent. Everything is always valuable to someone for some reason. You can't grind something up and extract x grams of value from it - it's not some objective physical property of a thing.
Ill_Department_2055 t1_j5v4ifu wrote
>You can't grind something up and extract x grams of value from it - it's not some objective physical property of a thing.
This is a strange analogy. There are many objective things in the universe that don't have mass.
>Everything is always valuable to someone for some reason.
I don't see how relational value would work without the anchoring of inherent value. In other words: if the valuer doesn't matter, why would his or her valuing matter?
XiphosAletheria t1_j5vf827 wrote
>I don't see how relational value would work without the anchoring of inherent value. In other words: if the valuer doesn't matter, why would his or her valuing matter?
To whom? And for what? Your valuing of things might well not matter at all to someone else.
Ill_Department_2055 t1_j5vmjz3 wrote
So what?
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