Posts tagged "bioethics"
We talk a lot about ‘saving lives’, but we shouldn’t — it’s really quite misleading. At best, we may save a few decades of someone’s life. Death is never banished; merely postponed. “Reducing” the number of deaths in the world is not a coherent goal: we know there will be exactly one for each life, and there’s no changing that (modulo immortality research). What we really mean here is that we aim to extend life. It’s worth being clear on this, since not all life-extensions are equal, but a rhetorical focus on ‘death’ [or ‘life-saving’] occludes this fact.
Philosophy, et cetera: Lives Can’t be Saved (seems topical given recent debates in France on assisted suicide; remember some form of it is legal in a few European countries like the Netherlands, Belgium or Switzerland)
Webber suggests that airlines set a standard passenger weight, say, 75 kilos. If a passenger weighs 100 kilos, a surcharge would be charged to cover the extra fuel costs. For a passenger who is 25 kilos overweight, the surcharge on a Sydney-London return ticket would be $29. A passenger weighing just 50 kilos would get a discount of the same amount.
Weigh More, Pay More - Peter Singer - Project Syndicate

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