When ethics leads somewhere we don't want to go
Is A+ worse than A? We've added people with good lives (welfare 80).
They don't affect the original A people. Adding happy people can't make things worse... right?
Conclusion: A+ is at least as good as A.
Through seemingly reasonable steps, we've concluded that Z is better than A.
A world of 10 billion flourishing people is worse than a world of
trillions living lives barely worth living.
Each step seemed reasonable. The conclusion is repugnant. Where did we go wrong?
This is called the Mere Addition Paradox because each step involves "merely adding" people with lives worth living. The paradox arises because:
Maybe "better than" isn't transitive. A+ β₯ A and B β₯ A+ doesn't mean B β₯ A. Controversial but logically coherent.
Maximize average welfare, not total. A+ is worse than A because average drops. But this has its own problems...
Only count lives above some threshold. Lives "barely worth living" don't add positive value. But where's the threshold?
Some philosophers bite the bullet: maybe Z really is better. Our intuitions about "repugnance" might be wrong.
In 2000, Gustaf Arrhenius proved an impossibility theorem: no theory of population ethics can simultaneously satisfy a set of plausible axioms. Something has to give.
This isn't just abstract philosophy. Population ethics affects real decisions about:
Parfit spent decades searching for "Theory X"βa satisfactory population ethics. He concluded he hadn't found it. The puzzle remains unsolved.