jay doesn't understand how viruses work. he comprehends his own illness like a savage comprehends a shooting star across the night sky. it's just something that happened to him and then went away, without etiology.
i told you a few days ago that his next 'phase' of intellectual development would be 'Well i had it, and i was fine, so everyone should get it! what's the big deal?'
herd immunity is an incidental side-effect of so many people getting a disease, not something to be aimed for. we don't have enough historical data or understanding of coronavirus to even know that long-term and meaningful immunity could be a thing. it could ravage us this winter/spring and then come back -- worse -- in winter 20/21, with no meaningful herd immunity whatsoever. the truth is that we dont know and are guessing based off experience with flu-type illnesses. herd immunity does not exist for other simpler coronavirus-type viruses, for example the common cold (which admittedly mutate more often). the idea that we can 'control' the levels of infection in a disease that is literally 2.5x as contagious as flu also seems plainly misguided. it's not a tap you can turn on and off according to how many spare hospital beds you have. it will quickly get out of control.
prepare to see a lot of very bad consequentialist thinking from the right-wing about how the 'hit to the economy' will 'outweigh' the loss of lives in terms of 'loss of life' or 'quality of life'.
the aggregation problem:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs … .tb01167.x
i told you a few days ago that his next 'phase' of intellectual development would be 'Well i had it, and i was fine, so everyone should get it! what's the big deal?'
herd immunity is an incidental side-effect of so many people getting a disease, not something to be aimed for. we don't have enough historical data or understanding of coronavirus to even know that long-term and meaningful immunity could be a thing. it could ravage us this winter/spring and then come back -- worse -- in winter 20/21, with no meaningful herd immunity whatsoever. the truth is that we dont know and are guessing based off experience with flu-type illnesses. herd immunity does not exist for other simpler coronavirus-type viruses, for example the common cold (which admittedly mutate more often). the idea that we can 'control' the levels of infection in a disease that is literally 2.5x as contagious as flu also seems plainly misguided. it's not a tap you can turn on and off according to how many spare hospital beds you have. it will quickly get out of control.
prepare to see a lot of very bad consequentialist thinking from the right-wing about how the 'hit to the economy' will 'outweigh' the loss of lives in terms of 'loss of life' or 'quality of life'.
the aggregation problem:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs … .tb01167.x
It is plausible to claim that it is morally worse to kill an innocent person than to give any number of people a mild one‐hour headache. Alaistar Norcross has argued that consequentialists, at least, should reject this claim. According to him, any harm that can befall a person can be morally outweighed by a sufficient number of very small harms. He gives a general argument for this view, and tries to show, by means of an argument from analogy, that it is less counter‐intuitive than it appears. I show that his main argument relies on a false assumption, and argue that the purported analogy is dubious.
Last edited by uziq (2020-04-03 02:03:33)