Ah yes, I should have phrased my question differently. What you said is quite clear, I'll try to rephrase that.Pandabearparade said:We can't, at present. At least not precisely. We also can't measure the number of rocks on Mars, but there is clearly a right answer to the question whether or not we have access to it.
Though in some cases the answer is obvious. What society is happier, England or Egypt? England by far, the answer is obvious even if we don't have a box that measures the "sob level" of a country.
What about the happiness/sadness in a smaller community? What is better: 4 persons very happy or 5 persons mildly happy?
Also: Would rather take the longevity or the intensity of happiness into account, as you can't measure those against another? Or both equally? I'm really curious about that, because I heard utilitarians answer that in different ways.
I think longevity is more practical, although intensity already inherits longevity automatically in a way, so I'm not sure what I'd prefer if I were a utilitarian.
I'll stop bugging you after this.