I'm more on Swan's side than not - hatred is a mere silly self-indulgence, even if it's only for adverts and such. For grown-up apes, the question is what do we want to do about things that don't seem right, and such questions are best not approached in a state of childish emotionalism. — iolo
Oh, I found another one, right here! — schopenhauer1
Ok, this is what I perceive to be your main issue right now in this argument, no?
A person has to exist for there to be an agenda. By not having a new person, there is no person, and ergo no agenda that this person is to be following. My agenda is to prevent someone else from being forced into an agenda, and by not having a new person who actually will be forced into an agenda, my agenda has not made an agenda for someone else. — schopenhauer1
Tell me clearly and concisely, where are the holes in my arguments? — PhilCF
You can slander me all you like. — PhilCF
Life can be about a myriad of noble quests... But the meaning of life is peace. — PhilCF
I don't think I've ever felt hatred or have the potential to. — Swan
The meaning of life is peace — PhilCF
I prefer the extra space, it gives me more room to breathe. — Metaphysician Undercover
The main difference between the forums is your punctuation habits would've triggered the automated illiteracy detector there, presenting you with a stark choice to reform or die at the hands of modbot. — Paul
There's someone who is a good role model for adult behavior with a suggestion above. — Coben
I did answer. I said no, and no. — schopenhauer1
Agendas are had by actual people. No people, no agenda for that person to be had. — schopenhauer1
It is always good to prevent suffering so no whether someone exists to know this or not. — schopenhauer1
No, the other person does not exist yet. No agenda is going to be had by them. — schopenhauer1
My opinion leads to NO suffering for a future person. — schopenhauer1
Ah no. Prevention of joy is not bad, if there is NO ONE alive to be deprived of it. Prevention of suffering is always, good whether someone for whom this is a benefit or not. That's the asymmetry. — schopenhauer1
Suffering, at this level, is the most important thing to take into consideration. — schopenhauer1
Anything else is having an agenda for another person. — schopenhauer1
Why is anything more important than the new person's suffering? What about the other stuff makes the threshold to procreate that much more? Because people are not killing themselves left and right? — schopenhauer1
From previous discussions, the answer to that seemed to be a stance that prevention of suffering was all that mattered. — Terrapin Station
No buddy, it's not. What I'm trying to say, is that upfront, that at the procreational decision (ONLY), prevention of suffering is above and beyond all else, because no actual person is alive to be deprived of the all else you described. Only AFTER they are created do they then have something to lose. And certainly valuing the prevention of suffering would have to come into play here as a premise. — schopenhauer1
This means nothing to me. Using "reasonable" or "common sensibility" I just won't accept as an argument. Argue something. Don't just use the ambiguousness of the word "reasonable" or the like make it for you. Explain. — schopenhauer1
Not if I admit that indeed, not causing all forms of suffering to another person, while not actually depriving that person of any of the emotions (or any other perceived good) is indeed the best decision and outcome. — schopenhauer1
What makes the emotions you list more important than causing the conditions for suffering for another though? — schopenhauer1
So it is good to bring about negative conditions for others because of the host of emotions you list? — schopenhauer1
Antinatalism is essentially about not having children to prevent a future person from either contingent or structural suffering. — schopenhauer1
Probably. I think you were being a little sexist toward fresco, though. — frank