All the same, though, "better brain than brawn". The heroic dead inspire a lot more death, and the Klingons will sing many ugly songs.... but they don't change. Nobody likes Cassandra, anyway; she just doesn't want us to have that nice big horse. — Vera Mont
I just checked the wiki page … it appears you chose to read what suited you and ignored the rest. On this subject I am sure I know more than you given that you literally stated some glaring untruths/assumptions based on some weird selective reading from a wiki page. — I like sushi
“Dilute horrors” ? What are you talking about? Whole civilisations literally collapsed before a gun was fired … I call that horrific don’t you? — I like sushi
Now you are just typing in tantrum mode.Who is making assumptions? Oh er … archeologists and historians not people who read selective wiki entries to fit into their sense of knowledge. — I like sushi
I still do maintain that is the case. Most civilisations have historically recovered from disease. Native Americans and indigenous tribes still exist, despite the ravages of disease and the actions of invaders. They just don't have the same control over the land and its resources as they used to, and that fact has a lot more to do with the actions of the invaders rather than disease. If no deaths were caused within native populations due to disease, then they would still have been almost destroyed due to the greed and short sightedness of their invaders.My entire point was you wrongly attributed aggressive invading Europeans as the primary mover in the downfall of the American peoples and their civilisations. — I like sushi
You probably do know more about him than I do. I have studied the Napoleonic wars in some detail and had read a little about Cochrane as an English naval commander. I probably know a lot more about the Napoleonic wars than you do, but really? WHO CARES!The additional point was that you clearly know next to nothing about Cochrane and his contributions in South America. — I like sushi
The offspring shall serve the parents' ego, then? — Tzeentch
You sought to dismiss my moral dilemma on the basis that the choice is purely a human construct.
All morality is a human construct.
So you're either consistent and dismiss morality altogether, or start cherry-picking (which is what you're doing) and are inconsistent, ergo a hypocrite. — Tzeentch
No, I call it out for what it is: irrational ego-driven vanity.
You won't have a leg to stand on if your argument doesn't involve the well-being of the person you just forced to participate in your project, so I would suggest starting there. — Tzeentch
This is not a cause-effect relationship. The rebellious slaves were wasted manpower. That's what I don't support. — Vera Mont
John Brown made his point in the church, not at Harper's Ferry; his death did not precipitate the insane civil war — Vera Mont
One is an example. The next four are heroic. The thousand(s) after that are simply wasted, like the people at Masada. Their death does not alter the course of history. — Vera Mont
Yes, and I'M SORRY I SAID THAT! Wasn't intended as combative. I never said I was miserable; I commented only that I can't affect current politics, either by voting or fighting. It wouldn't be any different if I moved to an orange, red or even green riding; it might feel cozy, but we'd be just as outnumbered. It's a downward turn of the wheel, that's all. — Vera Mont
You need to read up on your history — I like sushi
As soon as a reasonable number of people were infected it led to collapse of civilisations in the Americas without ANY hostile intention on the part of those landing there. — I like sushi
There is evidence for this along the Amazon where it was reported there were large kingdoms by explorers. Upon returning later no one found these mythical kingdoms … because everyone died of disease. Modern archeology has shed light on this. — I like sushi
Based on common understanding of human psychology.
But since you're the one claiming humans reproduce not out of personal motivations but some selfless act for the survival of mankind the burden of proof is on you. — Tzeentch
Based on what logic? Try actually answering a question instead of just responding with obvious and tedious obfuscations.Why would I have to reject morality altogether?
— universeness
It's either that or be a hypocrite. — Tzeentch
Because you like "legacy" you get to press gang everybody into your vanity project? — Tzeentch
If you are living a purposeless life and have no sense of purpose in your life, then you have reaped what you sowed. If you believe that life and lifeforms have no purpose then you are left with time as your enemy and oblivion as your saviour. How sad. If you do have purpose in your life, then you are contradicting your own words that suggest you believe HUmans have no purpose in this universe.
— universeness
A thinly-veiled attempt at a personal attack, and not remotely related to what I said. — Tzeentch
Lord Thomas Cochrane — I like sushi
I was just stating a fact about what happened to the indigenous peoples of the americas. To equate the spread of disease with genocide is silly. It is estimated that over 90% of the population died due to the ravages of disease … such is NOT genocide. — I like sushi
You told me to move, after I said my vote doesn't count here. I won't, of course, and so what? My neighbours and I don't talk politics; the flak is all virtual, and avoidable. — Vera Mont
One, or a half dozen martyrs are noticed, get put on placards and banners, inspire the troops. But once the revolution has been put down, why line the highway with crucified rebels? I'm opposed in principle to waste. — Vera Mont
People don't reproduce for the sake of the species' survival. This is just nonsense. — Tzeentch
You think in extremes! Why would I have to reject morality altogether? What utter nonsense!Unless you wish to reject morality altogether, this is more nonsense.
If you do wish to reject morality, then what are you doing in a thread that's unmistakenly about a moral question? — Tzeentch
I typed the word intent YOU decided that was synonomous with the term 'good intentions.' You further evidence your tendency to invent and attempt to misrepresent and misdirect when you are frustrated that you have no valid response.Good intentions don't excuse immoral actions. — Tzeentch
Necessary, why? To whom?
Sounds like a load of New Age hooey to me. — Tzeentch
The choices of moral agents can be judged, which is what we're doing right here.
I'm getting the sense that you have some rather subjective views about man's purpose in the universe, and are willing to resort to imposition to press gang new people into this project - an "ends justify the means" type argument and a common moral pitfall. — Tzeentch
It's a matter of rational scrutiny - to demand a consistent argument from someone who chooses to impose on others. You've failed to provide that, and that's why it won't do. — Tzeentch
Once again, I don't see any explaining going on here.
Why don't you start with coming up for a logically consistent argument as to why imposing is acceptable in this case? — Tzeentch
I'm not preaching anything. I'm pointing out your inconsistency and waiting for an explanation. — Tzeentch
and call out the BS of people trying to make them suffer — Benj96
This won't do.
There are many behaviors that have existed prior to notions of morality, and many of such behaviors are universally regarded as immoral now, regardless of their prior existence. — Tzeentch
"Don't impose (unless there are pressing reasons to do so)," is a common, almost universal moral principle.
You may claim this is not a moral principle, and that imposing is perfectly fine. Probably you realise that would lead you down a slippery slope. So what you have left is explaining why there is a pressing reason to impose in this particular instance - special pleading.
It's the procreators who are behaving inconsistently. — Tzeentch
I am pro species survival.
— universeness
Why? It's not something you have power over, nor have a stake in. Whether the human race survives for another thousand years or another hundred thousand, you won't be around to witness it.
Besides, do you expect me to believe there is even a single person on this globe that procreates not for the simple reason that they want to have children, but because they so selflessly care about the survival of the human race? — Tzeentch
I'm not suggesting any solution. I'm pointing out an inconsistency in your behavior and asking for an explanation — Tzeentch
It is now up to the "pronatalists" to argue why procreation is a special case that deserves special logic. — Tzeentch
Most natives of the Americas were actually wiped out by disease rather than - as many like to believe - war and genocide. War and genocide barely did anything compared to this. — I like sushi
Some 2000 tribes of people lived on that landmass for thousands of years longer than it was labelled Brazil. It's very insulting and historically ignorant to hand wave away the significance of the crime of genocide, inflicted on the indigenous people of the land mass, now labelled as Brazil, by European horrors such as the Portuguese empire and their accompanying offerings, such as influenza, smallpox, god, the Portuguese language and gunpowder. — universeness
We lost. I'm sorry that my admission of defeat annoys you. — Vera Mont
I'm sure you're right. — Vera Mont
Hopefully. — Vera Mont
The best way to prepare them is to teach them elementary survival skills: how to find your way home, how to build a fire, where to dig for water, how to build a raft and a lean-to out of wreckage, how to season termite stew, how to avoid pissing off the big guy sitting next to you. — Vera Mont
I have survivalist books and I understand very well the threat of tyrants and bullies. That is what we must educate against because things will not be good for humanity if those jerks are the only ones with power. — Athena
Thank you so much for that Elvis video. — Athena
It would be science as opposed to antinatalism that beats lives of unbearable suffering. Although this is likely to take hundreds of years. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I wouldn't say people get involved in politics etc with the goal of reducing the number of lives of unbearable suffering. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Many people have other goals that take precedence, and there are those that take a deontological approach, preferring personal freedom etc, despite the consequences. Look at America electing Trump, and Brits voting overwhelmingly for the Tories who cut the NHS killing tens of thousands in only a few years, according to the Royal Society of Medicine. — Down The Rabbit Hole
In that sense yes in referring to human selection. However humans are natural - born of nature itself. At what point does natural selection convert into human selection? — Benj96
Yes, but I think it's more important here, to use a concept of intent, akin to 'the imposition of an individual or group human will.'I suppose based on your distinction of "intent" and "no intent" you're referring to "choice" which pertains to agents/that which is conscious. So the difference then between natural selection and human selection would be the emergence of conscious agents with intent right? — Benj96
Does that mean then that humans are the only conscious agents with intent? Or is it perhaps a continuum graduating stepwise from a system with no agency or choice towards one that does have agency and control. And where would other animals, plants and life fall on this continuum of emergent "intent"? — Benj96
But as we cannot know for certain how our children will turn out we do take a chance by procreating. But we do know ourselves - as parents - we may be sure that we have the best intentions to do right by our children. That is usually enough to convince them (their agency) to be good because our children usually respect us as parents, as the ones that brought them into the world. — Benj96
For then they're on our side. We can only do our best to convince the fountainists to become bailors. The rest is up to the fates. — Benj96
However, those who thought their way through life, are even more valuable in their later years. — Athena
That is not what I have seen because the closest we can get to immortality is what we leave for the young. The greatest heartache of the people I know is the young not listening to their words of experience and they are struggling to hold their tongues. — Athena
However, we can become politically active. We can testify at public hearings on all levels of government. We can join organizations that are doing the work we want to be done. — Athena
The Older Americans Act is all about keeping us socially connected and involved. That Act entitles us to decent housing, transportation, and continuing education and gave us nutrition sites and senior centers. :lol: Because of the fear of what we will do with our united power, we can't use our senior centers for political purposes. But I must stress our entitlements are to maintain us as contributing members of society. — Athena
A job well done is just that - done.
You should feel proud of that fact, and move on. — Benj96
All we can merely offer is a change in the quality of the buzz - how someone gets their pleasure in life, a step away from something absurd/toxic/dangerous and towards something worthwhile, meaningful and wholesome. — Benj96
Well it wouldnt be true antinatalism then, if that's actually the case. If he doesn't care to reduce human suffering he doesn't behold an ultimate ethical principle for ending all suffering. — Benj96
If there is no decision being made, then it is not irrational. It just "is".
Unfortunate, yes, because now individuals don't have a say in whether they reproduce, and they still have no say in whether they are born. — Tzeentch
I answered this at the end of my last post to you:And what exactly do you believe my "original goal" and or "protest" consist of? — Tzeentch
You are an antinatalist because you think it's immoral not to be such, as you think reproduction is an imposition on those who are born, as you did not have their consent. You choose to ignore the fact that obtaining such consent is not possible and that simply means, by default, we must not reproduce and anything that reproduces asexually now or after our extinction is just unfortunate. It that basically you position? I — universeness
I agree, but we are not currently in danger of extinction due to lack of reproduction, so they are able to make such choices and overrule the natural imperative to reproduce but they may have to experience some suffering due to having to make that choice. Is it moral that the rich and powerful have more choice over reproduction that the poor? The poor used to have lots of kids as they believed the more kids you have the more chance you will be looked after when your are old. That didnt work out well either, it mostly failed. Desperate, poorly conceived solutions like antinatalism or having 20 kids will normally fail.Seems like these individuals were able to put rational considerations before instinct - excellent. — Tzeentch
It is not. It reveals your appeal to "natural imperatives" as simply an act of cherry-picking. — Tzeentch
I dont want to get all panto on you but Oh yes you are!But you are trying to constantly impose your antinatalism on others, consistently!
— universeness
I'm not. — Tzeentch
If you feel threatened by a philosophical discussion to the point it feels like people are imposing on you, maybe discussion forums are not for you. — Tzeentch
I have actually pointed that out specifically as the focal point of the dilemma.
All I'm doing is pointing out that procreation violates a common moral principle, and waiting patiently for a weighty argumentation as to why that should be ok.
You gave extinction as a reason, to which I replied:
- I am highly skeptical of individuals who profess the prolongation of the human race as their reason for procreating.
- Ends do not justify means.
You haven't really moved beyond this, and instead are seeking refuge in personal attacks. — Tzeentch
Yes, that is part of his central ethical argument. It's deontological, not consequential. Unnecessarily imposing on others for X reason, is wrong he is saying. Thus, obviously, imposing on many people EVEN in the hopes of preventing unnecessary impositions would by logic, also be wrong. — schopenhauer1
That's because there is no "natural imperative to reproduce" in HUMANS. We are a creature that has "reasons" that are shaped by a multitude of things, and are generally shaped by the general culture around us and simply personal preferences- anything from not wanting to miss out, to simply boredom with life, loneliness, and a host of other non-instinctual reasons. — schopenhauer1
Huh? Not even the argument. Another red herring. — schopenhauer1
Assertion that adds nothing to the argument. Rhetorical filler. — schopenhauer1
A truth isn't how successful it sells to an audience. People often don't see "truth" at all, and certainly not right away. — schopenhauer1
1). People with a fundamentally good intention (to address suffering, to find an ultimate ethical/moral solution for suffering). — Benj96
In this way it is a paradoxic cycle alternating from subjectivity (concept of an ideal), to the implications of that ideal if it was objective (actually the case). In which case the intent (ideal) violates its own existence if it were to be real (objective). — Benj96
They only articulate a pointless contradictory principle and flounder helplessly by fixating on it. One needs to identify their ability to act (their agency, the fact that their life can and does matter, and they can make a positive differenve against suffering) rather than just talk about sufferings inability to be abolished entirely. — Benj96
Being someone who exists (but has an ideal of not existing) signals serious concern to me for their wellbeing. Because to me it sounds like a state of helplessness and impotency - inability to reconcile their purpose (core ideal) with the fact that they exist as a person. So the only other option is to project the need for non existence onto others (in other words make it everyone elses problem). — Benj96
In short, a last ditch effort to cope by denying the fact that they're severely depressed/utterly miserable and have little joy left to feel. — Benj96
I'm handwaving it, because there is no reason whatsoever for an individual to feel any natural imperative. I don't feel any natural imperative. — Tzeentch
Simultaneously seeing that people using this "natural imperative" are using an irrational "end justify the means" argument (I explained why it is irrational) to excuse their individual actions. — Tzeentch
You can't guarantee your fake immorality concern wont return again, and again and again.
— universeness
I don't need to guarantee anything. The only thing I'm concerned with is the morality of the act of reproducing. — Tzeentch
Morality is about individuals and individual choices. I can point to many individuals who made the conscious decision not to reproduce, thus disproving - yes, disproving - any allusions to the existence of a "natural imperative" that we are somehow all magically subjected to. — Tzeentch
Clearly this is not the case. Humans have many instincts, violent ones, sexual ones, etc. that are clearly not moral. — Tzeentch
No, really what I'm doing is applying a very common moral principle - do not impose on others - consistently, and I view your position as special pleading to excuse your inconsistency. — Tzeentch
No I can't, because clearly you're responding to some generalized idea you have about antinatalism, and not reading what I am typing to you. — Tzeentch
It would be sad to imagine helping others and nobody appreciating it. People like to be appreciated for the good things they do. — Benj96
