• Judging moral ‘means’ separately from moral ‘ends’

    The greater point is that all moral decisions except the one I mentioned have an element of harm, so that’s inescapable in this universe.

    You mean to not harm, but you do. Maybe posing this question on this forum has somehow harmed somebody, but you didn’t mean it your ends was to just pose a question and not cause harm but you did.
  • Judging moral ‘means’ separately from moral ‘ends’

    That doesn’t change the fact that if someone is not born, that person would not be harmed. That is just a fact. However, almost all other moral decisions in the world have an element of harm to them. This doesn’t mean that unwanted outcomes can never result from risky actions that lead to procreation, it is just providing the status of this particular state of affairs.

    So again, it’s not about how easy this act is to keep, although it’s relatively easy compared to many other ones, it’s more about The status of the decision or action and question compared to other actions or decisions. Imagine that you wanted to cause non-harm, but you knew the risk would be driving somewhere to earn a living or something. It would be very hard to live in this kind of mindset, because at some point you will cause an infraction of some sort however, minor. Not being born means no ameliorating greater harms for lesser harms is taking place. That person would not have to be harmed in any small way for some greater good or lesser harm, etc. It would be perfectly not harming somebody to not have that person where they could have been born counterfactually.
  • Judging moral ‘means’ separately from moral ‘ends’

    I've held the position that in life, all actions will have a certain amount of amelioration and compromise. Ironically, the only time one can perfectly follow deontological principles (like non-harm), is by deciding NOT to procreate (which if not followed, would inevitably cause unnecessary harm unto the person who would result from this decision).
  • The Grundrisse with David Harvey
    What's fascinating to me is how Marx's picture of capital, in spite of all this esoteric trapping, still rings true today.Moliere

    I wanted to bring your attention to the critiques I brought above, and see if you have any answers to that:
    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/788907
    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/788908
  • Trouble with Impositions
    Because if people did not feel this way, the argument given would not arise.Manuel

    You can be a happy go lucky antinatalist. And there are! Doesn’t change the argument anymore than depressed people against poor leadership. Depressed people against theft or happy people who support right to die.

    I have read several of your posts on the topic, you don't need to keep putting "imposition" and "forced" in bold - I get that point very well. But it's simply not convincing.Manuel

    Some people will never be convinced regarding many things, pro choice, etc. That an individual isn’t particularly convinced doesn’t affect the aptness, just displays the view of a particular person. If I truly cared for that particular person to be convinced, I’d ask them if perhaps convention itself has gotten in the way of moral reasoning or perhaps why causing harm unnecessarily is justified, or how causing harm in the hopes of causing good is not using someone to see some outcome and why this is acceptable. Id question that persons moral framework. I’d mention how this is the only time someone can perfectly not cause unnecessary harm, and not hedge.
  • Magical powers

    I think people try to make the dichotomy between science and religion when really, it’s tedium of the endless minutia involved in technology and the fantasy of the spiritual sentiment that the consumers of products borne out of endless minutia look to to escape or to avoid the minutia that they do not have the capacity, means, or inclination to monger (but use the products of said mongering). Talk to an engineer and minutia is god. They are its miners and mongerers. The saviors.

    And yes mongering minutia for technology is different than other types of minutia historical facts on the Thirty Years War, abstract philosophies from 14th century Japan, gardening, whatever, because the mongering of tedium in technology is the mode of our very way of surviving in the world now so its usefulness, and its tedium are uniquely and paradoxically part of “modernity”

    See my post above:
    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/788937
  • Magical powers

    The new enchantment is the tedium of the knowledge class and the New Age sentiments that have developed in response to the minitia mongering. Technology is tedium all the way down, but gets reified as utility. One is praised for its hard nosed mining for more minutia. The other is used as a cudgel to techno-minutia’s endless nihilistic permutations of mind numbing detail and so becomes useless generalities on life.
  • Trouble with Impositions
    Indeed when the moral argument is countered you invariably dismiss that counter with something along the lines of "you've had your say, I want to hear from others", a 'casting around' for agreement, and disparaging all others as 'trolls'.Isaac

    Who countered what?

    The rest of the world think the difference is significant and as such taking a decision for them (because they can't) is a perfectly moral thing to do and faces no such contradiction with their moral behaviour toward persons who already exist.Isaac

    The rest of the world are individual decisions of people. Many wrong. Lot of wrong choices made by lots of people everyday.

    Since there are no other examples in life, you can't appeal to consistency, and since there are no objective moral laws, you can't appeal to authority.Isaac

    No, you know I can bring up the usual examples of egregious acts that you could prevent that everyone would agree with but make glaring exceptions for procreation.

    Were you to be interested in the arguments one might expect that to be and end to it. But these threads just seem to come back again and again. Fishing for people who agree with you is not the same thing as showing an interest in the arguments. It's an emotional, not an academic activity.Isaac

    I don’t fish for any agreement. It’s a nice change but clearly I keep replying to people as yourself. Almost every one of my posts about this is with someone who disagrees. Look at post history if you care to see the evidence.

    I don't think there's anything wrong with seeking catharsis (I don't think it's healthy, but then I'm not your therapist, so that's no concern of mine), but it is unpleasant to dismiss as 'trolls' anyone taking, at face value, an appeal to mutuality dressed up as a moral investigation.Isaac

    Yea yeah. Again, it’s not the AN making decisions on others behalf and messing with other peoples lives. The burden of proof is on the one doing the affecting. And “me thinks it good despite causing suffering” and “person doesn’t exist yet so I can do anything that will cause negative thing to someone in the future” are extremely weak tea.
  • Trouble with Impositions
    No Manuel has it right here.Isaac

    Oh boy, I guess another person saying that makes it true!
  • Solipsism++ and Universal Mind
    Add to that inapt, unrealistic thought experiments; quoting famous philosophers as a substitute for thinking things through; irrelevant comments and non-sequiturs; personal attacks and uncivility...T Clark

    Damn that’s the Constitution here no? :lol:
  • Trouble with Impositions
    I think your views of suffering are quite distorted to the extent that it actually clouds other everything else life can provide.Manuel

    You’re playing with peoples lives, not the AN. The burden of proof is on you and cannot simply be “you think it’s fine” and that it “ain’t that bad” is it? You see where that kind of self entitled deeming to do harm leads, if applied in any other case right? Me unnecessarily forcing an avoidable imposition on you because I deemed it right in some calculation I made- how is that ever right?

    Finally, also an issue that surely has come up - that people who have AN views tend to be depressed in some manner. This is claimed to be irrelevant to the central AN argument.

    But if AN didn't have this kind of depression, I seriously doubt it would've ever arisen.
    Manuel

    Red herring and ad hom, you’re right, it is.

    There is no word that goes beyond "overkill" that I know of - but I don't see what success you've had.

    Something has gone wrong here.
    Manuel

    What does success to you look like in this forum?
    The most “success” I’ve seen is posters display how many times they can sound like an ahole by way of smug trolling. And indeed if that is success it is in spades here.
  • The Grundrisse with David Harvey

    Further, the idea of exploitation of labor from those without industrialized means of production ("indigenous and third world populations), though maybe true, seems inevitable with two so asymmetrically different lifestyles clashing. This could happen under any system. That is more ethical than necessarily economic. You either decide to destroy populations and their lifestyles or you don't. Certainly, the "socialist worker" isn't necessarily going to prevent this exploitation any more than the capitalist class. Also, if Marx sees historical trajectory as inevitable, then this stage of exploitation has to have gone through (lack of contingency in history) for this socialist utopia to finally unite the exploited populations.
  • The Grundrisse with David Harvey

    Just my two cents in how anti-Marixists might respond to all of this:
    That due to the general trend of the 20th century from the Progressive Era, post-WW2 programs, and just unfolding of the idea of protecting people's time (8 hour workday, labor laws, etc.), Marx's initial critiques, which were valid for the time have been somewhat overcome.

    Then add to the idea that people can find value in their work, even if not making a profit and just a salary, takes care of the idea of alienation and even exploitation, as that seems to be based on the idea that people are complete pawns rather than satisfied producers of labor.

    Now, mind you, I think all of the above I just wrote there is bullshit, but for reasons that are not Marxist. I am just giving you some counters people usually use. In other words, these critiques of exploitation and alienation, some might say (not me), have been generally overcome or moot.
  • The delusional and the genius

    As long as we don't mind using people by causing harm and imposition so people can be "experiencers of good", then none of it matters.
  • Stoicism is an underappreciated philosophical treasure
    To be human, is to also fully realize the absurdity of the contingency of our actions and reasons, and the ability to be a thoroughly existential and constantly counterfactual creature. That is say, the moorings of anchors like "the good life" and "intrinsic value of the virtues" are indeed examples of bad faith psychological anchoring mechanisms. It's putting the cart before the horse. It is wishfully thinking oneself into a non-deliberative and determined being. The sedated comfort of not just law, but NATURAL LAW at that! Of course, don't look at the man behind the curtain, the saintly "sage" who will divine for you exactly WHAT that natural law IS.
  • Trouble with Impositions
    There are no new arguments to be given for or against AN. It boils down to you thinking life sucks and me thinking it does not.Manuel

    This kind of trivializing isn't even getting at the actual argument at hand. It's not about views of life, but at what is morally justified in terms of action towards others.

    In other words, these kind of antinatalist questions come down to what counts as moral, and are much deeper than, "you like blue and I like green".

    For example, you said:
    The point is that most people (not all) prefer to go on living, till' it's time to go - as everyone eventually will.Manuel

    I can phrase the argument as: "Do you believe it is morally justifiable to cause unnecessary (absolutely avoidable) harm to others and determine the conditions of their existence, based on the limited socio-cultural ways that humans must endure by default in this universe, which individuals have no control over upon birth?"

    You can say, "Yes, I believe unnecessarily causing people to experience X, Y, Z limited choices, and unnecessarily harming others, and using them is perfectly fine".

    These are the kinds of the deeper issues at hand. It's not just a matter of opinion, but informs our view of justice in the world, and justified action more generally. I would say such a view of procreation is callous, not totally thought out to its moral infractions, and using people. Going ahead and making a significant decision that life is what another person should experience, causing them unnecessary (avoidable) harm and imposing burdens (impositions), EVEN with the intention or hope that they would also have good experiences, isn't justifiable. Continuing to justify causing harm to others is a slippery slope towards accepting injustice, which can have far-reaching political consequences since it affects how others are impacted by individual decisions.

    It is also about informing people as to what an imposition is, why imposing unnecessarily upon others is wrong, and why creating impositions for others is equally wrong, when it is avoidable and unnecessary to do unto another.

    Since all other decisions relate to intra-worldly affairs, they inherently involve moral ambiguity, and require balancing different ethical considerations. In contrast, choosing not to procreate is an inter-worldly decision that can be made without any moral hedging or ambiguity and perfectly aligns with the principles of non-harm and respect for others. A state of affairs will occur that person will NOT be harmed, NOT be forced into this universe's limited choices, etc. Overlooking harm and downplaying it so that one can see X (even if it is "good experiences"), is still violating the dignity and respect of that person who will thus be harmed as a result of this imposition.
  • Antinatalism Arguments
    Done patting yourselves on the back? I find it funny that some styles of debate here are to be very unpleasant, but then use that to say how pleasant life is. Demonstrating unpleasantness as a way to justify life's pleasantness seems a bit more than odd to me.
  • Stoicism is an underappreciated philosophical treasure
    At the recommendation of others, I recently dove head-first into the world of Stoicism. And I'm shocked at what I am discovering. The quality and (above almost all else) practicality of the lessons and dialogues is stunning.

    Stoicism reminds me of Buddhism in many ways, especially in terms of framing desire, suffering and what is optimal for growth. Also in terms of the asceticism, and simplicity.

    Has anyone else here researched or even practiced Stoicism? What was your experience with this particular philosophy? I ask, because I am interested in being pointed in the correct direction when it comes to furthering my understanding of Stoicism.

    Maybe I'm missing something? Maybe there is a dark side to Stoicism that I'm not appreciating. Which is exactly why I'm starting this thread; to peek behind the veil.
    Bret Bernhoft

    The problem with Stoicism in particular nowadays is that people divorce it of its full metaphysics and epistemology. They try to take its axiological elements, like you can just take bits and pieces. The philosophy was meant to be followed in its entirety, and that means its huge mystical underpinning. Here is a whole video on it actually.

  • Antinatalism Arguments
    This argument strikes me as at best indentured servitude to a hypothetical or slavery to a hypothetical at worst. Am I off the mark?

    "You must exist and suffer because some hypothetical beings might have it better as a result."

    Slave owners had it better than their slaves.
    Sumyung Gui

    Yeah I think I agree here. The argument was:
    There's suffering but there's also a lot of joy. A lot of people consider the suffering to be worth it due to the joy.Xanatos

    My response was basically:
    It is immoral to be aggressively paternalistic- that is to say, to assume
    a) others should experience a certain existential arrangement that you deem as good (like having to survive in this universe in some socio-economic way)
    b) causing known harms (you know this is part of almost all human lives)
    c) causing unknown harms (you know of harms that you cannot predict)

    All of these assumptions would be violating the dignity of the person, as forced choices and forced, unnecessary (avoidable) harm was caused on behalf of someone else when this situation could have been avoided (by not procreating).

    So my argument rests on deontological considerations of duties towards others not to violate their dignity or use them.

    Xanatos also implied that it is okay to do X negative to someone (that could have been avoided) as long as it is with the intention or the hunch that the person being harmed would appreciate it post-facto. Using someone, by causing avoidable harms unto someone, EVEN with the intention that they will have positive experiences from it as well, is still a violation of dignity, the violation of not using people, and a violation of the principle of doing no harm.

    Once born, the situation changes whereby there is no WAY to both live and avoid harm and pursue interests. It would in fact be a violation to prevent certain goals and such that might cause harm because the person born now has interests, values, and such. At that post-birth stage, it becomes using heuristics whereby one respects the goals, values, and worth of others while still trying best to exercise ones own will.

    However, prior to birth, this is the only time someone (a potential parent) can avoid doing harm 100% towards someone else (by not procreating a child that will be forced and harmed). Thus, really, the decision to not procreate is one of the only ethical decisions where someone can "perfectly" follow the rule of not causing avoidable harm, not using someone, and not violating someone else's dignity by forcing your will on their behalf.
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution
    The discussion of animal vs human ways of being in the world seems to me too polarized. Animals are subject to pressures from their environment, including each other. So are humans. There are many similarities between humans and animals and it seems to me most likely that there will be very similar ways of being available to both. I have been told that boredom is a uniquely human capacity, not shared by most animals; parrots are apparently an exception, but it may be that the distress behaviour displayed by caged animals is the result of boredom, so that is not at all clear.Ludwig V

    I just want to present to you the last few posts so we can maybe discuss off that because they all hit on these subjects.

    Start with this post between me an javra and then read down: https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/786471
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution
    There is a massive qualitative difference between a) what lesser animals experience by flow, b) what humans experience during moments of flow, and c) what this "there" of actualized, perfect, literally limitless flow could be.

    Don't think this might change your perspective much, but I wanted to offer this alternative interpretation.
    javra

    I’m a philosophical pessimist and antinatalist as you probably know so several responses:

    whatever great experiences we humans have, ALL the non flow/non beauty whatever is not worth it. As you acknowledged, we “have” to constantly “get there” or “catch it” (flow states/ beauty). And anyone who tries to market the idea that all moments are good ones are selling a crock of bullshit. And is probably selling fake self help books to make an extra buck and smoking too much wacky tobbacy.

    I already said my piece regarding the having to get there and thus we are already in a state of lack because of the existential burden of constantly getting there as explained earlier. I think it’s a bit of a bias to think humans have some access to the best experiences simply because we are self aware. That’s just post facto justification for why living this constant burden is worth it. I just don’t agree.
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution
    Interesting perspective. I find that being in the zone, or in flow states, is antithetical to zoning out. Yes, the questioning, chattering aspects of mind vanish in both cases, but in the first we are effortlessly (so to speak) accomplishing our goals. Wheres with the second we don't progress anywhere. For me, in an ideal case, all pondering and analyzing is to facilitate a smooth practice of being in the zone and so having "flow". Which, for me at least, is when life become most purposeful, for lack of better terms.javra

    I was just listing off the top of my head states whereby we want to be caught up in something. And yes they may be opposites, but opposites of a same category. You passively get caught up in X, and it feels like time has flown by. You actively engage in stimulating activity and time has flown by. One is passive and the other active, but it is not uncomfortable, tedious, or existentially burdensome. With animals, a Gorilla can sit munching on leaves for hours, or just sit. Not in angst or tedium, but just being there. Obviously similar to a whole host of other animals, all of them except us really.


    Here again I'd describe this in terms of degrees. Lesser animals can certainly feel anxiety, trepidation, lack of flow - this in due measure to their intelligence. But they certainly are nowhere near as prone to such unpleasant states of being as we humans are.javra

    Ok, but this disruption is usually because their natural habitat is disturbed, not because of some natural angst. Although, I'll agree about general "unpleasant states". Sure, every animal that has a nervous system will "feel" some sort of unpleasantness, but not in the self-referential/aware human agnsty way. And I don't think being "bored" necessarily cuts it. I also don't believe this happens much in the wild anyways. Other animals have a niche that seems to be much more in balance with what it is their being in the world requires, reflecting whatever their evolutionary path took.

    But I agree that if they are there, it's nowhere near human states.

    Reminds me of train of thought wherein ego is considered a in some fundamental sense a vice, lesser animals have less ego in due measure with their intelligence, and we humans - although having greater egos due to our greater intelligence than all other known lifeforms - endeavor for states of being that are evermore more egoless while yet maintaining the wisdom, or gnosis, that our intelligence gives us opportunity to obtain. To momentarily bring spiritual notions back into the discussion, notions of Nirvana or Brahman come to mind as just such egoless state of being which would be the pinnacle state of awareness to experience ... that is yet different in supposed quality from the reduced egos of lesser lifeforms.

    Would this roundabout mindset be something that resonates with you?
    javra

    Well actually, this perfectly encapsulates the "shutting off" or rather "grappling of being" that humans must deal with. You see, we are not "there" (whatever we are aiming for with Nirvana and meditative practices) so we have to get "there". But why aren't we "there"? I'm sure you can use some tricky language and say, we are "there" we just don't realize it, but it is just inverting the same thing. We "don't realize it". So we aren't there. So yeah, we have the burden of not being there. Other animals are there.
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution

    Interesting! Don't get me wrong. I respect the variety of ways animals live in the world, and actually admire them more than our own. It is because of these "kinds" of capacities that we have that I think humans aren't necessarily "special" - not in the religious sense you were conveying with some elite status, but rather with existential burdens of self-awareness and self-motivational ways of going about the world. We must constantly renew every day why we do anything. It is precisely when our brain "shuts off" that we seek the most value: "Flow states", "meditative states", "good night's sleep", "zoning out". We don't want to be in continual discursive thought, but we want to be taken away from it. Other animals are already there. We have to constantly "get there" or "get caught up in something" to get there. It is why we look at other animals, especially companion ones with such love and loyalty, and perhaps even envy. They embody simply being, and not constantly grappling with being.
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution

    We are going to split hairs at this point because in theory, I have no preference for degree or kind. But the degree gets to be exponential once we factor in not just variation in culture, but the virtual worlds I am talking about. That is to say, the indefinite ways that we can be self-referential. Not that I am saying these articles and quotes are anywhere near consensus, but it is just an example of the general idea:

    In sum, our discussion points to the broad conclusion that all natural dependencies admissible in human language are Merge-generable, including certain types of nested, cross-serial, and transformational (such as filler-gap/movement) dependencies, and that non-Merge-generable dependencies of any type are extraneous to the human language faculty. There are only abstract hierarchical phrase structures in human language, generated all the way through via Merge. Here, we provided a novel set of neuroimaging data that confirm this general picture, thus corroborating the overarching hypothesis that human language at its core is a surprisingly simple system of unbounded Merge, and that Merge is the single generative engine underlying every aspect of linguistic computations.Frontiers In Article

    The significance of language lies in its capacity to express and communicate meaning, which includes our experiences, beliefs, intentions, and values. This capacity is founded on the ability to construe reality, i.e. to mentally represent it and make sense of it. Conception is not a passive reflection of the external world, but an active process that entails selective attention, highlighting of aspects, and organization into patterns. These patterns are abstracted from experience, both perceptual and introspective, and become structured in a cognitive grammar. Language is the vehicle for these structures, which are brought to bear on the interpretation of linguistic expressions. — Language and the Cognitive Construal of the World" by Ronald W. Langacker

    Language is the key symbolic adaptation that has enabled humans to accumulate and transmit culture, including cooperative social practices, technology, ethical codes, and knowledge of the natural world. The development of language reflects a confluence of evolutionary and developmental events that led to the co-evolution of brains and communication systems, including the growth of cortical brain regions involved in auditory processing, vocal learning, and syntactic analysis. As a result, human communication exhibits unique properties, such as the ability to express an unlimited range of meanings, displace talk to other times and places, and create recursive structures of great complexity. These properties, which are absent in the communication systems of other animals, reflect distinctive features of the human brain and its relation to social and cultural processes. — The Symbolic Species- Terrence Deacon

    The creative aspect of language use can be seen most easily in the ability to produce an unbounded number of new sentences, quite unlike any that have been previously encountered.

    Language is a complex, uniquely human cognitive ability that allows us to communicate with one another, to express our thoughts and feelings, and to create an infinite variety of novel sentences. While other animals also have systems of communication, they are not able to acquire language in the way that humans do, and their communication systems are limited in their expressive power and flexibility."

    We possess an elaborate and highly articulated system of knowledge of language, which is both tacit and explicit, and which reflects the experience of a lifetime. This knowledge, together with the highly articulated system of sensory-motor capacities, provides the basis for the production and comprehension of an unbounded variety of expressions, each with its own meaning, conveyed in a way that is sensitive to a potentially unlimited number of conditions.
    — Language and Mind by Noam Chomsky

    The recursive mind has allowed us to transcend the limitations of our senses, and to inhabit a world of possibilities, independent of immediate circumstances. It has allowed us to engage in science, to imagine alternative scenarios, to predict the future, and to entertain multiple perspectives on a situation."
    "Recursion is a process that allows us to generate an indefinitely large set of hierarchically structured objects or ideas, each of which can be analyzed in terms of smaller components that are themselves instances of the same kinds of objects or ideas."
    "The recursive capacity is what allows us to create complex grammars, to generate infinite sentences, to use pronouns, and to talk about things that are not present. It is also what allows us to think about the future, to make plans, and to imagine hypothetical scenarios."
    "The recursive mind is the key to our creativity, our sense of self, and our ability to navigate complex social environments. It is what allows us to create art, music, literature, and science, and to pass on our cultural heritage to future generations.
    — The Recursive Mind: The Origins of Human Language, Thought, and Civilization by Michael C. Corballis

    All of these quotes point to the "virtual world" that I am trying to convey.
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution
    So appraised, Homo Sapiens are a unique kind of lifeform. But then so too are all other species of life out there. And all species evolve, sometimes speciating into new kinds, given a sufficient period of time and given that they don’t perish.javra

    Yes agreed. But do other animals have this cognitively general processing unit? This kind is different not in its specialization but in its GENERALIZATION. It is this I'd like to focus on. This is quite different. We didn't get better at a set of innate things (echo location, egg flipping, great scent, etc.). We don't just have a set way we get the things we need to survive. But it's not just that, it is the fact that we have infinitely iterative ways of surviving. But not only that, it is based on the fact that as deliberative, language-based animals, we can create virtual worlds of internal culture, and personal value that we weigh our actions against, creating yet more exponentially different ways of being. This brain vastly plastic and continually iterative and learning from its learning about learning about learning.

    More generally, how can awareness, as an aspect of life, be deemed to not hold any continuity between different types, here meaning species, of lifeforms? With such an evolutionary continuity then also comes different degrees of magnitude of awareness and different degrees of quality of awareness. The ameba and the human then holding vast differences in their magnitude and quality of awareness despite there being a continuity between the two - such that the differences in their awareness could be deemed a matter of degree on a very extreme spectrum.javra

    Agreed here.
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution
    I'm sure some evolutionary reasons. Our evolutionary path was that of flexibility over specific modules to handle situations. These in turn, were probably a kind of Red Queen scenario where each new advantage created its own problems which needed more ratcheting. So for example, it may have started out simply with walking upright continually, which freed up hands for tools. As with other primates, tool-use is not new. But the complete freedom from using hands for mobility and bipedalism created the opportunity for more exploration. This in turn favored higher rates of pre-frontal cortex formations for abstract and long-term planning. This created the situation where social pressures needed even more ratcheting for there to be awareness of intent and understanding social relations. The shift to some language-based thinking that could have been due to various mutations (FOXp2 gene for example), along with exaptations like the the mirror-neuron system (that is just one idea), might have helped in developing dedicated regions like Wernicke and Broca's region of the brain. This in turn ratcheted up things exponentially as symbolic thought combined with a general processing brain (not specified to certain tasks and responses), created the goal-directed, reason-producing, narrative creating human being we saw appear 500,000-150,000 years ago.

    But though interesting, I am trying to showcase the burden that this kind of cognition carries. We are an animal that knows it does not have to, but does it anyways. A chimp forages and hunts in its environment but it almost certainly doesn't have to motivate itself. Sure depression is something that can be seen in animals, but it is not necessarily the same as a daily struggle for providing reasons. We know there are nasty, shitty, crappy, negative aspects that we don't want to encounter, and we must grapple with that and overcome that. If we didn't, we would literally die.
    schopenhauer1
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution
    Biblical-like metaphysics wherein a supposed existential division of being occurs between soul-endowed humans and soul-devoid lesser lifeforms. (To me, either all life is endowed with an evolutionary continuity of soul/anima or else no life is endowed with soul - but I see neither evidence nor logical cohesion for there being a division between lifeforms with a soul and lifeforms devoid of soul.)javra

    False dichotomy. I’m not implying nor would I imply anything like that.
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution
    We're defining the differences between animals and humans using different standards.T Clark

    I do not believe we have been. Rather, you keep asking about our ancestors implying this has an impact on degree vs kind in modern humans. It is precisely the idea that we are different on our very general processing brain than animals who do not have:
    Deliberative, constantly iterative, many degrees of plasticity, self-reflective, language based creatures, as we are now.schopenhauer1

    Further ones that:

    we deliberate on various counterfactuals and past events. We can reflect on the reflection of a reflection seemingly infinitely.schopenhauer1

    Yes, perhaps we are degrees from ancestral humans but clearly I mean non-humanoid. But that’s the point. At what point is it a degree versus a kind. You seem to be backhandedly stumbling to an answer maybe. Are we really degrees away from a chimp or a dolphin or whatnot or is it rather that there is something wholly different with a brain that is almost completely general processing?

    Instinct is usually defined as the faculty of acting in such a way as to produce certain ends, without foresight of the ends, and without previous education in the performance.
    — William James - What is an Instinct
    T Clark

    Darwin used the word instinct in a number of different ways—to refer to what impels a bird to breed; to a disposition, such as courage or obstinacy in a dog; to selectively bred patterns of behaviour such as the tumbling movements of tumbler pigeons; to feelings such as sympathy in people; and to stereotyped actions such as those employed by honeybees when constructing the cells of a honeycomb. It is regrettable that Darwin did not make the distinctions of the meaning of instinct more explicit, for he gave powerful precedent for the indiscriminate use of the word, the ambiguity of which has repeatedly clouded and confused the understanding of behaviour. — https://www.britannica.com/topic/instinct

    Some people might make rather simplistic analogies: “X animal gets jealous and feels happy as do humans”. Degree not kind. Case closed. That might be more like saying a bat, a flying bird, and a flying insect must be a difference in degree because they all can fly or have wings.

    So I can see the degree people using dolphins, apes, birds, and such and studies in communication and problem solving for their evidence. But is this really degree? At what point does something become wholly unique to that animals set of traits? General processing with very few innate components seems to be a defining trait. One of kind, not just a few degrees away.
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution
    I guess the answer is that there is continuity between animal and human cognition. It's a slope, not a jump.T Clark

    I’ll include our ancestors in it. Obviously that was involved, but even if it happened over 2 million years or in a day, I don’t think that informs degree or kind. I speak of the human that has all our faculties as we have them in modern humans. Is this a difference in kind? Deliberative, constantly iterative, many degrees of plasticity, self-reflective, language based creatures, as we are now.
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution


    I am not sure what you are saying. Yes, I've read the Language Instinct by Pinker. That is one theory. Even if it is, language indeed does seem a difference in kind. That very short snippet you posited doesn't get at the fact that Pinker thinks the language faculty is indeed quite unique to humans. Communication, through sound, movement, or otherwise, is not necessarily language. Perhaps dolphins and whales have a primitive language. But this isn't fully generative. It is language with the fully deliberative aspect of humans that make it perhaps unique in kind not just degree.

    The instinct for language, as humans use it, seem to be a difference in kind. We learn through language, we think in language, we deliberate on various counterfactuals and past events. We can reflect on the reflection of a reflection seemingly infinitely.
  • Difference in kind versus difference in degree in evolution
    It's not that I don't think we have a powerful general processing ability, but I don't think you can ignore what is built in from the start. I don't think there's anything wrong with calling them instincts.T Clark

    Can you define instinct? I am not being cheeky. This is immensely important yet elusive, even in zoology, biology, and certainly evolutionary psychology (if that is even amenable to strict scientific principles), I think this is not quite nailed down. An ape learning to use tools to pull termites and an otter in heat are two different things, so perhaps that points the way... Why is the otter trying to hump the other one three times per year? It can't help but try to hump the otter. It literally can't deliberate and think otherwise about it. That is the MO of the otter for those brief periods.

    I'll answer this question with another question - Is it actually true that there is a discontinuity in cognitive ability between humans and other living things?T Clark

    I am posing the question and thus, clearly I am asking thee.
  • Why being an existential animal matters
    And there isn't a reason, as you note.

    There's simply yourself, and the world, and what you need to do.
    Moliere

    Personality? Schopenhauer thought there was a character behind decisions perhaps. No freedom.
  • Exit Duty Generator by Matti Häyry
    The question I struggle with is, what probability makes it acceptable/unacceptable to procreate? 60% chance of a good life? 5% chance of a life of chronic suffering? I don't know the answer.Down The Rabbit Hole

    That's because you are asking the wrong questions as to antinatalism. It isn't as much utilitarian calculus as it is a violation of deontological principles like overlooking someone's dignity, using them, being aggressively paternalistic, and the like. The procreational decision is a time when one can prevent all unnecessary harm. At that point, barring a utopia of people's individualized choosing (which obviously doesn't exist), choosing anything that creates harm for another is overlooking the inherent worth of that person as they are being used (even if that cause is to have a happy person). It is unique in that no other decision can be so perfectly not harming someone as this. Everything post-birth becomes a hedging and weighing of greater harms with lesser harms, and risks and the like on behalf of others.
  • Who Perceives What?
    that is not idealism - it is representative realism, where the idea or perception represents the actuality.

    '“Realism” (in philosophy) is the view that certain concepts refer to real things. For Locke, it is the view that our sensory ideas (sensations) represent material objects in the world.

    We must distinguish between the mental representation of an object, and the object itself. The mental representation is an idea (probably a complex idea). The object in the world is not an idea but an object. The slogan is “ideas in the mind, qualities in bodies.” Ideas can represent qualities, as well as (entire) objects.'
    Wayfarer

    I am aware of this, but going down @Banno's rabbit hole. I pointed this error out if you looked a few posts prior to that.
  • Who Perceives What?
    That's an observation, not a problem.Banno

    How is one the other and vice versa? That is the problem.

    I'm not seeing it.Banno

    They both make the error of one BEING the other versus one CAUSED by the other. Something may be caused, but not actually be the same as what causes it.

    Is the tree the same as the experience of the tree? No. The tree impresses upon the experiencer which then experiences the tree.

    Is consciousness the same as the physical systems causing the consciousness? Not necessarily.
  • Who Perceives What?
    I wouldn't use cause. Consciousness is not a thing like moving billiard balls. I advocate treating it as a difference in seeing as, a la duckrabbit. The event can be seen as a physical system or as being conscious. Two sides of the same coin.Banno

    Isn't this just restating the problem at hand rather than answering it?

    The problem:
    There is mind and there are physical systems that correlate with mind.

    Banno's Answer:
    The event can be seen as a physical system or as being conscious. Two sides of the same coin.
    This simply seems to be stating:
    "There is mind and there are physical systems that correlate with mind".

    That is indeed the problem we are trying to solve, but not answering the problem.

    But again, this is a change of topic.Banno

    They dovetail nicely because of the error in language used. You can replace either one with a different wording and still errors ensue (use correlates or impresses upon, or anything else instead of cause to indicate that it is external)
  • Who Perceives What?
    What would be the equivalent in the realist/materialist attitude to consciousness?Banno

    Not equivalent. I am not sure if it is the inverse/converse, or what not but analogously, just as an idealist is mistaking ontology with causation, so too might the realist.

    Thus,
    "The tree IS my experience" is the idealist error. Rather it should be:
    "The tree CAUSES my experience (of that tree)"

    The realist makes a similar error in terms of emergence and especially consciousness. Thus,
    "Consciousness IS X physical system." Rather it should be:
    "Consciousness is CAUSED by X physical system".

    So while not the same, they make inverse/converse(not sure nor do I care the proper term) mistake.
  • Exit Duty Generator by Matti Häyry
    Since you enjoy the deontological approached to Antinatalism, are you familiar with the work of Julio Cabrera?Oldphan

    Yes very much so, just do a search here. I have written extensively on antinatalism and philosophical pessimism.
  • Who Perceives What?
    Ok, so if we agree to leave aside the exegesis, do we agree that idealism errs in treating facts about trees as facts about minds?Banno

    For the purpose of this particular dialogue yes, I can accept this.