they are "shown" by their relations to each other. So it's no surprise that examples are not listed... — Banno
The idea in the Early Wittgenstein is that we recognise elementary objects when we see them. — Banno
ne can give an exegesis of the picture the text presents without raising the question of whether it is true or false, but if the exegesis includes the question of the truth of what is presented then it is not beside the point. — Fooloso4
Interesting that you say "super consequentialist thinking". What proportion of your views (if any) are consequentialist? Do you think it's consistent for one to have a general consequentialist outlook while also having overriding principles (such as sanctity of life, consent etc)? — Down The Rabbit Hole
I view life as it is as a good; and life as it is includes suffering. Thus, suffering is ultimately good too.
I would distinguish between necessary and unnecessary suffering, perhaps. But that's a different discussion. — Xtrix
However, it's not even that claim I was discussing, but more about the nature of imposing life on another and when it's justified. Pro-natalists think that life can be imposed as long as X criteria of choices is involved and X criteria of harm is involved. In other words, they recognize that there is an "acceptable" amount of harm that someone else will suffer.
For the antinatalist, both of these claims are misguided. By its very nature, presuming for another that "these range of choices are good" is wrong. I call this moralistic misguided thinking "aggressive paternalism". It presumes one knows what is meaningful, best, or good for another, when in fact they may be ignorant themselves (if these are somehow "objectively" true), or simply, wrong (if they are relatively true and that person being affected just doesn't agree).
Also for antinatalists, presuming that it is permissible to allow the conditions for X criteria of harm is also presumptuous for another. Again, it is aggressively paternalistic to assume that X types of harm are acceptable for other people to suffer. These are flawed and misguided notions that someone else should arbitrarily, by their own reckoning, be the arbiter of what is acceptable in the range of choices or the range of harms that others should encounter. The sad thing is, there is no alternative for those who would disagree.. Only suicide and cajoling that, "This life isn't that bad!" and all the cultural pressures of thousands of years of optimism bias.
Also don't forget, there is unforeseeable harm as well as expected harm for the future person that would be born. The parents might have thought that only X amount of harm would take place, but there are other (perhaps more serious) harms that can befall a person that they didn't even expect and is regrettable. I'll call this a "known unknown". We know that there is unforeseeable harms for future people, so even though we don't know the specifics, we can understand a vague idea of it, and we know that it is a frequent occurrence. — schopenhauer1
When face to face with uncertainty and the future of children are precisely that, we must/usually assume the worst (outcome). Hence, antinatalism. This is a rule-of-thumb we employ every day in our lives. — Agent Smith
In that specific case, no. I don't think it's a great analogy though. Why? Because we're talking about something much bigger -- we're talking about life. So what if the pizza were the size of the world? Would the fact that there was shit on it negate all of that pizza? — Xtrix
have said that they are in favour of not building but are opposed to destroying. — Down The Rabbit Hole
An existing person? Then yes, that existing person can have future states. — 180 Proof
One ought to take into account the consequences for one's actions, and if the consequence of one's action is the birth of another individual, one should take into account that individual's behalf before one acts. — Tzeentch
Why should the fact that many people enjoy their lives give them a right to impose it on others? — Tzeentch
I don't see the relevance of the distinction. — 180 Proof
So there is not now an actual person who warrants moral concern, but only some hypothetical / imaginary – nonactual – person like e.g. Frodo Baggins. :roll: — 180 Proof
Already refuted that idea. There is a difference between something never being able to happen, and something that can definitely happen. — schopenhauer1
"unavailable for learning". — Banno
However, if they will experience harms that must be prevented, they can also experience positives. I don't wish to start a train of repetition, so I shall stop here. I hope that you and the others here have been doing well. — DA671
So not an actual person. No moral concern. No moral justification for antinatalism. Thanks, schop1. :up: — 180 Proof
what W. meant by object and name, among other things. — Sam26
At this point one will have a perfect logical language that sets out how things are by setting out the relationships between objects.
Is that a correspondence theory of truth? Yes. — Banno
I don't see why either if what you mean by "a person" is an actual person. — 180 Proof
Tell me what you think warrants ethical concern.
To my mind, only an ACTUAL sufferer warrants ethical concern. — 180 Proof
those already born — 180 Proof
compelled by their (socio)biology — 180 Proof
You think this is a justification for doing for unnecessarily putting people in harms way? And you can reference by what I mean by unnecessary.. but I'll give you it again..sufferers can thrive — 180 Proof
For Russell, the atoms are objects and predicates, and logical operators, a direct rendering of Frege's syntax.
For Wittgenstein, the atoms are relations between objects. — Banno
How would archaeology confirm or deny God talking with Moses? What would that even look like? — Moses
Maybe you're right, but mine leads to a happier life if I had to bet. That's why I'm not so much a philosopher anymore. — Moses
I don't even know what proof would be. What would qualify as proof? I have no idea, I just have this beautiful dialogue. I don't even know what talking to God would be like. I'm just massively impressed with the Bible even if we can never confirm all the truth or claims written within it. We have confirmed some of the genealogy though, even as far back as Genesis. There's at least some truth in it, but a lot of it we'll never be able to confirm. — Moses
At the end of the day, it doesn't even matter whether there's a perfect secular moral system (even it was "objective"). Even if there was, why should anyone care? Born from oblivion, pass to oblivion. Spend your time how you see best fit. Who am I to tell you how to live? I would say the same about religious frameworks if it were not for the fact that all get called to account before God according to Scripture. — Moses
It's not about the authors to me. It's about the bigger picture message. I'm mainly looking for bigger picture themes to extract. It's a truth-claim regardless of whether it was written by the Yahwist, Elohist or Priestly - the three authors identified. — Moses
IMHO the greatest affirmation of the dignity of the disabled occurs in a dialogue between God and Moses beginning in Exodus 4:10. I am disabled. Likely the same disability as Moses. I need a way to frame that, and my experiences/observations are simply not a sufficient answer to that question. Gotta throw in with God on this one. — Moses
What moral implications does this fact have, according to you? — baker
Well, no. Language can say lots of things that are not facts. I don't have a dog, for example, but I can use "My dog has fleas" in my posts.
The facts are those propositions which happen to be true. — Banno
Useful in developing computers, I suppose.
— Xtrix
If you only knew how much this sentence characterizes the state of modern humanity. — schopenhauer1
Ah maybe a sock puppet thenJust keep reading your exchange with DA671 He can save you!! :smile: — universeness
I will leave you with your ever-decreasing circles. — universeness
Go back and read your exchanges with DA671 — universeness
Keep reading them until his logic finally lifts the vile fog of antinatalism from your sad life. He is a much friendlier human being than I and he was able to tolerate the BS you type without losing his patience. — universeness
Your antinatalism just bores me now. You are a little lost child. — universeness
Facts are all around us. It's not difficult to find facts. There are many facts that haven't been discovered, but his aim is very specific. — Sam26
Useful in developing computers, I suppose. — Xtrix
