So pain is bad because pain is bad (foundationally). Makes sense, though I did offer an explanation of pain where is pain is not foundationally bad (when it is serving its natural function). — Joel Evans
Based on this, it seems that saying pain is bad foundationally faces problems from the natural-function argument. — Joel Evans
Why is a universe without the capacity for pain fundamentally better than one with the capacity for pain? — Joel Evans
And yet my question still stands of why he would need to create a universe without the capacity for pain. What is wrong with pain when it serves its natural function? — Joel Evans
You could very well be right that it would be better to live in a world without pain, but you haven't shown me why. — Joel Evans
They are not overcoming pain, rather it is serving its natural function in their bodies. If I smell something disgusting, that is unpleasant, but it's serving a natural function in our body. If pain is serving a natural function, why is it immoral to create a universe with the capacity for pain? — Joel Evans
So we have to go through pain to overcome it? Why must anything be subject to pain in this scheme? That seems immoral to create a universe with the capacity for pain, whether to see them overcome it or any other reason. — schopenhauer1
Because that pain serves a good purpose and isn't inherently bad. — Joel Evans
That still doesn't show that the conditions for pain are bad. I think that the natural use of pain (as a way of keeping an organism balanced and healthy) makes pain not an inherently bad thing. — Joel Evans
There is a difference between causing pain and giving one the capacity for pain. — Joel Evans
God (according to theism) gave us noses but that doesn't mean he directly causes us to smell things. — Joel Evans
But God didn't create the conditions of pain. He merely gave us the capacity to feel pain. — Joel Evans
That's besides the point though. — Joel Evans
You and I have been talking past each other. I don't think the presence of pain is a bad thing, and you do. I think that the good of having a fully-formed nervous system (pain, pleasure, and all feelings included) is better than having no fully-formed nervous system and no pain. — Joel Evans
I don't think that pain on its own is a negative experience in a way that affects the good-making qualities of God. Having a fully functioning nervous system that gives us the capacity for both pleasure and pain seems like a good thing to me, even if that means we (or animals) can feel pain. — Joel Evans
I am not entirely sure why he would need to create a world without pain. In a perfect world, organisms are designed to do certain things (eat certain foods, live in certain climates). Pain could just be a natural way for those organisms to "walk the line" (to maintain balance in other words). I don't see that as a thing that conflicts with any of God's omni-characteristics — Joel Evans
It is a natural indicator of something going wrong within or to an organism. In this way, pain itself is not necessarily a bad thing and so is compatible with the existence of a good God. In other words, if God created a world where animals experience pain, he could exist, and he could be good. Because of this compatibility, premise one is faulty, and the argument is unsound. — Joel Evans
I have been meaning to read up on gene editing, but it seems clear that this has better potential to eliminate suffering than promoting antinatalism. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Yes, optimism and pessimism are inheritable. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Very good question indeed.
But I am afraid that if someone cannot perceive it by himself, he has no choice but seeing it as fiction and what I said about it and evil would sound to him as non-sense. — KerimF
Actually, when and where 'true' love is supposed to exist but fails to do, we may say evil replaces it.
Similarly, scientists define the notion of 'hole' in electricity. It replaces an electron during its move (electric current). — KerimF
Ah! But it's not so simple. The less of a bad example one is, the more of a good example one becomes. One gives up a position in Bad Inc. only to fill one in Good Inc. To make the long story short, one hasn't been able to break free from being perceived as nothing more than an object of utility, some utility. — TheMadFool
Here, it is clear that the evil is the institution of slavery and God doesn’t favor this evil; however, the text listed above also implies the idea that instead of forcing or coercing someone to do something, it is more of God’s will to give guidance and gradually lead someone to the good path, because making people voluntarily realize their sins and return to goodness is the more meaningful way which can truly defeat the evil and guide people to the goodness. Thus, ultimately, I don’t think God has the desire to eliminate all evil directly; instead, I think that despite he doesn’t favor evil, he somehow intentionally puts evil in the world and considers it as a method to strengthen people’s faith and guide them to ultimate goodness. — Isabel Hu
that sounds strange to me. Maybe I’m wrong, and maybe this isn’t suited for this forum, but are optimistic or pessimistic dispositions genetically inherited? — Albero
just curious, but have you ever heard of non-academic philosopher David Pearce? Like you he is an anti-Natalist, but also a negative utilitarian. However, he’s not in favour of any world exploder arguments because he believes that transhumanism will solve what he calls “the Darwinian predicament”; and with future technologies we can bio-engineer suffering out of our existence. Personally I think this belongs in the realm of science fiction, but these ideas are nonetheless interesting — Albero
If I was to pretend I was an anti-natalist, this more deontological approach seems a lot more consistent to follow. The negative utilitarian one I mentioned completely disregards the preferences of existing beings in favour of reducing them to mere vessels of utility juice (not sure if that came out right, lol) which I don’t really like. I respect David Benatar himself for saying he wouldn’t press the universe exploder ether — Albero
The YouTuber Inmendham (the creator of efilism) has argued once that he would murder a woman if he ended up getting her pregnant to prevent further suffering, and has also stated it’s a moral good to kill the outdoor cats that roam near his property. Not only that, but in the various debates he’s had on YouTube he never argues in good faith, and usually ends up leaving the debate in a fiery, screaming rage littered with abusive remarks. His actions are anything BUT ethical, and he makes antinatalists out to be a super villain death cult. Luckily Inmendham is very obscure and rarely gets attention these days, but I don’t think it’s a good thing for antinatalists to accept his conclusions — Albero
Pretending that we require the consent of some non-existent, imaginary person seems nonsensical. — NOS4A2
Is it wrong for a pigeon to shit on my car? Is it wrong for a shark to prey upon another fish? These organisms are behaving in accordance to their nature.
Procreation is an act of blameless wrong-doing, i.e. foolishness. Is it wrong for a fool to act foolishly, if it is in their nature to do so? There is nothing in procreation to justify, it's just what people do. We might think it is stupid, or that it would be better if they refrained, but demanding people give a rational justification for something that is natural and instinctive is equally foolish. — darthbarracuda
Is it wrong for a pigeon to shit on my car? Is it wrong for a shark to prey upon another fish? These organisms are behaving in accordance to their nature.
Procreation is an act of blameless wrong-doing, i.e. foolishness. Is it wrong for a fool to act foolishly, if it is in their nature to do so? There is nothing in procreation to justify, it's just what people do. We might think it is stupid, or that it would be better if they refrained, but demanding people give a rational justification for something that is natural and instinctive is equally foolish. — darthbarracuda
Amor fati - and stop whinging vacuously about it. — 180 Proof
If you can't beat em, join em even harder, with more enthusiasm is just not knowing where else to go, and also a not-so-subtle "man-up!" philosophy.. Typical 19th century macho bullshit. How much stache does Nietzsche need.. Drinking his own kool-aid. Keep climbing those alps Nietzsche-pants. — schopenhauer1
I understand Camus' "must be happy" as Sisyphus (every human's proxy) deriving dignity from rebelling - striving - against, or opposing, or refusing to be defeated by, or not conforming - reducing oneself - to, "fate" (i.e. "the gods"). — 180 Proof
(B) I guess. Well, it's not. Whatever happens to a tree is not "caused" by planting the seed from which it grew. — 180 Proof
Is that (A) "I don't know why" or (B) "I think it's self-evident why"? — 180 Proof
Would you not throw yourself down and gnash your teeth and curse the demon who spoke thus?... Or how well disposed would you have to become to yourself and to life to crave nothing more fervently than this ultimate eternal confirmation and seal? — Friedrich Nietzsche
It can be easy, in any philosophical topic, to be bogged down in word semantics. Whether or not it is 'bad' that no life exists on a foreign planet, I maintain that if every life that could be created would experience net positive, it would be the morally correct thing to bring them into existence. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Tell me/us why 'procreation' ought to be "justified". — 180 Proof
Again, the only pain that is truly bad is the pain you can't fix. Most of us don't have that. Pain and suffering come and go, and there are other ways to cope with it when we cannot address the underlying cause of the pain itself.
I just don't understand why experiencing pain would be an argument against existing. Could you propose why? — Philosophim
At times I find life really painful but I do think life can be worth living because we can create and find ways of overcoming physical and emotional pain in most instances. — Jack Cummins
Contrary to Benatar's Asymmetry, I believe it is the net experience that matters. To take it to the extremes to prove my point, I would take some minor negative experiences for a life otherwise full of pleasure, but I would (obviously) not take some minor positive experiences for a life otherwise full of pain. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Pain that you can fix is good. Pain that you cannot is torture and unnecessary suffering. — Philosophim
So, you think the best solution is to avoid bringing new human beings into the world. I have never brought another human into the world personally but surely the problem of pain is not so great that it means that humans should not be born. Surely, life for future humans may have great possible potential rather than being all negative.
At times during the Covid_19 situation I have even wondered if part of the reason leaders have allowed the virus to get out of control was a means of reducing the population, in a world of diminishing resources. — Jack Cummins
@180 ProofNo. It's good because it makes you pull your hand out of the meat grinder before you lose your whole arm. — frank
