But then those same people are apphaled by rapists, murderers, totaitarian governments, terrorist groups, etc..... That's the inconsistency here.
It is ONLY ever the main theme for them when it comes to birth as I’ve asked them to come up with one other example where they think this type of thinking is acceptable and they have yet to come up with one. — khaled
I'd go with B. The people in A might turn out to be nagging antinatalists. The other 100 might be able to drown them out. :grin: — Terrapin Station
Also the point is that they WILL become an existing being with opinions and their opinions of the world may be highly negative. So simply don’t take the risk for them when you can avoid it. — khaled
Let me ask you this, if you were in a state of oblivion and someone explained to you the risk of harm, and gave you the choice to be born and have a life, would you choose to do it?
Wrong answer, either way. Because you don't have the frame of reference or even the consciousness to evaluate the proposition, in fact you don't even exist. You would actually have to be born and live some extent of this life thing to be able to determine whether it was worth living or whether it was better to remain in the oblivion of not existing.
If you don't exist, no action such as "forcing" can be executed against you. — staticphoton
No its not wrong. — staticphoton
A life worth living has nothing to do with "life is good" — staticphoton
That's why I said the values are learned from the parents or the environment. I should have also included the pre-existing genetic makeup, which is actually a direct contribution of the parents. — staticphoton
The whole thing is about making the possibility of harm the pivotal point of the argument, which is an incredible simplistic way of evaluating the meaning of life. — staticphoton
You're saying that after life evolving for 2 billion years and finally acquiring the power of reason, that reason is used to conclude the whole process was morally bad and should be ended.
I'm saying that's just silly. — staticphoton
The child will learn a set of values either from his parents or the environment he is raised in, before then he is not capable of deciding whether his life is worth living or not. Once he has a developed a set of values he will. You can come to him at that point and ask him whether he wishes he was never born. — staticphoton
And your child might have something different in mind than preserving the human race. I’ll just leave it at that. The whole POINT of the example is that working as a janitor is something most would say has no greater purpose. All I did was reduce the probability someone finds purpose in the activity in question and suddenly for you it went from “yea it’s ok to force them to do it” to “no it’s not ok, who’d ever want to be a janitor”. — khaled
And actually, antinatalism is one of the few moral theories where believing in it blindly, even if it turns out to be wrong, doesn’t hurt anyone. Natalism on the other hand.... — khaled
But other than dismal scenarios, from my perspective the foundations don't hold. — staticphoton
Ending humanity is not my ideal. It’s a side effect. “Humanity” is not a person. I’m not actually harming anyone here whereas one can be harmed severely by being brought into a world where harm is possible — khaled
So I was trying to make it easier for you. — staticphoton
In the end it is all a matter of belief, and we are free to believe what makes sense to us. — staticphoton
I prefer to not pretend my personal moral judgment is above nature's design. — staticphoton
but I'm finding it to be nothing but an exercise in idealism based on a dim view of the human experience. — staticphoton
It appears to me that humans, actually all life, is constructed to process and resolve suffering as a means to progress not only evolutionarily, but to enrich self worth (at least in the case of humans). Assigning moral value and therefore placing judgment on something that has no will of its own such as are natural processes seems misguided. — staticphoton
A life with zero suffering is as idealistic a concept as it is unattainable, furthermore, a "neutral" life without natural good/bad cycles seems to appear utterly meaningless...what would be the point of pursuing such a goal? — staticphoton
The whole point is harm is only subjective to a particular witness and can by dynamic when we shift to another. Subjectivity makes sense only within the consensus group. The larger the group, the more sense it is.
But even with the largest group, say 7-8 known billion currently, it's nothing compared to divinity for a theist group. — Dzung
If considering only for conscious agents, then you have constraints from the society and environment that you'd better follow. As you have free will you can opt not to, say opposite of #4 and the consequence may be severe. — Dzung
As far as I am concerned, it is just too easy to sign a contract that will financially burden other people who are not even born yet. Therefore, the millennials are completely exempt from paying for any of that. Just don't pay! — alcontali
When the push of ideals meets the pull of economic necessity, it's always a risky bet to assume that ideals will rule the day. — Bitter Crank
As far as I can tell, the Founding Fathers NEVER intended an egalitarian distribution of wealth. Most people (like 94%) couldn't vote in the US in the 18th century. White men who didn't own property finally gained suffrage in all of the states around 1850. Black men didn't get voting rights till after the Civil War. Women didn't get the vote until 1920. The political and economic elite of the United States has neither liked nor trusted working class people. Most people (at least 80%) are working class. That there is a huge population of "middle class" people is a falsehood aimed at class division. There are some middle class people -- maybe 10% - 15%of the population. — Bitter Crank
So what does it take to mobilize the collective will? Look at D Trump or R Ford - demagogues don't work. We need to start with better education. — Pantagruel
All your arguments now work equally well to prove the exact opposite of the Anti-natalism stance. — DingoJones
I've addressed this line of questioning from you about a million times before. You must like going around in circles to the point of absurdity. — S
I want to start a family because of the joy it will bring — S
All of this you already know. You are presumably just feigning ignorance as some sort of rhetorical tactic. I know that you have your own answers, and that you disapprove, but why do you feel the need to repeatedly express this? Is that normal behaviour, do you think? Do you think maybe you would benefit from counselling? — S
It's not a craving, that's just more rhetoric from you. It's simply our natural inclination towards problem solving. — S
If we unite all into a compound witness, it's a different scenario — Dzung
under views of higher beings if there were, it's a completely different scenario. — Dzung
On the other side, "no life" state is invalid in any sense from the very ground. At least there then no meaning is possible. — Dzung
Any coin has two sides, so golden mean is always the answer for the best, no extremes should. Lives flourish themselves so any intention to put them under control, either direction, is discouraged. — Dzung
No, not necessarily. What I'm getting at is that a lot of antinatalist argument rests on an assumed view of self which is essentially, "I did not exist prior to my birth, at which I came into being to live a lifetime as the same ongoing self (which suffers and is harmed), and when I die this self will be annihilated forever." Yet there's nowhere stable within the flux of conscious experience for this self to be located. And so if it doesn't exist, to whom does birth harm?
Does procreation create selves? — Inyenzi
I use paper plates, but, after a week, I have to take out the trash. — PoeticUniverse
How is this question any different than "why do I exist?" — matt
I don't really care that you believe that it's not right. I don't agree with you, obviously. And if nothing can be done about it (not true), then I say put up and shut up. — S
Oh my god! The dishes! What a nightmare! We should all just kill ourselves on the spot! But no, like your namesake, you don't advocate the most logical course of action if life really was that bad. You just complain more, exaggerate more, because that's your thing. — S
Yes, mild dissatisfactions add up. But that still doesn't justify your ridiculous conclusions. — S
Is this a joke? Are you pretending to be someone from another planet? — S
hey’ve found a way to escape the value structure you believe is a permanent fixture — Possibility
There is no ‘already-established’ that cannot be changed, except that your subjective value structure renders it so. You’re actually railing against a system that it is within your capacity to deconstruct for yourself, and for others, simply by increasing awareness, connection and collaboration with anything that challenges its reality. — Possibility
But all your ranting about ‘propaganda’ and ‘force-recruiting’ only reinforces what you find so abhorrent. — Possibility
It’s like a prisoner constantly claiming their innocence, declaring that they shouldn’t even be in jail and complaining about the walls and the guards and the restrictions - it does nothing to change the reality, it only becomes tiresome to those around you. It’s not like we don’t see this already. — Possibility
Whether we agree with your interpretation or not makes no difference - we’re all in the same physical situation. If you believe there is nothing that can be done about that, then why even bring it up? If others choose to interact with the world in a way that brings a more satisfying structure to their experience of the same situation, who are you to say that it’s false, when the structure within which you continue to interact with the world renders you a prisoner? Is it because the sense of purpose and joy they may express as a result only reinforces your feeling of hopelessness? — Possibility
You seem to be a prisoner of society’s apparently ‘already-established’ value systems. I’m not. I cannot change what others do, but I can demonstrate a way to experience reality that strips the so-called ‘recruiting’ of its apparent force, rather than just complaining about it. — Possibility
Where you see nothing here, I see potential. Where you see culturally created values, I see attempts to map a value structure that reflects our current level of awareness, connection and collaboration with reality. And where you see the promotion of insufficient value structures by many who want to keep it that way, I see fear, denial and avoidance of the striving-after - the pain, loss and humility - that informs our existence. — Possibility
The emphasis on family planning as an environmental fix distracts us from making essential investments in people and the environment. This includes supporting clean energy, food security, and mass transit, along with accessible comprehensive health systems infrastructure, education, and employment" — StreetlightX
If you don't consciously think that, it's not the case. That's the whole point. — Terrapin Station
"have tos" or needs always hinge on wants. I want to do it. — Terrapin Station
I felt a sadness for this beautiful butterfly and also a very close connection to it. Was I also like it, in the wrong place at the wrong time and all my life a futile nothingness, empty and pointless? — TheMadFool
