I doubt the average person, even the average TPF member, is conscious of what they "live for everyday", since the daily ritual of life doesn't allow for that much reflection. On top of that, when we do reflect on why we live life each day, we tend to come up with a nice ideal: "I live life for the betterment of others", "I live life for the beauty of things", "I live life because it's my imperative to do so", etc., ad naseum. But these aren't real reasons for "living life"; they're justifications for one's existence, and generally not quite truthful. In reality, we generally don't know exactly why we're living life. — Noble Dust
I'm stuck on the same one — Agustino
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So I can "learn German", "read philosophy", "listen to music", sleep and avoid pain. — darthbarracuda
What really defined the dominant class were the languages of their intellectual ancestors. — apokrisis
The language of a given group of people may disappear IF it is advantageous to abandon one's own language for someone else's. Take the languages spoken by immigrants to the United States in the 19th century: German, Norwegian, Swedish, Danish, Finnish, Croat, Polish, Russian, Yiddish, Greek, Ukrainian, Spanish, Chinese, Italian, French, Czech, and so on. The first generation kept their native language. The second generation tended to be bilingual, the third generation tended to be monolingual in English. — Bitter Crank
In reverse, an influx of a new language group which belongs to a dominating/dominant culture may cause the native speakers to abandon their language. In South America, many native Amerindian languages were abandoned in favor of Spanish or Portuguese. Probably the same thing happened over time in the British Isles. There was an advantage for non AS speaking people to learn Anglo-Saxon, and eventually lose their own. — Bitter Crank
Of course, it doesn't NEED to be expanded to more people. I thought we agreed on that. Is our main difference that I think more people get added the same way more squirrels keep getting added, and you think people are going out of their way to reproduce for some sort of reason?
The reproductive urge operates whether anybody (squirrel or human) wants it to operate or not. It just does. — Bitter Crank
People read statements like mine, and they object that it is all too reductionist, depressing, mechanistic, and so forth. Much the way people (me too) respond to your antinatalist statements. The difference between your view and mine is that you think people can help it, I think people can't help it. Yes, we could cease to reproduce -- but the commitment and prolonged concentration that universal, species-ending non-reproduction requires is not one of our features -- and it isn't going to happen. — Bitter Crank
If you watch people in silence, they don't seem all that self-reflective a good share of the time, either.
Are these people engaged in self reflection? Anything but. Naked apes addicted to the latest distraction. — Bitter Crank
Is human reproduction a self-reflective decision? One can hope, but clearly it is not always the result of self-reflection, or reflection on the goodness of the species' prospects, or the prospects of a specific child. — Bitter Crank
I agree with you that "existence after death" is the same as "existence before birth" but I have no evidence that such is the case, therefore I can not say that there is any truth in the claim. — Bitter Crank
I'm not all that worried about antinatalists. There are more children being born than the world can reasonably support, so antinatalism makes sense from that angle. I know people who have opted to not have children for philosophical reasons, who aren't quite antinatalists. It's an entirely supportable position, at least from some angles. Being a gay guy, I never intended to have children. Not fathering a brood hasn't felt like a loss to me. — Bitter Crank
I might even take Schopenhauer1 along to see if I can't arrange experiences which will be so thrilling he'll change his mind about the downside of nativity. Though, $50,000 isn't all that much when you get down to it. In order to change Schopenhauer1's mind, I might have to also have the $50,000 from the in vitro fertilization operation. Get me $100,000, TimeLine, and I'll throw in a second lunch and several movies. Maybe we could pick up a few philosophers and go bar hopping, or something. — Bitter Crank
Me and IVF are buddies. She calls me Dr. Evil. — TimeLine
But there is an ambiguity in our understanding of the sentiment. The first and broadly understood - i.e. the boo friggidy hoo my life is shit emotions - is only bad insofar as the individual does not actively engage in making those circumstances better and if they are able to articulate it, then they are able to improve it. I am not fond of this type of emotion, it is too static, defeatist and unchanging for my taste. — TimeLine
Are you implying that love - and again, not that sentiment of a mushy romance but think of 'brotherly love' when I say it or the capacity to give love (emotion/compassion) - as a Will that drives us, are you suggesting the endeavour to reach happiness by regulating and correctly applying our emotions and by being passionate against injustice or bad things happening to others, that contains no 'purpose'? As you say: — TimeLine
Humans don't need to be born at this stage; I openly told a woman at work who said that she spent $50,000 on IVF treatment that she was an idiot. We have more than enough children being born for the wrong reasons that need our attention (love, compassion, empathy, they are emotions that connect us) and why I myself do not wish to give birth but will (in the future) adopt a child. There is no 'black and white, strict, clear' reality here; IVF treatment and anti-natalism are two extremes and what we need is to apply ourselves with more humanity, compassion and knowledge that modifies our recalcitrant emotions and project it correctly to the external world, to direct the implicit and subjective experience to - as Searl said - direction of fit. — TimeLine
Imagine if Stephen Hawking's parents known that their son would have a rare early-onset, slow-progressing form of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and they practiced antinatalism, then we would not have one of the brightest minds of our generation — Cavacava
I haven't finishing reading your post, but if you hadn't shown up pretty quick, I would have sent you a telegraph alerting you to the topic's bright, sunny, breezy existence needing your special seasoning insight. — Bitter Crank
I enjoy solving problems, and the problem of finding goods is a crucial issue, It adds zest to my life, when I succeed it is fantastic, when I fail it's depressing, but I enjoy the striving.
Still working on the others. — Cavacava
I think the problem is a a given to life, not that the problem has the option to be given. It is just there, given to everyone. — Intrigued
How do you make that value call? — Cavacava
If that is your definition of "work," then I don't necessarily see work as a bad thing. Sure, some people can be obsessed with finding pleasure that it causes them pain, but I don't think that is the case for most or even all people. Your definition seems a bit too broad. — czahar
That may be true now, but probably won't be true in the near future. With the way technology is advancing, it is entirely possible that robots could do the labor we all do today. Certainly all manual labor could be replaced by robots, and virtually any labor that involves a lot of math could also be done by robots. — czahar
This seems to be an extreme response to the work "dilemma." It's kind of like burning one's house down in order to kill a spider in it. I think there are better ways to reduce (and maybe one day eliminate) work. First off, we need to get rid of this ridiculous Protestant work ethic. Next, we need to reduce the number of hours people work and replace as many jobs as possible with robots. Third, tax those robots and give the money to humans in the form of a universal basic income. — czahar
It does not have to be, the same way you're not the root of it either. So, where does that leave us? — Πετροκότσυφας
Since when has "the rest of humanity" been the root of morality? Do I even have to say the fallacy of numbers? — schopenhauer1
Yeah, and the rest of humanity does not think that having to work to survive is inherently problematic. So, how is this anything more than just someone's personal dissatisfaction? — Πετροκότσυφας
You speak for the rest of humanity? — Philosophersstoney
So, life's bad because it entails work and work is a burden. Ok. Now you have to show how work is inherently a burden. — Πετροκότσυφας
I would put it this way: the good things in life are only valuable to those who want them. Before being born, nobody wants the goods in life, so they are not valuable to them until they are born. So, to create an empty cup where none existed before, just so that it can be filled and emptied repeatedly over the course of some decades before spilling for the last time, seems to me like a pointless endeavor, and since we know the pain that accompanies each instance of emptiness, it's better not to make the cup at all.
