Wow. You would be about the first person I've ever debated with on here that's even considered the possibility of changing their position in response to an argument put by the other side. Regardless of what you come up with in response, I'm impressed you'd have the intellectual honesty to do so. — Isaac
Yes, I gather that. Which is inconsistent with your response to surgery, laws and parenting where in those cases you use the net harm reduction to justify the action to take on another's behalf. — Isaac
How do you judge what someone "can predict"? — Echarmion
But it is knowingly if you understand the logic. It's a certainty that the actions you take cause indefinite causal chains and therefore also cause harm. — Echarmion
How is it possible to "do my best" if I know I'll inadvertently cause harm by seekingly innocuous acts? Like if I celebrate my birthday, there is a significant possibility that by having a party, I cause not just one, but possibly several children to be born. I know this to be the case, it's not some outlandish scenario. So no parties? — Echarmion
I am asking how you arrive at the conclusion that preventing people from existing is morally equivalent to preventing some particular instance of suffering, since you agree they're not one and the same. — Echarmion
But if just potential avoidance of future harm is sufficient, how does this not apply to children? — Echarmion
Does it matter here how strong the feelings are? Maybe you don't don't find the other person objectionable, you just don't think you'll be as happy as with someone else. But of course you don't know that. So why cause the immediate, certain harm? — Echarmion
Noone is good enough not to risk harming others. — Echarmion
And we determine this breaking point how? What's the mental operation here? Because from the outside, it looks like you're just taking the status quo and then saying "this is what causes the least harm". — Echarmion
Net harm reduction is the measure you use elsewhere. Net harm reduction. The net harm reduced by having a child is something which is at least arguable. Certainly requires actual empirical data and is not this ridiculously simplistic equation you would have everyone use. — Isaac
Likely will not be overall harmful to himself or others — khaled
Most people are satisfied with their lives. So overall people's harm-reduction activities must be sufficient to render an overall satisfaction. — Isaac
Are most people happier alone? No. So it follows from this fact alone that most people's happiness is generated by others. — Isaac
Of course you haven't, if three caveats in you throw your hands up and say "oh it's all too complicated for me". — Isaac
Neither does mine. — Isaac
. And when I do you complain about the multiplication of factors. — Isaac
It basically does. It's a fairly strict rule of evolution. — Isaac
No, it doesn't. Unless you are an exception to every other brain studied. — Isaac
Possibly, but why are all those other brain regions involved? — Isaac
You can't get outside of it and make it want something else. Where would you get the motivation to do so from? — Isaac
It is only necessary that your child is above average for it to be the case that their net action is to reduce harm. — Isaac
Previously when uncertainty was raised as a critique, you rallied to "we can be sure of the overall picture". Why are you now avoiding that? — Isaac
We can be sure - from the general life satisfaction measured in every survey on the matter - that people's general harm-reduction activity must be substantial, certainly net positive. — Isaac
If any of life's trivial burdens counts as a harm, then just smiling at someone to make then feel better counts as reducing that harm. — Isaac
This makes no sense at all. If I've just explained how circumstances and caveats are essential to understanding morality, it's nonsense to maintain that their presence can be described as 'breaking' it. — Isaac
Your maxim has caveats too. Is it 'broken'? — Isaac
To say factor A needs to be taken into consideration in case X but it's not so relevant in case Y is not a 'critique'. — Isaac
That's what actually happens, and it happens in your brain, schop's brain, my brain regardless of whatever pubescent philosophy you want to claim you follow. — Isaac
If fifteen factors to consider is really too complicated for you then I can see exactly how you've ended up with the arguments you have - it explains a lot. — Isaac
So how is it that in conceiving a child (who, by your own notion of ethics will spend a good deal of their time reducing harm), I can somehow be certain that the net effect would not be to actually reduce harm? — Isaac
but it only takes one accidental birth and you could argue that your own child could then justifiably reduce the net harms in the world — Isaac
Continuing to have children (who work to reduce harm) is the only way to ensure the net harm in the world is reduced short of actual 100% immediate genocide. — Isaac
If and when life becomes a curse, there's a very simple and radical solution to it: death. — Olivier5
This weird kind of logic would mean you're responsible if the person whose life you save ends up a serial killer. — Echarmion
Not to mention that causal chains are indefinite, so whatever you do, you're basically guaranteed to cause something horrible eventually. — Echarmion
So you necessarily need to add caveats like there needs to be a certain probability, which are ultimately arbitrary. — Echarmion
But if you agree that not existing isn't the same as not suffering, how can you then be certain that it's nevertheless preferable to suffering? — Echarmion
Certainly most people wouldn't say that they'd rather not exist than exist and suffer. So where do you take this idea from? — Echarmion
If someone kills their partner in a one-time emotional meltdown, do we still punish them? — Echarmion
Are we allowed to cause people emotional pain by rejecting their love, regardless of our reasoning? We are, but this also cannot be justified as prevention of harm, — Echarmion
Do we allow people to ride motorcycles for fun? We do. But clearly this creates the conditions for harm. — Echarmion
This part:
And based on that fact some justification should be required to do the thing that could lead to this negative subjective evaluation in the future.
— khaled
It strikes me as completely absurd. — Echarmion
However, would you willingly try to cause unnecessary harm (assuming you knew what you were doing was indeed harmful rather than something else like "just punishment" or corrective action)?
— schopenhauer1
This is essentially asking "are you evil"? — Echarmion
as freedom (of choice?) needs to exist for some reason in the first place and is more important than the negative duty to not cause unnecessary harm somehow. — schopenhauer1
you do really seem to treat harm as an objective fact as opposed to a human judgement. — Echarmion
Sure, it's part of a causal chain that includes harm at some point. — Echarmion
What about that not having B does not cause harm? I think we agree there as well.
— khaled
No, I don't agree, as I have explained. If harm is "doing something to someone they do not want to do", then the absence of harm is "doing something that is not going against anyone's will". The amount of people doesn't seem to matter here. — Echarmion
And concerning suffering, which you seem to use interchangeably with harm: if suffering is "something you don't want is done to you", then not suffering is "nothing you don't want is done to you" — Echarmion
We've been over this, and I already gave you my arguments for how it can nevertheless be wrong. — Echarmion
And we're back to repeating the same sentences over and over again. Maybe if you say it another 100 times, it'll suddenly be convincing. — Echarmion
I literally just explained to you, and you agreed. So I am confused why you're now turning around and telling me that, no, we don't need a comparison of different states of affairs that B experiences. — Echarmion
“if B is not born B will feel neutral” — khaled
In the second, we're comparing Bs feeling to nothingness. — Echarmion
You can't very well arrive at the conclusion that B would rather never have existed, because that's inherently contradictory. — Echarmion
As to the "hard line", it's between saying something like "one has to always minimize suffering" and saying something like "you're responsible for protection this person from suffering caused by getting lost because you're their tour guide". — Echarmion
But then doesn't preventing harm here turn into preventing the conditions that allow harm to be assessed? — Echarmion
There is no general responsibility for all possible harm. Rather, there are specific responsibilities towards the people you interact with. — Echarmion
But they don't 'break it'. That;s the point. What you're doing is presenting situations for one maxim in which it is insufficient on its own to explain the result. That's entirely to be expected if we use more than one maxim. Nothing's being 'broken'. — Isaac
Why? Why would you expect there to not ever be any single exceptions. We've established that differnet scenarios introduce different factors to consider. What's so special about the number 1 that it can't be the sum total of cases with some given set of factors? — Isaac
That is exactly what you are de facto arguing by using examples of the form "but you wouldn't...". — Isaac
Apart from managing our body, working out social/moral dilemmas is the biggest job our brain does. It's occupied with it almost all the time at a tremendous rate of calculations per second. The effort is literally exhausting (one of our biggest calorie demands) and is most probably the reason why our brains barely fit through the birth canal (at huge survival cost). That anyone would expect the answers to be writable in a few pithy maxims is absurd. It's fiendishly complicated. Luckily for us we have the most integrated supercomputer the world has ever seen working on the problem almost every second of our waking day. The problem arises when, instead of trusting the results of that network, we ignore all but one region and expect the results to be anywhere near as good. — Isaac
The comparison is hard to notice, because it's such a natural thing to do. But when you say "I wish this didn't happen to me", you're not wishing for an absence, an empty set, because you cannot actually imagine the absence of a state of affairs. What you do instead is imagine a different state of affairs that the event isn't part of. Absence is always relative. — Echarmion
And the one where we establish harm/suffering in the first place does require us to compare two different versions of Timmy. — Echarmion
If they’re not prepared, I doubt they want them. — Pinprick
But you can’t be certain about this. The next family may very well be starving to death. — Pinprick
I don’t see how you can be sure that whatever unknown harm may befall the child will be less than the harm the hopeful parents (as well as hopeful grandparents, siblings, etc.) will experience. — Pinprick
But in this situation, you prefer to compare potential harms. Why is that? — Pinprick
Why is it ok to risk harming others while building a pipeline without their consent, but not ok to risk harming another person by having a child? — Pinprick
and it can’t be because of the amount of harm not doing so could cause (we’ve lived this long without a pipeline, so building one is more for convenience than anything else). — Pinprick
However, not having a child will cause more people to suffer. At the very least there are two parents, even more if you consider grandparents, siblings, etc. that may be negatively affected by the parents not having a child. — Pinprick
Putting exact numbers on things is ridiculous, but to illustrate the point, let’s say if I have a child it’s likely that he/she will suffer 20% of his/her life. Let’s say that by not having a child, I, my wife, and our parents will each suffer 5% more than we would if we had a child. Cumulatively, this amounts to an increase of suffering of 30%. Which is the better option in your opinion, and why? — Pinprick
So it’s ok to do because you think it will benefit them? — Pinprick
Presumably because they find life valuable, right? — Pinprick
Personally, I think my life is worth more than $1000, but everyone has their price. — Pinprick
So, if these two parents are considering having a child, and one parent states that they will kill their self if they have a child, then they shouldn’t have the child, regardless of how beneficial doing so may be for the child. — Pinprick
What I wanted to point out is that you figure out whether something was necessary by making another comparison. — Echarmion
again you seem to be going down this weird line that if two things are similar in one aspect, they must be the same thing. — Isaac
It's like you look to normal attitudes as a measure of what's convincing morally but then refuse to allow conception into that set of normal attitudes. — Isaac
That you phrase these as greater harms is irrelevant. — Isaac
In MGE there are no greater harms being avoided, with birth there are. — Isaac
Because as I've said for like the hundredth time we do not decide moral dilemmas by applying a single maxim. — Isaac
With exercise, the benefits of coercion would not outweigh the harms, given the methods we'd have to use. — Isaac
With exercise, there's and alternative method (persuasion). — Isaac
With exercise, failure to achieve the benefits is remediable. — Isaac
I'll do one more of these, but I'm not going to just point out the actual differences all the time when the whole "this is a bit like that so it must be the same thing..." argument is flawed. — Isaac
Like saying "there are just no examples -apart from the example you just gave". What kind of counter-argument is that? — Isaac
Most has been taken up trying to show that it is commonly held but inconsistently not applied to birth. Those arguments are flawed, and it is those I've been mainly opposing. — Isaac
But it is ridiculous in some circumstances. That's the whole point. We do not simply have one unadulterated maxim which we apply in all cases. — Isaac
only that it was disingenuous of you to ignore differences. — Isaac
Only we can't agree. Not even you agree. When pressed on "we should not cause harm" as a maxim you add a load of caveats, we all do — Isaac
Non-malicious intent — Isaac
reasonable expectation of counterbalancing benefits — Isaac
intent to mitigate forseeable harms — Isaac
mutual goal — Isaac
expectation of duty — Isaac
You're simply confusing sufficient with necessary. The fact that it alone cannot account for the difference does not mean it's not a contributory factor. — Isaac
To say the birth will cause harm in the same way MGE will is again monumentally disingenuous. — Isaac
I've never claimed there is anything wrong with that argument, so I don't know why you might have done that. — Isaac
The argument that "'we should not cause any harm under any circumstances, birth causes harm' - is not a ridiculous premise because we generally agree to something similar" is not valid. It assumes a similarity with other moral dilemmas without taking any account of the circumstances which make them different. — Isaac
It feels far more like you're trying to sneak in an argument in favour of AN by suggesting some inconsistency between our response to your examples and our response to birth. — Isaac
But no such inconsistency can be shown once you allow for caveats to the maxim, and you have already agreed that caveats are required. — Isaac
No intent to mitigate non-trivial harm, no reasonable expectation of counterbalancing benefits, no reasonable expectation of consent. — Isaac
So not an example comparable to conception. — Isaac
That's yet to be established as you've not yet offered any counter-argument — Isaac
The difference between malicious genetic engineering and birth is trivially easy to show once you allow the kinds of caveat to a single maxim which you allow. That is what I showed in my example. — Isaac
Harm who? There is no one to be harmed. This is a consequence of the insistence that having children is not causing harm "because there is no one to be harmed".
— khaled
Not my insistence, nor anyone here, as far as I can tell. I think everyone's agreed that we can imagine a future child and mitigate harms that might befall them. — Isaac
Then you have the recklessness argument, as I stated in my actual definition of the differences which you've just ignored. It is insufficient to have good intentions, one must also have just cause to believe those intentions will yield the expected result. An arbitrary and unevidenced belief in the benefits of blindness does not satisfy this requirement. — Isaac
instead choosing to switch lanes again, back to the ridiculous premise. — Isaac
Most people consider ending the human race as an ethical outcome prima facie ridiculous. — Isaac
It's ridiculous. No-one normally sets the bar that low. — Isaac
If that's all you're saying then we're back to ridiculous premises leading to ridiculous consequences. — Isaac
But you keep trying to make your premises sound less ridiculous with examples of the form I outlined above. — Isaac
Examples of this form are logically flawed in the way I showed. — Isaac
for which it is shown to be trivially true that it leads to ridiculous conclusions. — Isaac
But in adding these caveats, you change the nature of the argument. — Isaac
When these altered arguments are shown to be flawed (as I've just done) — Isaac
assumed consent of the unconscious — Isaac
"cause", "suffering" and "unnecessary" have a large frayed edge to their common definitions. And you require all three to agree on a specific issue. — Echarmion
This implies we're looking at two timelines: one where A happens and one where it doesn't. — Echarmion
Because an event A is necessary for an event B if, in the absence of it, event B doesn't happen. — Echarmion
And lastly, the notion of suffering also implies a comparison. This is more or less what I've written to Schopenhauer above with respect to harm. We don't just conclude that bad things are bad in a vacuum. If something had happens to someone, they wish it didn't happen . And since there is no simple absence of events, that means they wish for something different to have happened instead. — Echarmion
Not my insistence, nor anyone here, as far as I can tell. — Isaac
The issue with non-existence is about consent to risk harm, not future harm itself. — Isaac
What does make a difference convincing or reasonable? — Isaac
“Birth, although similar to malicious genetic engineering in every respect, is fine because it starts with a ‘B’” — khaled
since you've literally had to make a moral judgement in order to even describe the situation. 'Malicious genetic engineering'. — Isaac
In the example of malicious genetic engineering there is an intention to cause harm — Isaac
I think that's abundantly apparent. — Isaac
But if there's no compelling argument (other than just "well that's what my unusual premises lead to") — Isaac
How so? There have been several arguments put forward, that was an opposition to one of them. — Isaac
IF there is a situation to create unnecessary suffering and there is a lack of consent that can be had (and he gives the contingent circumstances of not improving a situation, permissions etc.), don't do it as that will affect a person negatively in the future and violate consent — schopenhauer1
Perhaps you feel exactly the same way. — Echarmion
I can tell you a hundred times that we can only compare situations of different existences (tortured child - not tortured child, seeing child - blind child), but never compare an existence with a nonexistence. But you just somehow don't see it. — Echarmion
IF there is a situation to create unnecessary suffering and there is a lack of consent that can be had (and he gives the contingent circumstances of not improving a situation, permissions etc.), don't do it as that will affect a person negatively in the future and violate consen — schopenhauer1
And I just somehow don't see why it's just as bad to cause common suffering as it is to inflict special suffering. — Echarmion
If I am against suffering due to torture, I must be against suffering due to being born. — Echarmion
And I just somehow don't see why it's just as bad to cause common suffering as it is to inflict special suffering. If I am against suffering due to torture, I must be against suffering due to being born. And I just am not. Weird, right? — Echarmion
Despite the title, the OP makes it clear that it is the form of argument, not the subjectivity of the premises which is being taken issue with. — Isaac
You can't be seriously saying the only difference anyone could point to between malicious genetic engineering and birth is the initial letter? Ridiculous. — Isaac
because the ways in which x is dissimilar from conceiving children could otherwise be held as rational reasons to absolve such an obligation. — Isaac
All your arguments are of the form " but you wouldn't do x, which is similar to conceiving children in ways a, b and c...so you're obliged by reason to not conceive children" — Isaac
Protestations to the contrary aside, your approach implies an objectivity you've not demonstrated to be there. — Isaac
before finally admitting it's just a personal feeling without any objective validity. — Isaac
The parents will be benefitted. If they actually want a child, then having one will benefit them. — Pinprick
f we need bread, and there’s only one loaf left, we buy it regardless of the fact that the possibility exists that doing so means someone else is doing without. — Pinprick
We routinely risk endangering others if we perceive the benefits to outweigh the costs. — Pinprick
To give a real life example, currently where I live a natural gas pipeline is being constructed underground. This has the potential to explode, and pipelines have in fact exploded before. Were that to happen, the damage could be catastrophic, as this thing runs beneath our roads, near private property, etc. No consent was required, yet this project is occurring nonetheless. — Pinprick
Why then can we not do the same with childbirth? — Pinprick
Performing CPR on an unconscious person risks breaking their ribs. We do so anyway. — Pinprick
The underlying assumption here, I think, is that life has intrinsic value. — Pinprick
Most people get scrapes and bruises, and maybe broken bones, but these relatively small sufferings do not make most people feel like life is not worthwhile. — Pinprick
If we could only experience the pain of stubbing our toe, and every other experience was either neutral or positive, would you still conclude AN? — Pinprick
But if you feel that way, then you’re agreeing that sometimes it’s ok to harm others for the sake of other people? — Pinprick
Doesn’t AN think it’s always wrong to have kids? — Pinprick
So why not take the risk? — Pinprick
But maybe prison is a better example. If someone is sentenced to death, there’s no way that is for their benefit, or that they consented to it. Therefore, it must be for the benefit of others. — Pinprick
knowing that they may not find life worthwhile due to suffering, should also be ok as long as doing so benefits others. — Pinprick
This isn’t really a comparable analogy. There is a difference between potentially taking life and creating it. — Pinprick
I think the rest of what I said was “without good reason.” That last bit should clear up most of these scenarios for you — Pinprick
Generally speaking, the risk of significant harm (dismemberment, lobotomies, disabling injuries, etc.) trumps any potential pleasure. — Pinprick
I personally think these things, but they aren’t facts, and you’re free to disagree. I have no desire to try to force others to agree. You have no obligation towards me whatsoever, nor I to you, but if we both choose individually to follow certain principles in our personal lives, then we owe it to ourselves to follow those principles. But I would never consider you to be obligated towards me due to a principle only I hold. — Pinprick
Ok, consider the example of being sentenced to death then. — Pinprick
Ok, but why haven’t I seen this on other similar forums? Is there something about this forum that attracts these sorts of people? — DingoJones
This seems like something different, like these people are going through the motions of the same psychological effect. — DingoJones
It’s questionable in certain circumstances, but we shouldn’t therefore never send kids to school. — Pinprick
That’s why I feel that you must look at the probability of whether or not the person being born will experience enough suffering to not consider their life to be worthwhile. — Pinprick
It depends on the probability of harm vs. pleasure. Is it likely that the person will find fending for themselves in a forest pleasurable? — Pinprick
I don’t really agree that obligations exist except in the abstract. If you so choose to follow a principle, then your obliged to do so, but you’re not obligated to choose to follow a principle in the first place. IOW’s it’s permissible, but not obligatory. — Pinprick
Much like the school example. If it’s more likely that the benefits will outweigh the costs, then it’s permissible. — Pinprick
No, in which case having kids is permissible, because it is more likely that they will experience more pleasure than harm. And I’m not claiming that therefore it’s impermissible to not have children either. Neither is obligatory. — Pinprick