I doubt you'd get a single person to agree that reducing the number of bananas in the world is a moral imperative, or ensuring that there's no electricity, or no number 7
— Isaac
Agreed. But I also doubt that you can get a single person to agree that "We are morally obligated to reduce the number of bananas" is NOT a valid moral claim, though a ridiculous one. Yet you are attempting to redifine what "moral claim" means by referring to the public use of the word even though you are literally the only one going against the public use which I find funny.
There is a distinction between whether or not something is a moral claim and whether or not you agree with it. "We are morally obligated to reduce the number of bananas" is a moral claim. But not one I think anyone will agree with. — khaled
It is precisely because short term gratification can be pleasurable but anti-social that we have a need for a moral code. — Olivier5
what is [one of] the common motivating factors for inclusion in that category? — Isaac
What is not supported by any evidence I've seen (and is, in fact contradicted by all the evidence I've seen) is the idea that the types of behaviour we generally label 'wrong' have no connection at all and are put into the 'wrong' classification entirely at random. — Isaac
For one, the suffering you outlined isn't quantifiable, since it's a binary relation (something is either what you wish or it isn't) — Echarmion
some hierarchy of interests to resolve conflicts. That isn't necessarily a problem - a lot of legal systems work that way - it's just different from merely tallying up empirical suffering. — Echarmion
More to the point of the decision, if suffering and harm are ultimately about a violation of your will, and your will is how your self realizes itself in the world, then what you seem to be concerned is not so much suffering, but freedom or dignity. — Echarmion
No — Isaac
What is not supported by any evidence I've seen (and is, in fact contradicted by all the evidence I've seen) is the idea that the types of behaviour we generally label 'wrong' have no connection at all and are put into the 'wrong' classification entirely at random. — Isaac
that's why I used the word 'overall', — Isaac
I would bet money on the claim that you could find no case at all where the only psychological response to an anti-social act was pleasure without also seeing signs of significant neurological abnormality. — Isaac
what is wrong is entirely divorced from what feels good in a hedonic sense (in the sense that eating chocolate feels good). — khaled
It is unlikely that in a normally functioning brain antisocial behaviour overall feels good — Isaac
We aimed to determine whether life-course-persistent antisocial behaviour is associated with neurocognitive abnormalities by testing the hypothesis that it is also associated with brain structure abnormalities. — Isaac
This is not to say that there aren't such people in whom it 'feels good', and that it is still wrong, but that's not the same as an argument that 'wrong' is divorced entirely from what 'feels wrong' to most people most of the time. — Isaac
"...actually account for" and "...requires the least effort" are no less subjective than the terms you started with. — Isaac
compared to how real people normally think no. — Pfhorrest
there is a very important difference. the dogmatic justificationist (foundationalist) says that the premises they find self-evident constitute a reason why someone shouldn’t believe differently than they do. the critical rationalist admits of multiple unfalsified possibilites, and will say only that particular sets of possibilities have been eliminated, not which of the remaining set is definitely the right answer. — Pfhorrest
Then you are not a justificationist — Pfhorrest
The same thing I mean for claims about reality, just involving a different facet of experience: hedonic rather than empirical. — Pfhorrest
what is objectively moral is whatever feels good and not bad to everyone in every circumstance (but regardless of who does or doesn’t want it). — Pfhorrest
There is nothing more to objectivity than the limit of ever more comprehensive intersubjectivity, unless you want to appeal to things entirely beyond the realm of phenomenal experience, but there’s pragmatic reasons not to do that either. — Pfhorrest
"Could be" isn't "has to be".
I arrived at critical rationalism (the rejection of justificationism) not via justificationist means, not by appealing to some deeper principle that entails it, but rather via critical rationalist means themselves, by finding a reason to reject justificationism and so being left with its negation the remaining possibility, adhering to that remaining possibility requiring no justification in itself. — Pfhorrest
I don't have to actively believe that there are no such reasons in order to be warranted to hold those beliefs. I just need to be unaware of them. — Pfhorrest
If you committed to rejecting every belief against which there might be... — Pfhorrest
If you're saying there is no objective morality, you're saying that all moral claims are mere baseless opinion and so none are binding on anyone ("binding" in the sense that it'd be as wrong to deny them as they would be to deny an objectively correct claim about reality). That nothing is actually right or wrong, people just have opinions about it and none of those opinions are any better or worse than anyone else's. — Pfhorrest
The best you can do is show that a factual claim is the most comprehensive and efficien) — Pfhorrest
That there is no good reason to reject anything is the default state of affairs. — Pfhorrest
The onus is on those who want to change your mind to show that there is good reason to reject your current opinion. — Pfhorrest
Back to the topic: People are commonly of the opinion that this or that is morally right or wrong. It’s justificationism to say “nothing is objectively right or wrong because you can’t prove that anything is”.
“Show me moral certainty or reject all morality as baseless opinion” is bad philosophy: it’s just giving up, or worse, insisting that everyone else do so. — Pfhorrest
it is not necessary to reject every opinion until you can find reasons to justify it; it is only necessary to reject an opinion if you find reasons to reject it, and it is acceptable to hold any opinion, for no reason at all, until such reasons to reject it are found.
Like with coherentism, contradictions between different opinions are good reasons to reject some or all of them — Pfhorrest
Justificationism, if true, would make it impossible to ever rationally hold an opinio — Pfhorrest
Thinking you need a starting point is what makes it seem impossible. — Pfhorrest
there is something real and something moral – as there certainly inevitably seems to be, since even if you deny their universality some things will still look true or false to you and feel good or bad to you – — Pfhorrest
That moral premises are fixed. There are universal moral premises. That moral realism is sound. Same thing. — Philosophim
When it is logically shown that it must be the case that it is impossible. Proof by contradiction for example. — Philosophim
But until it has been irrevocably proven that such things are impossible — Philosophim
In fact, there is no set of contingent conditions imaginable that undo or even mitigate the ethical value, the "badness" of the one child's torture. — Constance
I have always viewed these types of arguments as, "Too hard for me to solve, so I guess they can't be objective or real." — Philosophim
For murder: someone might really enjoy murdering someone, and painlessly murders a homeless person with no relations. — Echarmion
But I admit this is a fanciful and unrealistic example. — Echarmion
A hungry person steals bread from a large company store. It seems pretty evident that the suffering of being hungry outweighs any suffering anyone who works for the company feels due to the theft. — Echarmion
My point is that you don't show how any of this is related to "suffering" in the usual sense of the word. — Echarmion
Why is there no reference to the actual suffering of the person in question? — Echarmion
Well, it depends on the scenario. AN treats the unborn as potential sufferers, so you could argue that they are also potential happy beings. By not allowing them to be born, you are denying their potential happiness, just like you are denying their potential suffering. — Pinprick
Also, if you want to have a child, then doing so will likely bring you pleasure. But if you are not permitted to have a child, then your happiness is also being denied — Pinprick
I want to have a child so they can experience love, happiness, etc. — Pinprick
...So that life will continue. — Pinprick
So that I’m not made to feel like a failure. — Pinprick
Because the vast majority of people find life worth living, so the risk that my child will not is very small. — Pinprick
because you deem it to minimize suffering. — Echarmion
it seems to me you can justify any arbitrary result. — Echarmion
And "foreseeable" was the word I used to denote exactly the things we can predict. — Echarmion
You can predict the outcome of an indefinite chain of events with "some certainty"? I don't see how you could. — Echarmion
Police patrols interfere with people traveling. — Echarmion
Casting someone a sideways glance is interfering with their emotions. — Echarmion
We expect people to abide by all kinds of laws and social norms regardless of how they personally feel about doing so. — Echarmion
Mentally ill patients. — Echarmion
Is philosophy good for us? — Brett
you just have no right to stop me from buying a PS5. — Pinprick
What makes this any weirder than preventing unnecessary harm? — Pinprick
I do see that, but you can’t claim one the one hand that not having a child prevents harm, and on the other that it doesn’t prevent pleasure as well. — Pinprick
Having a child doesn’t just cause harm, it also causes pleasure, but AN seems to want to ignore this side of the equation. — Pinprick
There is no cutoff to causal chains, so you're never going to be able to predict the suffering you cause with any certainty. — Echarmion
If we're going with something more malleable like "never take actions that will cause forseeable suffering greater than the forseeable suffering they prevent" — Echarmion
and if we applied that rigorously we'd be forced to do whatever the most emotionally unstable people wanted in order to avoid causing them any distress, unless and until your distress overrules theirs. — Echarmion
It is also wrong to unnecessarily deny pleasure (or happiness or whichever feel good term you prefer) to others. — Pinprick
I think the asymmetry argument fails to do so. — Pinprick
I have a method to check principles. — Echarmion
There is no one principle that can be universalised. You figure it out by using something like Kant's categorical imperative, or Rawls "veil of ignorance". You ask yourself whether or not you can imaginge all of humanity as acting as you do, and then see if this results in a) an obvious contradiction and b) a world you would want to life in regardless of how and where you lived. — Echarmion
It's not willy nilly if you act according to a principle that can be universalised — Echarmion
I answered this question a couple of times now. Not sure what else I can say. — Echarmion
If you're thinking about morality as a set of general reasons that can be applied to any given situation regardless of circumstance, like the 10 commandments, what you and I think of as morality is nothing alike. — Echarmion
I said suffering, not harm. And as I already wrote, I consider this merely a statement of fact, not a moral issue. — Echarmion
I did give you the reason. What else is necessary to turn this reason into a justification? — Echarmion
That seems to be saying the same thing. — Echarmion
I did. Causing heartbreak. Doing risks sports. Driving a car. — Echarmion
The principle I recognise here is "don't do things willy nilly", not "do not cause suffering". — Echarmion
"Good" is a label I attach to actions, not outcomes, so I don't really agree. — Echarmion
To think that antinatalism is any different than any other moral principle in this regard, would be special pleading to make antinatalism seem extraordinarily out of place with ethical principles. — schopenhauer1
That this will involve suffering on the part of the children. — Echarmion
I think it's sufficient that you want to have children and honestly judge that you can give them the necessary love and resources in order to allow them to become active members of a free and equal society. — Echarmion
I think I'll just not be convinced that the suffering is simply bad. — Echarmion
Heartbreak isn't limited to relationships though, is it? — Echarmion
Wouldn't it be better though, if we decreased it? — Echarmion
I don't get why I should stop worrying about suffering just becasue "it's not my responsibility". — Echarmion
This supposed calculation is imaginary though. You're not really doing anything like comparing the suffering of the two scenarios. How would you even go about doing that? How much suffering does taking the bus or the train cause you? 10, 100, 167? How much suffering is the potential of a car crash worth? Does it matter whether you just got your license vs. having 20 years of experience? — Echarmion
You need at least a third principle to decide when to apply which. — Echarmion
I think I do agre with that. Not in any given case, but yes, in some cases it's ok to cause suffering so that those that suffer (or sometimes even other people) have more choices. — Echarmion
But you do intent to have a blind child instead of one can see. That intent can be malicious, as I explained below. — Echarmion
Nor do you. So the difference between us isn't really that I inflict suffering on other and you don't. It's just that I consider different reasons sufficient. — Echarmion
If the child lives a perfectly happy life, doesn't matter right? — Kenosha Kid
He should not have been allowed to be born. — Kenosha Kid
He didn't though. Don't you see? There is no kid! He didn't blind anybody! This is what I said a while ago by the way. I said that our empathy can extend to "future people" and you claimed it can't, yet here you are clearly extending empathy to "future people".
— khaled
I meant once the kid was born. — Kenosha Kid
Broad or general, yes, that is the point. — Pfhorrest
That's not really how emotions work. You can't decide to not be heartbroken. — Echarmion
I still don't see why you say that we should care about suffering for future people and dependants, but for independent adults only their choice matters, and the suffering caused is suddenly no longer relevant. — Echarmion
But everything from driving your car to going mountain climbing risks other people suffering. If that was really the standard, we'd have to all lock ourselves into our rooms and interact as little as possible. — Echarmion
Isn't it kind of a problem to have a moral system that requires things that are practically impossible? — Echarmion
This would seem to imply that at least the ethics of reducing suffering are not monolithic, i.e. they aren't derived from a single principle, but rather multiple competing ones. — Echarmion
You can intent to harm people in the future, including people who don't even exist yet. Intent always references a future state of affairs. — Echarmion
they already existed before you decided to cause them to exist. — Echarmion
I think the most basic thing we'd need to agree on for you to consider my view convincing is that choice is more important than suffering - that what life is about is being who you are, not just trying to get it over with as painlessly as possible. — Echarmion
Not from the perspective of either of the children, but from the perspective of everyone else. So we can ask ourselves whether the principle that "I should act according to my fancy when deciding on the capabilities of my future children" is a moral one. Can we want that to be a universal principle? — Echarmion