Torturers deserve to be tortured. Wrong to torture them though. — Bartricks
and I am full of humor. — Bartricks
If a view is true — Bartricks
If a view is true, it is not also false. — Bartricks
My view that God demonstrably exists, and my view that if God exists then everything that happens to us is deserved, are distinct views. — Bartricks
And I am not talking about whether they are true. I am talking about their compatibility! — Bartricks
Can't quote as on mobile. — Bartricks
Third paragraph - I don't know what you're talking about. — Bartricks
Like everything else you have said, I find that highly implausible. — Bartricks
Right, an intractable game of challenges forced onto someone and cannot be escaped easily. — schopenhauer1
Procreation meets the threshold, similar to the lifeguard example. — schopenhauer1
Yes, it always meets the threshold. — schopenhauer1
maybe reasoned argument permits any number of views depending on the starting premises? And the premises themselves can be different leading to different views. So no, reason doesn’t lead to the one true view, as there will always be starting premises that can’t be reasoned for if you dig back long enough. — khaled
No that is true.. but that is after the threshold is met — schopenhauer1
So the objection that this means that a bunch of things not occurring is "good" I guess would be yes for Benatar. — schopenhauer1
Unless maybe reasoned argument permits any number of views depending on the starting premises? That’s how reasoning works in case you didn’t know. It applies rules to premises. And the premises themselves can be different leading to different views. So no, reason doesn’t lead to the one true view, as there will always be starting premises that can’t be reasoned for if you dig back long enough. — khaled
You don't need a teaching qualification to teach at a university. — Bartricks
The big name philosophers who fell out of vaginas located in western countries do not agree in their conclusions about the nature of reality. — Bartricks
There are some who find reasoned argument oppressive, because reason only permits there to be one true view — Bartricks
But I explained earlier that it isn't binary but a matter of degrees meeting a threshold. — schopenhauer1
The violation happens only after the threshold is met. — schopenhauer1
The point is, "absence of good" is only bad when there is actually a person affected by this. Not so with the absence of suffering — schopenhauer1
The absence of pain that could have occurred, is always good. The absence of pleasure for someone who does not exist but could, is neutral. — schopenhauer1
So some conclusions might be:
A universe devoid of people with pain is just a "good" state of affairs.
A universe devoid of people with pleasure is just a "neutral" state of affairs. — schopenhauer1
Thus nudging the lifeguard to wake up is not to the degree of violating dignity or unnecessary suffering prevention that forcing the lifeguard into a lifetime of teaching lifeguarding lessons would be doing. — schopenhauer1
Even if we were to "know" the greatest good would come from this, the dignity threshold has been violated — schopenhauer1
Certainly, there is a balanced calculus that has to be made regarding how much unnecessary suffering and dignity violation is happening. — schopenhauer1
Violating unnecessary suffering prevention: Yes
Violating dignity using people for aggregate: Yes
Violating dignity, forcing a game on them: Yes — schopenhauer1
that’s why he adds that most people have bad lives and have optimism biases and all that stuff to make the arguments stronger. — Albero
then that would indeed be violating the other rule about dignity as you are looking at outcomes other than the person the decision is being made for. — Albero
perhaps another issue might be that the asymmetry seems (at least to me) to extend to infinity. As I’m sitting here typing, I can list off a million potential harmful situations that aren’t happening, and saying “it’s a good thing I’m not being murdered, raped, or my house is currently on fire.” — Albero
It's not about act, it's simply the state of affairs of not being harmed/in pain/suffering/negative, etc. — schopenhauer1
Don't have a child:
No suffering- neutral, No pleasure- neutral — khaled
Don't have a child:
No suffering- good, No pleasure- bad — khaled
It's not a strong "do this!" simply a common "don't do this!". — schopenhauer1
I have to agree with you. — Antinatalist
But if you mean having a child and not having a child are both neutral acts, then I have to disagree. — Antinatalist
Have a child:
Risk of suffering- bad, risk of pleasure- good
Don't have a child:
Prevention of suffering- neutral, prevention of pleasure- neutral — khaled
These individuals are therefore, in both good and bad, responsible for the emergence of a certain person. — Antinatalist
Note it’s not a question of “whether” you’re speaking garbage, for that is so obviously the case, it’s a question of “how” one can speak so much garbage seriously. So no it’s not question begging. Look up the definition bud! — khaled
Why? Note, the issue is not 'whether' this is so, for it so clearly is. The question is 'why' it should be — Bartricks
I'm not sure why people can't disagree without being disagreeable. — schopenhauer1
Why? Note, the issue is not 'whether' this is so, for it so clearly is. The question is 'why' it should be — Bartricks
Well, that's question begging. — Bartricks
You think, no doubt, that this is not a philosophy forum, but an 'express yourself' forum - a kind of therapy session where you come to be heard, not have your views assessed. But when a nasty philosopher comes along and subjects your views to scrutiny, or presents his own and then defends them to the hilt, you get all upset because he's not validating you or something. — Bartricks
I like the topic of the OP, but don't think you really said anything meaningful about it. I'm fairly new to philosophy but I just read your OP as something lacking but was genuinely curious to hear your objections to individual subjectivism, if for no other reason than perhaps finding potentially motivation for myself to interact here more often and more deeply. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Is someone who believes in false beliefs guilty of the sin of bad-faith, that is of believing something which he knows at some level to be not worthy of belief? — Pantagruel
Are you suggesting you resolved millennia of theistic disputes and figured out who or what "God" is? — baker
Pro-PIll: If life is more enjoyable when you're not afraid of when it might end - then take the pill, and rid yourself of that fear. Once you've taken the pill, you are in full control of the moment of your death. You're free of the fear of grim reaper death birds suddenly swooping. Now you can enjoy life in peace. — csalisbury
What about if, as a cost of taking the pill, you could also no longer post on TPF ever again — Pantagruel
So, that wasn't doing philosophy by consensus. That was noting that a consensus was evidence for something, namely how powerful and widely felt a given intuition is. And those widely shared powerful intuitions were then in turn powerful evidence that a given premise in my case was true. — Bartricks
a claim to morality is grounded only when the person handled is precisely not in a position to help herself and as long as she remains in this position. — spirit-salamander
When we do not help someone in need, we do not solely prove to be non-meritorious but we commit an evil — spirit-salamander
There is no way of knowing whether one person's conscious experience of the wavelength 750nm is the same as anyone else's. — RussellA
And for reasons that I will leave for later discussion, that mind will be the mind of God. — Bartricks
They're ignorant of the argument I have presented — Bartricks