I don't consider it realistic that there would be a law against procreation. — Antinatalist
So how is this not using people for a scheme again? This is again, LITERALLY defining an/the agenda, that is my whole theme in our discussion. You are doubling down on the fact that procreating is forcing others into a (political) agenda.. and you have thus defined it "benefit ..to existence".. Which has not justification other than STEAMROLLING COLLABORATION MUST BE HAD! But you don't care that this forced agenda violates and disrespects the dignity of the individual that must "benefit the value of existence".. Again, the political agenda. — schopenhauer1
You are full blown HR defending the Boss now. — schopenhauer1
And somehow, the "AWARENESS THROUGH COLLABORATION" is a the big consolation prize.. — schopenhauer1
In a way, each of us is a leaking ship, loaded with precious cargo. What we do with that cargo is more important than the ship that carries it. Once we recognise that, it’s a matter of pooling our resources and building a better system that can hold ALL the cargo, not just what you can salvage of yours and your significant other’s. So, why are you all sitting there complaining about the current state of your ship?
— Possibility
Utopianism. Why do people need to be on the ship? All this amounts to is more of the same.. Work to survive, maintain comfort, and entertainment pursuits.. You're just talking the best processes to do this..That isn't addressing the very problem of being on the ship in the first place. Don't think about the ship.. think about fixing the holes better! But Schop's point is that the holes are inherent.. Dissatisfaction-game is inherent. — schopenhauer1
Do you have a reference for your speculation? I'm skeptical. A little evidence would help. — T Clark
Meaning is usage. — T Clark
You use " relation of change" a few times, do you mind expanding that term as I'm not sure exactly what you mean.
In particular how you think conscious and non-conscious entities differ in terms of " relation of change." — PhilosophyRunner
I agree with that, people here living on this globe could reduce suffering. But the first thing for that is not to reproduce - although that is preventing the suffering, not reducing it. — Antinatalist
I mean, the griping can be akin I guess to the "connection" and "awareness". It is collective recognition of the forced agenda, and being compassionate about the shared situation we all find ourselves in (connection). It is trying to not burden too much other people if at all possible, and doing things to alleviate other's burdens.. So there are ideas of reducing suffering, but in this context of the very fact of the burdens in the first place. It is the recognition that we are on a constantly leaking ship that needs to be fixed.. and yes, helping fix the holes, but WITH THE RECOGNITION that it is indeed a never-ending leaking ship that we are all forced onto, that others thought fit to bring more passengers onto to keep fixing the holes, and now burdening them with something to overcome. And with the recognition that this ship has a "maintenance routine" that no one asked for, and cannot accord to any individual's idea of how to run it. The ship (life) has a "situatedness" of physical/social reality that no passenger can alter, but must (even if unintentionally) contribute to. Only within that context is it getting at what is going on. — schopenhauer1
"Potential of life" doesn't mean anything in the context of "fear of death". However, if you mean the "experiences of life that one may benefit from", I do not deny people can get benefit out of experiences. That doesn't mean THUS life... which supposedly you agree with. — schopenhauer1
How do you disagree that it's forced? In fact, you just agreed with Antinatalist here:
Procreation is forcing somebody to this life, and that is no way necessary. Forcing someone to live is deciding for someone else´s life, which this someone has not even any kind of veto, any kind of way to prevent this thing from happening.
— Antinatalist
No argument with you there.
— Possibility
And my point is indeed that you can't go along and start praising the collaboration "reduction suffering scheme" without recognizing the forced aspect of its very existence. So no, I won't let you get away with moving forward with the new age talk until you recognize this. — schopenhauer1
You could make up any scheme you want... whatever political agenda/scheme you want. All forced. And THAT is where we must start in our ethics. No moving forward until that is properly put into the equation and context. That we are living out someone else's forced agenda, and the implications of this on everything, including reducing suffering. — schopenhauer1
You want to manage like a business your way out.. The most middling of middle class answers to suffering. Suffering doesn't go away because we work as a "team" to get goals done. — schopenhauer1
Even if you were right, that things will get better and there would be more collaboration among humans, we don´t need those things in the first place if there weren't life at all. — Antinatalist
Procreation is forcing somebody to this life, and that is no way necessary. Forcing someone to live is deciding for someone else´s life, which this someone has not even any kind of veto, any kind of way to prevent this thing from happening. — Antinatalist
Gaslighting at its finest. So you think that fear of death is equivalent to THUS thinking it is okay to start life? Oh please try to justify that one.. Fear of death, your justification for life must be worth starting :lol:.Doesn't logically entail.
Also, this is COMPLETELY buying into the comply or die scenario.. You are LITERALLY saying, "If you don't like the agenda, then go kill yourself!". And then when we don't you say, "HA! SEE Life must be good!" Hogwash. — schopenhauer1
Right, so keep experimenting with more people till we "get it right" :roll:. But we won't get it right because behind all our actions is the "comply or die" gun to our heads. Keep surviving, and overcoming dissatisfaction.. Because STEAMROLLER COLLABORATION SCHEME THAT POSSIBILITY WANTS TO SEE CARRIED OUT!!! — schopenhauer1
Now Schop1 would have you believe that I am pushing some ‘agenda’ of blind collaboration, but the first step is always to increase awareness of potential.
— Possibility
Yes, indeed it is. Awareness of YOUR potential maybe, but not forcing other people's. I mean you fit into the Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs model.. What you forget to include in your little scheme is that we are already put into a scheme where we have to collaborate. This is much of my point. You focus on the collaboration to meet goals (like a manager at a business, but for any aspect of life) and not the forced aspect of this collaboration. — schopenhauer1
You don't give a concrete example of what "transcend" means.. It's all bullshit hope-vision-imagery with no real "there" there. The only thing I can imagine in your imagined utopia is "collaboration" schemes of people somehow magically "conforming" to the group. This is to take away people's autonomy. If I do work and I think ALL work is meaningless, you're just going to give me some "collaboration" rhetoric.. And try to convince me that I am being a "rogue individual".. Again by focusing so much on collaboration you miss the "forced" aspect of this collaboration. We ALL know that we need to collaborate.. But a lot of times, IT JUST SUCKS!!! — schopenhauer1
I've given my examples besides the obvious of not procreating. In all aspects of being, there is a comply aspect to it.. So the question itself is always IN LIGHT OF THIS FACT. But you keep missing my point and trying to jump over it to simply "collaborate" without acknowledging background radiation (because we were forced into this situation and can't get out without overcoming fear of death). Unless you acknowledge that blindspot, your philosophy can't get beyond antinatalism. You have not integrated it. — schopenhauer1
Is this your position? I can observe an ongoing relation of change between a plant (living organism) and its environment. Is the plant conscious? — PhilosophyRunner
In order to specify position, velocity, etc, one needs to set up a frame of reference. But from a frame of reference we can specify what a distance is.
I don't think we can do the same to consciousness - as shown by your attempt that leads to more questions than answers. From my frame of reference, I cannot access your consciousness, only the external manifestation of it. — PhilosophyRunner
And that is the problem I have. There is brain biology and chemistry that can be access from outside. There is body motion and behaviour that can be accessed from outside. But consciousness is often used to mean those, it is used to mean an internal state of awareness. And that internal state can't be measured directly as far as I know.
While distance is used to mean a physical attribute that can be measure from a frame of reference.
Now perhaps that internal consciousness state can be be entirely written in terms of the physical,, which solves the problem. Maybe, I don't know. — PhilosophyRunner
I wouldn't call that naive. In human history, just the encounter of two tribes has often led to irrational violence. That is so sad. And now there are billions of people, are you really saying that there will be a time in the human future without violence, for example? Of course there could be ideas, innovations and practices that will reduce violence, epidemics and suffering which derives from such phenomenons. But I don't see that misery totally disappear. — Antinatalist
I don't want to be rude, but for me that sounds naive. But of course it is a good thing to try to reduce suffering (but not by any so called utilitarian way, though). — Antinatalist
You speak as if you're 100% certain. Are you? Probably not. So, yeah. — Agent Smith
Assuming thoughts can be reduced to an electric current as biologists claim (re neural action potential) and given that atoms, thought net neutral, possess charged particles (protons and electrons) and that too in motion, panpsychism doesn't seem that far-fetched an idea. We can play around with this rough outline of panpsychism's mechanism to refine it further. :chin:
Is lightning a thought? Are storm chasers aware of something we're not? I dunno! — Agent Smith
Assuming that everyone in the world is on a spectrum from the most cruel diabolical and evil human being to the most divinely graceful and saintly human and everything in between (by the assumption that some people are better -more moral/ kind/ loving than others).... my question is would we ever recognise them for who they are?
If we are all by and large imperfect beings how do we then recognise the truly evil (as we also have aspects of malice in ourselves) and similarly how would we ever appreciate a truly perfect being or the closest to it, if indeed they existed because our own failings are the only template by which we judge others. — Benj96
My understanding was that writing arose in agrarian empires that had the need for records and which could afford a scribe class. This started off ideographic (or indexical) and naturally evolved towards the more purely symbolic (or alphabetical) with use.
Nomadic folk had oral cultures and little need to keep written records. So they wouldn't have originated any written language system, and only have employed the more generalised symbolism of art, decoration and dress. — apokrisis
What you could lose by not getting the promotion is that your ego could be hurt and your hopes could be dashed, so there's that to lose. — HardWorker
I agree with a lot of what you wrote.
But we cannot directly measure the dog's consciousness. We can measure behaviour, we can even measure neural correlates of consciousness.
While we can directly measure the position of planets and their motion, for example.
If I design an artificial dog that behaves exactly as a natural dog, is that artificial dog conscious? I don't think that is as easy question to answer.
Never mind dogs, I can never know how other people exactly sense the world. I can think of my own consciousness and extrapolate based on behaviour I see. But haven't we all had a time where we later found out that what we thought what person thought, was not actually what they thought. Neither of us can truly, precisely know what someone else is thinking. — PhilosophyRunner
You are talking about written language. There are, or at least were, societies without written language. It is my understanding those societies still had fully developed spoken languages. I don't think anyone knows when and how language first developed or whether earlier humans used language. — T Clark
How do we know about early language and how it developed. It was my understanding that all languages which have been encountered, no matter how primitive the society, have fully developed grammars and vocabularies. — T Clark
Do you think that antinatalists would be somehow more convincing if they will make more suicides? — Antinatalist
When there is human life, is possible at least (more realistic is to say it is almost inevitable) that there is genocides, rapes, mass murders, child abuse and so on.
Even when we could think that something so called "bad" is actually good, I can not considered any of those aforementioned things any way good. — Antinatalist
Allright, I try not to be. — Antinatalist
Basicly: it is bad when there is somebody suffering, and when there is no one suffering, it is not bad. Quite simple. — Antinatalist
So, are you against procreation? — Antinatalist
What is this state of non-existence that you value higher than being? And in what way is it more valuable in this non-state? What you seem to be referring to is the idea of unrealised human potential. But I could be mistaken.
— Possibility
I believe that "being" who does not exist, does not suffer. — Antinatalist
But that is not the only reason for my antinatalism.
The other one is this; when you reproduce you are deciding for someone´s life in a situation when you really don´t have to. — Antinatalist
Perhaps we shouldn't be aiming for the abolishment of pain/suffering. Instead, let's try to reduce their intensity, their unpleasantness, their foolifying power - like how syringe needles are small, sharp and bevelled to make them less painful, not painless. — Agent Smith
Leprosy has long been considered a divine punishment and people seem to be certain that it's an illness in need of a cure. Congenital Insensitivty to Pain (CIP) is also classified as a malady. However, I'm sure there's a comic out there that lists CIP as a superpower, to be used by the so-afflicted for good. — Agent Smith
Fear, pain, humiliation and loss feature heavily in this book. What is most apparent is that none of the characters are free from any of it. Many will go to great lengths to avoid these experiences, to pretend they can be free of them, that they should be free of them, but it's impossible, even in this fictional solar system.
Vas, a man whose currentgift is to feel no pain, lives an empty life - he is wielded as a weapon, a tool, and finds no other purpose in life than that. Without an experience of pain, he has no way to appreciate the joys in life. He has become an object, empty of life. Vas' juxtaposition with Cyra, who is constantly in pain and must learn to live with it, also accentuates the life she embodies - she experiences so much more, and can find beauty and joy where others cannot (or will not). Because Cyra is forced to accept pain as a consistent part of life, because it is impossible for her to avoid, she is able to live more fully than others.
To the rest of us, who spend our lives trying to avoid or eradicate pain, a life like Cyra's would seem pointless. To see it as her gift is almost impossible. That is how we feel when we hear the phrase 'life is pain' - because how can a life of pain be a gift? But what Cyra realises is that her gift is her ability to absorb pain, to cope with it. Her gift is the courage to live with pain, to love, show compassion, experience life, even, perhaps, to ultimately forgive and bring peace - not in eliminating, in spite of or even despite the pain she feels and cannot avoid, but because of it. —
Nictoine, to my knowledge, is a neurochemical with effects on our in-built reward system and hence the physical dependence that characterizes addiction to nicotine. — Agent Smith
This idea is probably a component of the Transhumanism manifesto, the movement being, by and large, focused on the abolishment of suffering. — Agent Smith
In some schools of Mahāyāna Buddhism, it is said that Buddha's actual spoken words (i.e. all of the content preserved in the Buddhist scriptures) are only baubles or toys to attract the ignorant. His actual meaning is forever unspoken and communicated in silence. (This is the gist of the legendary origin of Zen Buddhism in the Flower Sermon.) — Wayfarer
You’re not doing your intelligence any favours here.
— Possibility
Another example. If someone would point out that your concept of men and women doesn't do your intelligence any favors, well that would be bigotry/disrespectful, right? I haven't seen stoicHoneyBadger identify as an idiot yet, have you? — Harry Hindu
While we are a necessary part of consciousness - it doesn't exist without us.
Hence I suggest we are less able to observe consciousness objectively, than we are able to observe the solar system objectively. — PhilosophyRunner
The possibility of suicide of course exists. Once born, however, a human being is highly unlikely to have the sufficient skills to commit suicide before the age of five – often, in fact, not before turning ten or even fifteen. When this wish arises and the individual aims to fulfil it, surrounding people strive to prevent the suicide almost without exceptions if they only can. Furthermore, a vast number of highly retarded people exist who, due to their condition, will never really be able to commit suicide.
One must in any case consider the possibility of having to live a perhaps highly agonizing period of life before suicide, due to a choice – that of creating life – for which the individual him/herself is not responsible. And most importantly, not even suicide guarantees that the individual will achieve the state or non-state where s/he “was” before the decision of having a child was made. (Be it complete non-existence, for example.) — Antinatalist
What's your opinion of the following?
1. In life there's potential for suffering and joy.
2. It's impossible, at the moment, to ensure the actualization of joy sans suffering.
3. On the whole, suffering > joy. Ask a person whether s/he wants their pain taken away from, or more joy be added to, their life? I bet they'd want the former (pain taken away).
Ergo,
4. Antinatalism. — Agent Smith
The Godhead seems to be described as a three-in-one relationship between three different personalities, all of which participate in the same divine identity.
However, this relationship is incredibly difficult for me to make sense of, especially since it feels logically contradictory. Christianity claims to be monotheistic, yet the Trinity feels more like a pantheon, or maybe a relationship hierarchy or some sort.
My argument against the logic of the Trinity looks something like this
1.A monotheistic God is one distinct being
2.The Trinity is three distinct beings
3.God cannot be both one and three distinct beings
4.Therefore, the Trinity is contradictory — tryhard
The last posts of schopenhauer1-Possibility -debate reminds me that "Go then kill yourself" -attitude.
And same time these people (I´m not saying Possibility is one of them) find very odd when I tell, or have told elsewhere that people who present suicide as an option; that usually people under age of ten or even fifteen don´t have capabilities doing suicide. — Antinatalist
The potential to suffer? — Agent Smith
I think you are just looking at the world through some feminist lens, trying to find things to feel offended about. — stoicHoneyBadger
As per Laozi, simplifying Taoism, we're supposed to emulate the nonliving: go with the flow ( :heart: ); only dead fish go with the flow, one remarked.
The point then is to die or act dead, let the chips fall where they may (wu wei, actionless action). Momma nature knows best! Trust in her experience (4.5 billion years), have faith in her wisdom (she is the Tao, mother of the myriad things). — Agent Smith
The fact that you are so sure you do is just patriarchy at work.
— Possibility
And what's wrong with that? — stoicHoneyBadger
I do not see decadence, i.e. loosing standards, as a positive thing, rather as a potentially deadly illness of a civilization.
Of course girls need to have a good character, etc., but in general traits see as positive in a man and in a woman are very different. — stoicHoneyBadger
Well, such 'warning bells' of caution are well made.
I think we must globally unite, no more countries, no currencies, no rich, no imbalances of power or cults of personality/celebrity. I am just struggling a little as to how I can best go about making all that happen......now!.....that's all.
I don't advocate for putting interplanetary existence on the back seat. I want to supercharge the efforts towards it but I also want to supercharge all efforts towards a far better stewardship of Earth.
I think we must do both or else.........I do think we may go the way of the Dino's. — universeness
I am sure I can answer for most men. If you prefer dudes, or at least girls that look like dudes, well, that's up to you. — stoicHoneyBadger
To each his own I suppose. It's either literalism or flights of fancy. In other words, it's either incoherence, allegedly, or fantasy. They say...all roads lead to Rome. We're free! Yippee! — Agent Smith
Pursuit of profundity has risk, sometimes serious risk, but I so agree with this. If we as a species do not even achieve the ability for some of us to exist beyond this planetary nest then I dont think we can claim to have done so much better than the dinosaurs did. Ok, we moulded/affected the planet much more than they did but we have no more protection from extinction than they did, and we never will have unless we become at least an interplanetary species. We should just have stayed in the caves and forests and enjoyed the pretty flora and treated any pesky philosophers and scientists amongst us as dangerous enemies that must be eliminated. We could always excuse ourselves by claiming but that's what our god(s) want. I will stop this line now in-case I enter rant mode. :smile: — universeness
Well, I do prioritise it but others regularly demonstrate to me the folly of ever assuming you are the smartest person in the room. Even forms of intelligence and specialisation of field are quite myriad.
Someone who seems pretty vacant on one topic may be almost an expert at something I know little about. — universeness
If I have nothing in my wallet, then there are zero dollars. That's not a limit, that's a fact. — SolarWind
There is no contradiction between possibility and jump point. The possibility for superconductivity results from the material, below a certain temperature superconductivity suddenly occurs. — SolarWind