But causing it in the first place is fine? Why? And why is it fine sometimes and not fine in others? — khaled
I don’t see this as very weird though. That we find different risks morally acceptable is normal. We make laws out of the ones we agree on. — khaled
Generally speaking though, if X * Y is greater than the suffering alleviated from the person committing the act then the act is wrong. We can debate how big X and Y are in each case, but more often than not it’s clear which is greater (X*Y or the suffering alleviated from the actor) — khaled
Exactly. And the reasons aren’t good enough for me. If you discard “the benefit of mankind” I don’t see how you can possibly argue that they are. — khaled
Sure. I would say dependents are special. Because it is the job of the parent to make sure they suffer as little as possible, since they’re the ones the brought them here. And so they’re allowed to force them to do things for their benefit. — khaled
But what I was getting at was forcing people to do things that YOU like, without knowing whether or not they will. In the example I assume the person tied up is not your dependent and you do not know if they’ll like the game or not. Sure, they may end up enjoying it, but we don’t just take that risk with people who are not our dependents. Ever. And even with dependents we are very careful. — khaled
And you cannot argue in the case of having children that existing is good for the non-existent potential child (because they don’t exist!). So you are taking a gamble, like with the tying up example. Sure the game is pretty good and has few complaints, but is that a good enough reason to force people to play it? Not unless you want to bring in the survival of mankind as a good in itself I don’t think you can argue it is. — khaled
And what would those be? The duties. — khaled
And I never get why people are always willing to claim that having children is wrong sometimes but never actually go into detail on when. It happens every time around here. — khaled
The idea that "mankind" and other such concepts should be favored over a single human's actual concrete suffering. Things like "For the country" "For mankind", etc always rubbed me the wrong way. If you can't point me to a person getting harmed, then I couldn't care less about "the country being harmed" or "going against mankind's interests". — khaled
It does. I should go into more detail. The test is more like "Had X not been around would Y have still suffered and if not could X have predicted this?". If the answer is yes then it's not X's responsibility to help. If the answer is no-no then again, not X's responsibility. You have to judge people actions based on the info they had at the time. There are other rules but I don't want to overcomplicate things for now. — khaled
Had the driver known that he was going to run over a kid by speeding out of town, then he is responsible. However, he did not know that. Furthermore, it is just as likely that that child would have ran behind the parked car 10 minutes later, meaning if the driver did NOT speed up out of town he would have ran him over.
In other words: At no point did the driver commit an act he could reasonably predict would harm someone, as speeding out of town and NOT speeding out of town have a basically equal chance of causing an accident as far as the driver can predict. — khaled
Agreed. But from where comes the justification to create happiness at the risk of suffering for others? — khaled
No matter how much I like a videogame for example, I can't go around taping people to chairs and forcing them to play it. And I definitely can't justify it by giving all these people a button they can press to instantly kill themselves then saying "I'm not even forcing them to do anything, if they don't like it they can just kill themselves. The pleasure and suffering are two sides of the same coin". I find it apphaling how often I hear that as a legitimate argument by otherwise rational people. Heck with life, you don't even get the "quit button" and have to make your own. — khaled
You still haven't answered my question though. — khaled
I don't know who parents think is responsible for suffering. — Andrew4Handel
Sure. I don't think so though. And I find that justification disgusting. — khaled
Not in total, sure. If a kid runs into a wall like an idiot despite their parents warning them that running around like that will hurt, that's partly on the kid. However I think that parents are partially responsible for all their child's suffering.
My "test" for responsibility is: "Had X not been around would Y have still suffered". If yes then it's not X's responsibility to help Y. However in the case of children (being Y) the answer is always no (X being the parent), for every instance of suffering. That I find problematic. — khaled
Agreed. And we can get into the nitty gritty. But I doubt whatever configuration you choose will end up having the statement "You are responsible for your child's suffering and pleasure" be false. Or are you going to argue that parents are not responsible for their children? — khaled
If we can agree that they are, and we can also agree that there is a risk the child suffers disproportionately in their life despite the parent's best effort, what justifies that the parent taking the risk? We can agree that usually we would need some sort of justification when doing something that can risk harming others no? — khaled
See! This is where Kant is sneaky. I'm not an expert, but I bet if I say that duties arising through the Categorical Imperative are outside influences, we would find that Kant insists this is all a principle of our reasoning and so is an inner influence of some type and not impinging on our freedom. — Garth
But actually maybe Kant's idea here is correct, or almost correct. Because I don't think any emotion can be understood without considering what consciousness thinks is good. In fact, our empathy for others doesn't depend very much on reading facial expressions but on predicting the motivations and intentions of others. Maybe if we don't do what is best we won't be free because we'll feel doubt, guilt, remorse, paranoia, etc. — Garth
Preventing suffering takes precedence over the creation of pleasure, especially when not creating 'good lives' does not harm the unborn — Inyenzi
Antinatalists seek to prevent all human suffering — Inyenzi
But I'm sure we can agree there is a difference caused between the pain that you experience when you stub your toe and when I punch you in the face. The difference being that I am directly reponsible for one. The goal of antinatalism is to cause as little of the latter as possible while ensuring you yourself survive. With having kids you are responsible for every pain and pleasure they go through. Because none of it would have happened without you. And you didn't need it to survive. — khaled
I think it is that you guys think we consider "not having children" as a good act. It isn't. Having children is a bad act. That doesn't make the opposite good. The opposite (not having children) is not good or bad, because it doesn't harm or benefit anyone.
Put simply, the goal of antinatalism was never the elimination of pain, as that would require the existence of someone whose pain you're eliminating. The goal was not to cause pain. So the fact that the elimination of pain is not the same as absence of being is irrelevant. — khaled
The key point is that anti-natalism confuses elimination of pain with absence of being. — Joshs
I mean, intuitively, there are few things more oppressive for our emotions and our feeling of being free than having some duty imposed on us, especially a duty which we do not also desire to do. — Garth
Lock's version fo freedom - liberty, a much better term - is the capacity do act if one so wills, or to not act if one does not will. — Banno
Because people didn't object to this man's rage and hatred in this particular instance. In fact, they offered him support. Yes, I admit that considering the counterfactual in which he wasn't then approached by the girl requires a bit of imagination, so it doesn't qualify as more than speculation. I don't claim to make an empirical claim since I'm not an empiricist nor a scientist. But I am fairly sure that if he had simply voiced complaints at a girl he likes sleeping around nobody would have said anything nice to him. — Garth
The point of my essay is this: The substantive question about incels is what phenomena in our culture produces them. — Garth
So I see no reason to even bother reading incel ideology. We should decide what the incel is. — Garth
So what is the use of 'freedom in it's first instance that you're trying to define by it's second use? — Isaac
According to whom? You? I don't particularly care about your opinion. So I don't see why I should provide evidence for my claims to you. — Garth
If you can't identify any problems with my explanation other than calling it "questionable" — Garth
But the problem with this narrative is that if she had not asked him out and if he was simply
sharing his rage and hatred for her at being rejected, there is no way he would garner the same
sympathy. He would be branded an incel -- that is to say an irrational hater of women. This
would suggest that the defining difference between a person expressing his pain at being hurt
by women and a person being an incel is the mere event of being unwanted by women.
If one cannot, then he or she is to that extent not free. — tim wood
But the purpose here is to draw attention to people who claim as a matter of right under freedom to do what they want; and to the harm they do, potentially to be sure, but too often as a matter of fact. — tim wood
1. If I justify my view, I simply offer another set of premises which are equally unjustified. You may refer to Aristotle's Prior Analytics for a discussion of the possibilities involved. — Garth
2. If you ask me to justify a definition, what form would the argument take such that the definition itself is justified? — Garth
Furthermore I wrote an entire essay on the subject, which you are ignoring the existence of — Garth
You know, it's ironic you ask me for reasoning when you didn't bother to look at my essay. — Garth
How we describe the incel is one thing and how the incel describes himself is another thing. I don't think that my essay really requires me to address the details of the way incels describe themselves since it is really about how we describe incels. — Garth
I've written an essay last year about whether we honestly judge others as incels or whether we actually apply a different set of criteria to them — Garth
Can you explain to me the concept of strict proportionality? Does it mean that you cannot harm someone in self-defense more than he will likely harm you if you didn’t take the self-defense measure? — TheHedoMinimalist
No, it's not. A person, male or female, who is not under the influence of debilitating substances, who is not physically forced or coerced, and is aware of the fact that sexual relations produces kids, is literally what defines a legal adult, de facto of course. — Outlander
This doesn’t entail that everyone should always be responsible for killing someone while driving their car so why should someone always be held responsible for a pregnancy simply because they chose to have sex? — TheHedoMinimalist
Would a rule selected in accordance with arbitrary parameters from a set of predetermined rules be dependent upon those arbitrary parameters in its application after being selected? — ToothyMaw
Further: is the rule itself arbitrary after being selected? — ToothyMaw
I'm inclined to think not since it was part of a set of predetermined rules. — ToothyMaw
Or is it mind-independent and free of subjectivity because it has a purpose that appears to be mind-independent and free of subjectivity? — ToothyMaw
I don't see what is wrong with seeing things from their perspective. If they consider themselves as victims, then we should try to see whether it is true or not. — Wittgenstein
Maslow's hierarchy of needs would make it difficult for incels to reach selfhood after skipping the essential physiological needs and in general ,love/belonging needs at the lower order of pyramid. — Wittgenstein
While growing up, they were told about life getting better as you grow up or how consuming " this and this " will fill the hole in your heart, your craving for living a meaningful life. They think it's all a scam. — Wittgenstein
Here's what you do, you ask them this simple question: — BitconnectCarlos
If they answer "yes" to the fate question you've got to wonder why fate has conspired to punish them in particular and what the story behind that is. — BitconnectCarlos
That they are Intelligible and sufficiently representative of humanity; the axioms need to be coherent with respect to human nature for any reasoning done with them to produce behaviors rational for humans. — ToothyMaw
I see no issue with what is sufficient for being human being arbitrary; human nature can still be objective. Furthermore, I think some aspects of human nature are observable. For instance: humans value the lives of loved ones over those of strangers much of the time. There are exceptions, but not many. It actually seems to me the nomological account is superior in this respect; evolutionary biology can provide some truths about what humans tend to be. Neuroscience too. — ToothyMaw
I'm saying that since the behaviors are reached via reasoning they are rational - if they are anchored to human nature. According to another metric they might not be rational. — ToothyMaw
Can axioms that can be reasoned with be extracted from an evolutionary view of human nature? — ToothyMaw
If humans are, for instance, compassionate towards those less fortunate than themselves in a way distinct from other animals, and sufficiently for being human, does that mean that this trait can be synthesized and used to develop behaviors for specific situations that are rational, with respect to human nature, for humanity? — ToothyMaw
Could these loose concepts be extracted and reasoned with to create rational behaviors, with respect to human nature, for specific situations for humanity? — ToothyMaw
The only objective with floating these kind of absurd ideas was to get Donald Trump's attention, — ssu
I conclude that nobody can see the world as it is. — Daemon
Well there is no alternative for us. We exist. However, as long as a capacity exists where someone in the future can be prevented from challenges, then it is incumbent not to start X[1,2,3] challenges for that person (that is to say all harms/challenges that come from existing in the first place, which is caused by procreation of that person). — schopenhauer1
I do think that antinatalism has implications for how to act as a community. If you want to discuss that, let me know. — schopenhauer1
Knowing this, I see it as paternalistic to think that another person should be born, because I deem life's negativity/challenges sufficient to bear the burden of. — schopenhauer1
Antintatlists will either take the metaphysical stance that it is a "good state of affairs" (a sort of absolute axiom) that all cases of harm were prevented in one inaction OR, simply that AT LEAST the bad situations of affairs of all/any harm befalling a future person was prevented. — schopenhauer1
Similarly, antinatalists often view impositions on other people as wrong. Starting someone else's life by having them is seen as an imposition. This is where the facts on the ground are seen as different. Natalists don't see starting someone else's life as an imposition. They see individual instances of challenges to be the impositions. Antinatalists don't understand why these individual instances cannot be summed up as a general category of negativity/harm. Thus instead of 1, 2, 3 instances it is X[1,2,3] that is being prevented. — schopenhauer1
So, if you have time to stop and contemplate, I am asking you to step into my fantasy of many members of the forum, sitting in a room together ? What difference would it make to the agenda and discussions emerging? Would there be many raised voices, with others silent, but listening?Would we come to a better understanding of philosophy, as being discussed on the many threads, which are perhaps like little safe, houses, distanced from the harsh realities of the three dimensional world? — Jack Cummins
In the case of flat earth, that standard is common sense, trust in our sources, and trusting our eyes. No need to elevate our visual reports or the photos to the status of "undoubtalbe" see? For the purposes of any discussion ever we only deal with agreements. Big T doesn't enter the conversation, so I don't care if it exists or not. — khaled
No the challenges are a game.. I guess death is a way out of the game. I'm calling it that.. Call it challenges if you want. Discreet things to overcome over a lifetime of surviving, finding comfort, entertainment in a society being exposed/impinged along the way by contingent harms. Stop trying to find "gotchas" and engage and maybe this will go somewhere :roll:. — schopenhauer1
That's difficult on this forum for whatever reason though.. Mainly due to personalities perhaps. — schopenhauer1
No, see I never said that. You can certainly address other problems I just focus on this one. It is the originator of all the other problems, so is one place to start. For people already existing, yep there is a shit of challenges to get your hands dirty if you want. — schopenhauer1
What does seem like moral superiority to me is chastising those who do not want others to live out the challenges but rather default assuming that the challenges are the be all and end all.. But that's just it.. Of course it is, because what else is there if we don't kill ourselves right away or die of starvation? Yep, of course we are going to buy into the challenges thing.. It's a must. Do or die.. I get it. — schopenhauer1
I'm more interested in why someone would want (need?) A to be True in the first place. We can all agree that 2=2 and that this site is mostly in English, what further need is there for us to elevate these statements to "undoubtalbe" status? Is it for peace of mind? Is it a reflex to not have to deal with unreasonable people suggesting that 1=2? What is it? — khaled
Yes, die slowly (by playing the game in various ways.. some leading to faster death than others) or kill yourself. Kind of strengthens the argument actually. — schopenhauer1
Sounds like a game.. challenges to overcome.. figuring out the key to overcoming the challenges. That's what I mean by you reiterating the game analogy. — schopenhauer1
Why do people have to be put in a circumstance where they have to figure out a solution for anything in particular? — schopenhauer1
For someone who poo poos my analogy about a game, you are sure reiterating it. — schopenhauer1
You can reinforce it with more smug responses and I'll entertain it. Keep your greatest hits coming. — schopenhauer1
But, someone is being started in life.. and the analogy is that the "game" is one of life or death. You either live the structural and contingent conditions or you die. — schopenhauer1
It's smug to assume people should play the game.. that is to say start the game for other people to play. — schopenhauer1
?Irritatingly pleased with oneself, offensively self-complacent, self-satisfied.
I have compared this to a Stockholm syndrome scenario. The child becomes grateful to the parent without realising the nature of the relationship and the imposition. — Andrew4Handel
Those are the de facto conditions. That is the game. I don't like to start games for other people. — schopenhauer1
Smug assumptions and conclusions to do on behalf of other people if you ask me. — schopenhauer1
IT doesn't matter if the world that is better doesn't actually exist, it's just not this world. — schopenhauer1
And if yes, is there any other way of saying this, other than "I have to trust past experience because past experience tells me that"? — znajd
But I don't necessarily have to subscribe to that kind of metaphysics to get the point. Being alive entails essentially being de facto forced into deprivations of the survival, comfort, entertainment varieties. — schopenhauer1
I just don't get the idea that we want to make other people deal with any kind of thing. The natalists response is to, again, "deal with it" or "go kill yourself". I just don't find that acceptable. — schopenhauer1