What some posters also don't get is that a paradise is still a paradise, even if it is unobtainable. The question wasn't "Is paradise attainable', but "What is paradise?". — schopenhauer1
"growth-through-adversity" (The Standard Model of Natalism) — schopenhauer1
It is a gross generalization to assume that the Standard Model of growth-through-adversity is what is necessary to be experienced by anyone, period. — schopenhauer1
Maybe people don't demand enough when it comes to thinking about putting more people into the world. — schopenhauer1
Well, given your awareness of all of those problems, why would you conclude that you'd prefer it over what you do know?! You'd risk a nightmarish existence, like in one of those "be careful what you wish for" horror films? — S
You haven't made clear your thinking about what I said: whether you agree with my prediction, disagree with it, aren't sure one way or the other... — S
You're not interested enough to do so yourself, then? Even though you were the one who seemed to be offering up that speculation about how most people would respond as some sort of support behind the notion that a life without suffering is preferable. — S
Why don't you do create a poll on the forum? My money would be that most people on the forum would choose a life with suffering, because a life without it would be much worse. It would be horrible. And I think most people on this forum would be intelligent enough to realise that. — S
Now all you have to do is actually explain why you think that. — S
I want challenges, and frankly, even some drama. — Coben
What is it with people in this discussion and avoiding direct questions? Are you in training to become a politician? — S
You don't see any merit in my reply to what he said, or you don't see any merit in what he said? — S
Why would anyone with any sense see any merit in that sort of abstract, unrealistic, nonsensical speculation? — S
Also, I did say paradise can be choosing as much adversity as you want..testing it out and leaving it when be :). — schopenhauer1
I'm not sure what that means. Antinatalism is not about eugenics. It's an equal opportunity no birth movement :lol: . — schopenhauer1
At the least, antinatalism is providing a template to understand why we are continuing existence. Just stop to think about it. WHY are we perpetuating more people? I am not talking the dull, brute way nature fools us into it (sex feels good and this leads to procreation), but in a philosophically-informed way. What are we trying to do here perpetuating more people? People just don't consider this at all. It is even more existentially relevant than why continue living. It is rooted in the very questioning of ANY human existence, not just your own and thus implies much more about life itself. — schopenhauer1
But to accept suffering is not to wallow in it as such, or wear it like a badge of martyrdom, waving it in people’s faces as if I am the only one who suffers. To accept suffering in our lives is to simply absorb it and move on as if it’s just part of life. — Possibility
