It will definately take more than one generation. — Isaac
The point is that if, for whatever reason, we're needed to do the replanting, we'll also be needed to do the tending. — Isaac
You can't invoke a self-sustaining nature to do the tending, but assume it incapable of doing the seed sowing. — Isaac
Repairing the damage we've done to the environment is exactly the sort of project I was referring to. It will definately take more than one generation. — Isaac
The justification in this case does not amount to an argument, it is a mere dogma. but it's as near as I wish to get. Someone will press me, and I will admit that suffering is good, because suffering is part of life. And then if someone pursues the matter I will have to stray from the topic and discuss the relation of pain to suffering. My children will suffer, and they will die. We all do. I see it and say 'yes'. — unenlightened
Because YOU deem it as a good thing, should another be the recipient of your preference, especially if the consequence is a whole lifetime of unknown variations on a theme of possibilities of suffering? — schopenhauer1
You don't seem to understand what it is to be rational or to be very yourself or recognise it in others. — Bartricks
You seem to think - question beggingly - that if you have kids you're thereby showing concern for others! Er, seriously? It's those of us who have decided not to have kids for moral reasons who are showing concern for others. I think you're suffering from what Satre would call 'bad faith'. I doubt very much moral reasons played any role whatsoever in your decision to breed, — Bartricks
My experience politely listening to parents drone on about their banal decision to breed is that most of them decided to do so for either no real reason at all - they just sleepwalked into it - or for the kind of utterly unhealthy self-indulgent reasons some of which have already been surveyed above. Concern for others wasn't in the mix. Yet they don't hesitate to give themselves a big slap on the back for doing something that was unbelievably easy, namely the act of breeding itself (sex isn't hard, is it?) or else they want praise for doing something they jolly well ought to have done, such as dedicating time and effort to looking after the poor victims of their immoral and self-indulgent decisions (you forced them into being here, 'of course' you now owe it to them to do all in your power to ensure their existence here is a nice one - you owe them a living for christ's sake!!). — Bartricks
I don't expect to be taken seriously by those who have already procreated. For they have a huge vested interest in telling themselves they haven't committed a serious wrong, — Bartricks
I would argue that antinatalists like Andrew4Handel @Bartricks and myself are to a large extent caring about other people, by wanting to prevent their suffering and de facto forced sutuations. If life is not a paradise, should we be creating more beings who not only suffer, but are often self-aware of their own suffering? Even if you don't agree, there is a goal of preventing negatives, and violating dignity of the potential person, so that is "other" centered, it's just that its counterintuitive because the compassion for that potential person manifests in the advocacy for their prevention of being born. — schopenhauer1
It will definitely take more than one generation. — Isaac
No, it will not, not for trees. — James Riley
If we'd simply do nothing except get out of the way, nature will both resew and tend itself. But if we want to do a favor for succeeding generations of people, then, rather than sewing the succeeding generations of people we could sew succeeding generations of trees in the areas that we've destroyed and then get out of the way. — James Riley
extinction of homo sapiens might be an attractive option for nature, — James Riley
That population will be way more than enough to tend, and even more effective in doing so, if it isn't saddled with the teaming hoards. — James Riley
Really? You think we could repair the damage we've done to an ecosystem like the rainforest in less than one generation? — Isaac
I don't think you've quite grasped the nature of habitat restoration. Sowing (or planting) is really very low down on the list of jobs that would help. Land needs to be legally protected, markets for unsustainable resource extraction overturned, illegal activity prevented, pollution reduced, climate change reversed... — Isaac
I can't think why, homo sapiens has managed to have minimal impact for the first few hundred thousand years of our existence. I don't see anything inevitable about our current destructive spree. — Isaac
Agreed. But the OP isn't suggesting we should have fewer children, it's suggesting there's no good reason to have them at all. — Isaac
Yeah, and I've said as much to you here (below) and on other threads.Someone as learned as you would know that our brains are pattern-detecting meat machines.
I'll let @unenlightened sort you out ...Please read my reply to unenlightened.
The "default stance" comes from humans being probability / change-blind and intentionality-biased. We fill in the gaps with intentional/causal stories by default. Btw, what's the PSR for the PSR? What's the cause for every cause? Why everything has to have a why? — 180 Proof
If we plant the trees and get out of the way (i.e. don't cut the down again because our numbers demand the resource) then yes. No doubt. — James Riley
You were thinking of trees metaphorically, as a representation of all our damage/repair. I was talking about trees. — James Riley
if we bring our population back to a sustainable level (I suggested, above, 35 people per 10k square miles) then the repair would take care of itself. — James Riley
I'd say the burden is upon you and your next generation to show the continuation of the current spree is not inevitable. — James Riley
There isn't a good reason, at least as far as nature is concerned. — James Riley
The only reason is our own subjective reason, and that has yet to be proven as an objectively good reason. — James Riley
How would that repair the damage? Large canopy trees take hundreds of years to grow so the ecosystem would certainly not be 'repaired' within one generation, just no longer being destroyed. — Isaac
No, I was talking about trees too. Literally. They plant themselves, have done for millennia. It's those other issues which are the problem. — Isaac
Maybe, if we did so instantaneously, but since that's impossible without genocide, doing nothing (no inter-generational projects) in the meantime would lead to a massively impoverished environment for those 35/10k^2, which would take many hundreds more years to recover than it would if, rather than ignore it, we protect what we have whilst such a reduction in population density was slowly enacted. Walking away is not the best way to do that. — Isaac
What would an "objectively good reason" be? What would the truthmaker of 'Good' be objectively? — Isaac
Essentially you are saying you want to create the suffering subject so that they can be the hero of enduring that suffering. — schopenhauer1
Essentially you are saying you want to create the suffering subject so that they can be the hero of enduring that suffering. — schopenhauer1
I act on my deeming as I suppose you act on yours. What other course do you suggest - that i act on yours and you on mine? — unenlightened
Yeah exactly, we just don't know. I do know there has been talk of inviting transhumanist David Pearce here. He is a non academic philosopher, but he's written quite a bit on negative utilitarianism (basically hedonic based antinatalism) and a lot of what he says has to do with nature and how ugly it is. There's a lot of sciency talk about the neurology of animals, insects, fish, and other creatures, how they perceive suffering, and what this means for negative aggregate ethics. If you asked Pearce, it seems he really does buy into the whole "it would be great if we bulldozed all of nature instantly" but since that's not happening, he advocates that technology should eliminate pain in nature entirely. If you ask me, wild animal suffering never concerned me that much, and I think Pearce sounds like he's caught up in too much wacky sci-fi optimism, but if you're interested in this it's worth checking out
My questions too. IIRC, it has something to do with Platonic form (or Kantian categories of reason) or some such. — 180 Proof
I have no problem with the creation of suffering as you describe it. — Tom Storm
I don't give a fuck. — Tom Storm
Not much of a philosophical case, but I see you have made your personal stance known. — schopenhauer1
I think this is at the heart of it. I can see your opposition to having children includes rational reasons, but, based on the quoted text, it also includes a lot of resentment. — T Clark
I recognize that questioning a persons motives is not a valid argument, but you're the one who started it. — T Clark
Reason =
1. Cause - I yawn because I am tired.
2. Motive - I go to bed to get some rest.
3.Justification - if I rest I will be less tired and more able to explain things.
4. Function - rest allows the body to repair itself.
You equivocate the various meanings and confusion results. This thread is about "arguments". It's the first word of the title. So it is not about causes, or motives or functions, it is about justification.
The cause of having children is usually fucking.
The motive is usually that people like fucking and like children.
The function of children is to continue the species.
The justification for having children is that life is a good.
The justification in this case does not amount to an argument, it is a mere dogma. but it's as near as I wish to get. Someone will press me, and I will admit that suffering is good, because suffering is part of life. And then if someone pursues the matter I will have to stray from the topic and discuss the relation of pain to suffering. My children will suffer, and they will die. We all do. I see it and say 'yes'. — unenlightened
The "default stance" comes from humans being probability / change-blind and intentionality-biased. We fill in the gaps with intentional/causal stories by default. Btw, what's the PSR for the PSR? What's the cause for every cause? Why everything has to have a why? — 180 Proof
YOU deem it as a good thing, should another be the recipient of your preference, especially if the consequence is a whole lifetime of unknown variations on a theme of possibilities of suffering? — schopenhauer1
I act on my deeming as I suppose you act on yours. — unenlightened
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