why is it insulting to tell someone their life is not worth living to their face, but not insulting to say everyone's lives are not worth living? — darthbarracuda
Perhaps the answer is more psychological than philosophical. — TheMadFool
Perhaps there's an absence of the implication of a personal defect in a general statement. — TheMadFool
Although this is a big blow to heart and mind it also opens up the possibility of finding a personal fulfilling, enjoyable subjective meaning to life. As an added bonus we also, despite the suffering that is real and unavoidable, find moments of happiness, no matter how fleeting how small, that make us feel our lives worth living. — TheMadFool
I'm reading Joseph Raz, who writes a lot about valuation, and so forth, I don't know if you're acquainted with him....value-laden assessments of the human condition? Do they have truth aptness? — darthbarracuda
This also seems to be a decent argument for antinatalism - if I'm not morally allowed to tell people whether or not their lives are personally worth living, then surely nobody is allowed to force someone to live a life they may or may not feel is personally worth living. Of course, this is kind of a mask for the more fundamental issue, the disvalue of suffering, the same disvalue that I just said potentially isn't objectively shown to be of disvalue. Confusing. — darthbarracuda
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