Oh dear how I broke all time, logic, and proportion, oh my! — schopenhauer1
I don’t want this condition..is not breaking any grammar rules. — schopenhauer1
Since there was no you before then (nor could there even possibly be) no-one 'did' anything to you. — Isaac
So baby born into lava pit. — schopenhauer1
Yeah. Lava pits are dangerous and babies need not be born into them. — Isaac
Someone did that to the baby the moment that baby was born (or conceived even). — Isaac
It is a necessary part of being you that you either do what it takes to survive or you die. — Isaac
And your problem with all your arguments is you don’t recognize de facto conditions as still forced conditions. — schopenhauer1
a conditions necessity doesn’t make it any different than the lava pit scenario, when it comes to impositions. — schopenhauer1
All of which I learned from individuals.
I have never met the collective, let alone learned anything from it. — NOS4A2
It's the difference between a fireman complaining about long working hours and a fireman complaining about fighting fires. A fireman need not work long hours, but a fireman just ceases to be a fireman unless they fight fires. — Isaac
Being you requires that you survive or die. So it's impossible for someone to impose that situation on you. It what being you consists of. — Isaac
You can whinge like a five year old about it. Fucking annoying, but not incoherent. — Isaac
Saying someone did it to you is equally annoying, but additionally incoherent. — Isaac
Procreation is not an event? Being born is not a state of affairs caused by an act previously? — schopenhauer1
I am not here to condemn the people, just the question the practice and philosophy — schopenhauer1
As to the general philosophy, I've already presented counterarguments on several occasions. I've no intention of repeating them to the disinterested. — Isaac
Both created you, of necessity. Neither were done to you. — Isaac
Both created you, of necessity. Neither were done to you. — Isaac
We'd have to venture into a more "exotic cosmogony" in order to be able to coherently claim that the injustice of birth is done _to_ someone.
An "exotic cosmogony" like the one where living beings happily exist as "disembodied souls", but who can be embodied against their will by the act of someone else. — baker
Someone brought about Y state of affairs for someone else, which entails X.
Someone could NOT bring about Y state of affairs for someone else, which entails X. — schopenhauer1
One doesn't just "come into existence" without someone else making this happen. — schopenhauer1
None of that makes sense. The state of affairs you're talking about are a necessity for the 'someone else'. So your second statement is absolutely, unarguably false. — Isaac
One doesn't 'come into existence' at all. It's not a thing that 'one' can do because 'one' has to exist first. Before. — Isaac
is meant that there is a counterfactual that COULD have happened (Someone could NOT bring about Y state of affairs for someone else, which entails X). — schopenhauer1
A "person" at some point X becomes a person (though this is often debated as "when"). You disagree? — schopenhauer1
One could not do (or not do) anything to a person or on behalf of a person at all because there was no person to act upon until the act of creation was over. Ergo, the act of creation cannot be done to, or for, the person thereby created. It breaks normal causality. — Isaac
Yes. Obviously. A person cannot become a person. They already are one. An embryo becomes a person, or a gamete does, or a 'disembodied soul' does, depending on your beliefs. — Isaac
But...this is the important bit...no one imposes the necessary conditions of existence even on those. An embryo has necessary conditions of existence. A gamete cell has necessary conditions of existence. A disembodied soul has necessary conditions of existence.
For anything which exists it is necessary that it resist entropic decay otherwise it will cease to exist.
This is a necessary condition even of computer code, galaxies, sandcastles...
No one imposes this. — Isaac
are you going to argue that we cannot consider the baby's well-being before the baby was born because there was no baby yet to be born into the lava pit? — schopenhauer1
Yep and do not make those X (gametes, embryo, disembodied soul) a person. What's your point? — schopenhauer1
I don't care much what happens to rocks, galaxies, and other non-sentient things. I wonder why that is? — schopenhauer1
I haven't even mentioned well-being. — Isaac
That they'd still have necessary conditions of existence. — Isaac
If what you're saying is that human care about their necessary conditions of existence (whereas rocks don't), then I agree, but that doesn't constitute an argument against procreation. Most humans find those conditions acceptable costs and so it's a reasonable gamble to take for the benefit to society. — Isaac
Having lost that argument, you now want to make the problem one of unjust imposition — Isaac
ut you can't because the necessary conditions of existence are not imposed by anyone, they are a fact of the world. No one forced that on me, so no injustice has taken place. All that procreation has done is change the necessary conditions of existence from those of a gamete, to those of an embryo, to those of person. At no point has the mere fact that entities must resist entropic decay been imposed. — Isaac
But are you going to argue that we cannot consider the baby's well-being before the baby was born because there was no baby yet to be born into the lava pit? — schopenhauer1
It's a shame that after so many pages of discussion (including those in the other threads) we've essentially not moved beyond this point. — Tzeentch
No sane person would act in the way described. No sane person would try to defend someone who acts in the way described, for reasons that are obvious. — Tzeentch
It's just rhetorical. That's why I stopped engaging with this position. What's the point in engaging with ideas that no one applies consistently or genuinely believes in? — Tzeentch
I am talking about the considerations of someone in the future that isn't born yet. Lava pit baby and humans being born in general are all "real considerations". The actual person doesn't have to be born for these considerations to be "about" what could be an actual person born. — schopenhauer1
imposing one's will on another and burdening them with impositions is wrong 100% of the time. — schopenhauer1
Once a person, it now "matters" in the way that suffering/negative experiences/values matters to a sentient and self-aware being. — schopenhauer1
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