The arrangement always means that you are still a unit and treated as a means. The package is not because you are you, it is contingent on how valuable they think you are.. When you are not valuable, they will just fire you because you are no longer a means for their end. — schopenhauer1
Not really, because ironically, FORCING a population to do something, even if to prevent ANOTHER forcing (that is to say procreating someone into the burdens of life), would be a contradiction of using the exact moral issue (forcing upon someone) to solve the issue (of forcing life onto someone). — schopenhauer1
In other words the immorality of birthing children has to shift base from consequentialism to the next easy harbor viz. Kantian ethics. — Agent Smith
Is life intrinsically immoral in the Kantian sense? Should everyone make babies (re the categorical imperative)? — Agent Smith
Can you elaborate, I don't recall having read that particular argument you say you've made. — Agent Smith
We can't use a consequentialist argument. — Agent Smith
The deontological RULE is to not cause unnecessary suffering onto others — schopenhauer1
We must distinguish entailment from effect.
I conjecture that life is inherently/intrinsically immoral i.e. it's unethical to have children ... even in svargaloka. — Agent Smith
Antinatalists like David Benatar and @schopenhauer1 value life over morality (not unlike Kierkegaard's 'teleological suspension of the ethical'), that is, they argue, in effect, it is better to prevent life than to struggle with both the personal and the public moral problem of preventing and/or reducing the suffering in individual lives as much as possible. "Destroying the village in order to save the village" does not save the village, only rationalizes an atrocity – in the case of antinatalism, it only rationalizes evading moral engagement with the problem of the suffering of the living by, in effect, proposing to eliminate sufferers themselves. Why not advocate total nuclear war (or unleashing the most virulent lethal pathogens from all biolabs) – engineering an extinction-event – in order to "prevent bringing any more offspring into the world"? :mask:Antinatalism is paradoxical - it values life & joy and for that reason promotes a 0 child policy ... — Agent Smith
Yeah, but this antinatalist evasion is too simplistic, schop ...Actually, it's more a simple solution and elegant. Don't create the burdens to overcome in the first place. Keep it simple. — schopenhauer1
There is also the other side of the coin minted by Einstein: “Everything should be as simple as it can be, but not simpler” – a scientist’s defense of art and knowledge – of lightness, completeness and accuracy. — Louis Zukofsky, 1950
Antinatalists like David Benatar and schopenhauer1 value life over morality (not unlike Kierkegaard's 'teleological suspension of the ethical'), that is, they argue, in effect, it is better to prevent life than to struggle with both the personal and the public moral problem of preventing and/or reducing the suffering in individual lives as much as possible. "Destroying the village in order to save the village" does not save the village, only rationalizes an atrocity – in the case of antinatalism, it only rationalizes evading moral engagement with the problem of the suffering of the living by, in effect, proposing to eliminate sufferers themselves. Why not advocate total nuclear war (or unleashing the most virulent lethal pathogens from all biolabs) – engineering an extinction-event – in order to "prevent bringing any more offspring into the world"? :mask: — 180 Proof
Right! Only those who want to have children for no other reason but to love them and bring them up strong. My (panglossian) guess is that's only about one in four, if thst many, who actually have a children. :smirk:Should everybody have children? No, right? — Agent Smith
Right! Only those who want to have them for no other reason but to love them and bring them up strong. That's about one in four who have a children is my (panglossian) guess. :smirk:
The rest, three-quarters of the species, however, needs to be sterilzed! :brow: — 180 Proof
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