Given the context above, how would one make a good judgment on the matter? — TheMadFool
I believe that life is getting ''better''. We have medicine, machines, knowledge, democracy, etc. All mentioned afore facilitate a happy existence. Things were different a few thousand years ago - tyranny, disease, ignorance, etc. Am I wrong in thinking there's a positive trend here? — TheMadFool
If there's one thing to go by I guess it's population. An increasing population would mean longer lives, healthier women and children. There may be depression, suicide, and other social ills but it seems to be of lesser effect than the positive effects as evinced by world population growth. — TheMadFool
No, I’m not actually. — TheHedoMinimalist
Antinatalism is the belief that birth should be morally wrong because it involves bringing into being a creature capable of suffering and that will suffer without its consent and that automatically makes it wrong no matter how much pleasure that creature experiences (because you have no right to create another human when THEY will be the ones to bear the consequences of your choices). — khaled
.”They [parents] were just a cog in the mechanism of the physical world. You might as well blame our galaxy for your birth, or the Big-Bang. I'm not denying that your parents had a role, but not uniquely. You're giving them too much credit. — Michael Ossipoff
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As a materialist I see blame and prosecution as an evolved mechanism for removing troublemakers and bolstering your chances of survival.
.
.As a materialist that doesn’t believe in free will…
.Now, that being said, in my view blaming your parents for your existence makes sense. You were evolved to undoubtably see them as the cause of your existence despite the fact that they had no choice but to have you. As such they are the cause of your existence.
.Same with how you say “the gunshot killed the man”. Of course, according to my view, the Big Bang killed the man but when people talk of “cause” they always mean their perception of who the biggest actor was as tuned by their evolution to remove troublemakers. And this is what materialists always mean by “cause”.
You are because you used the word "objective." What was that word supposed to suggest otherwise? What difference did that word make to the sentence you typed? — Terrapin Station
.”But if there's no need for life, then why does Schopenhauer1 think that there's need for things in life?” — Michael Ossipoff
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He means that a non existent thing (an unborn baby) doesn’t need anything including life
.…but when someone is born, they suddenly need things in life.
.It’s better to be in a state of not needing anything and to be put in a state of needing something then acquiring it.
.Solving a problem you posed is not productive and it is immoral to force someone to solve a problem YOU POSE on them when they didn’t have to solve it before.
It would not be fallacious for me to argue that I should buy pizza because that’s what the guests want. — TheHedoMinimalist
Similarly, it would not be fallacious to argue that if most people prefer existence over non-existence then we should consider this fact when thinking about the morality of reproduction — TheHedoMinimalist
Valid argument: Most guests at your party want to have pizza for dinner. This fact is one objective fact about the overall preferences of your guests that should be taken into consideration — TheHedoMinimalist
.”Then what is the point of railing at that obvious inevitability?? In fact what even is the meaning of that railing?” — Michael Ossipoff
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It’s not an inevitability.
.It might convince others not to have children (deterministically of course) and then eventually maybe an anti-reproduction policy can be implemented.
.The antinatilists might succeed in their quest you never know.
That's not a fallacious sentiment--sentiments can't be fallacious, arguments are; but it's also not true or false, correct or incorrect, or objective in any manner (aside from the objective fact that when polled, most of your guests said they wanted pizza). — Terrapin Station
That makes a lot less sense to me. You should consider that fact when thinking about the morality of reproduction in what context? Deciding your own moral stance? — Terrapin Station
You can't have a valid should. Shoulds are preferences that individuals have, too. They're not valid or invalid. — Terrapin Station
.”What? Things that we like are an opportunity, not something compelled on us. That's how everyone but a very few Antinatalists and Absurdists view it.” — Michael Ossipoff
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That’s how most absurdists view it actually.
.Not having free will is the state of the world for us.
.”It's meaningless to speak of that situation as something that has been done to some pre-existing someone.” — Michael Ossipoff
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No one does that. I found andrew’s analogy most fitting. Setting a bear trap in an empty park is still wrong despite the fact that there is no one there yet. The point is that setting the bear trap WILL harm someone. Doesn’t matter if that person doesn’t exist yet.
As this reveals the only problem with existence is suffering and pain one has to undergo in living. — TheMadFool
As I mentioned, the suffering and pain graph is showing a downward trend with modern medicine, technology, and good governance. There is no logical contradiction in utopia is there? Utopia is possible and if we go by national strategic planning and UN millenial goals, such as eradication of polio, universal health for all, etc., the global community is, in reality, aiming for a utopian world or thereabouts. — TheMadFool
.”I’ve been saying those things [about reincarnation] since my arrival at The Philosophy Forum.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Well you haven’t said them here lol.
.And looking into the comment history of everyone I meet is creepy and time consuming
.”…though I never claimed proof that there’s reincarnation “— Michael Ossipoff
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Why were you stating it as fact then?
.”No pain whatsoever for anyone is a big, big thing to postulate for physical beings in a physical world operating by its own physical law, where the physical perception of an immediate &/or urgent need to avoid serious injury is called “pain”.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Imagine a world where a planet where particles accidemtally collided together forming a utopian planet where everything has a marshmallow like texture so that even if you fall you just bounce back and can’t hurt yourself even if you tried. Now imagine those particles collided also forming 2 humans that just happen to both not have the ability to feel pain.
.If you’re still not convinced a world without suffering is possible you must at least be convinced that a world with less suffering than this one is possible.
.And besides according to your position you shouldn’t be an antinatlist.
.Because no matter what you do you’re not actually preventing people from being born. A person will ALWAYS be born into whatever world best fits “them”
.(although you don’t hhave proof that changes to their subconscious self remain after life
.and you still have no proof that moral GOODNESS brings you to better worlds.
.You know the saying nice guys finish last right? What if being good actually made you susceptible to getting born into WORSE realities.
.You haven’t explained how this “affinity” between person and world is decided).
.Since a person will always be born into whichever world fits them our decision to procreate or not procreate is completely inconsequential.
.If we DO antinatalist ourselves into extinction…. we didn’t save anyone from anything.
.according to your position you shouldn’t be an antinatlist.
”Actually, Ontic-Structural Subjective Idealism makes no assumptions or presumptions whatsoever, and posits no brute-facts (…unlike Materialism.)” — Michael Ossipoff
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.Your version does. You assume people go to better worlds if they do moral deeds. You assume people’s subconscious changes remain after death and that they get reborn into a different life as a consequence.
.You assume people’s subconscious changes remain after death
.and that they get reborn into a different life as a consequence.
.You assume “minds” exist
.to have ideas to begin with for these minds to be born into a world consistent with their ideas.
.You assume our laws of logic are cross-universal and that an illogical universe with contradicting principles cannot exist.
.All you know is that we cannot image such a universe. That’s not proof it cannot exist.
.There is no such thing as an ideology that makes no assumptions.
.You can’t have a syllogism without premises.
.”The (Materialist) world that they believe in is indeed absurd.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Mind explaining how?
.Also I’d rather we do metaphysics in a private chat rather than on this thread
It’s not clear to me how your thought experiment does reveal that the only problem with existence is suffering and pain. Some philosophers would argue that betrayal, ignorance, disappointment, malevolence and death would also be part of any properly dystopian future even if they wouldn’t contribute to the suffering. Some pessimistic philosophers would even argue that life is good but death is bad and it’s the combination of life followed by death that makes being born regrettable. Also, it seems that I could just as easily argue that the only thing good about existence is pleasure and happiness. There’s a debate in philosophy about whether or not intrinsic goodness or badness lies in experience or if there are also things that are intrinsically good or bad outside of its effect on experience. I tend to think that intrinsic value could only lie in experience. — TheHedoMinimalist
Well, even if I knew that in 200 years there would be a utopia, would it be right for me to create a child living in circumstances that I believe are worse than non-existence in order so that my great-grandchildren can live in utopia? It’s seems like I would be using my children as a means to an end and that could be objectionable from a deontological perspective. But, even if I was to be a pure consequentialist and I knew that a utopian world would come about in 200 years, how long would this utopian period last? Would it be an everlasting utopia? What if it peaks 200 years from now and it sustains it’s utopian state for another 200 years but then it goes to hell afterwards because something goes terribly wrong and it continues being hell for thousands of years. My great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandchildren might have to live in hell! This is why it’s not clear to me if we should rely on future predictions as a basis for justifying or condemning reproduction. — TheHedoMinimalist
Well, isn't depriving people of heaven/utopia a bad thing? When I say utopia/heaven I mean a permanent state of happiness. All the problems of existence dealt with decisively. — TheMadFool
How could you deprive someone that never existed? — TheHedoMinimalist
However, a person doesn't come into existence from nothing. A plant grows from a seed. The seed has the potential of becoming a beautiful flower. Would you deny the seed of its potential?
Likewise, in our bodies the female egg and the male sperm together, have a potential for a beautiful life. Are antinatalists not then depriving a potential wonderful life? — TheMadFool
Well, by that logic, we are depriving a near infinite number of potential beings. Every time you are not reproducing, you could be potentially depriving someone who could of lived a happy life. You seem to be suggesting that all of the gazzilion of different sperm and egg combinations could be potential victims. This seems absurd to me. — TheHedoMinimalist
Imagine you have a gift that you're sure will make anybody happy. Imagine you're a filthy rich man. Wouldn't you produce children or find someone to appreciate and enjoy your gift/wealth? — TheMadFool
Then, why accuse it of being fallacious since sentiments can’t be fallacious? — TheHedoMinimalist
You should consider the probability that your offspring will be glad to be born. This fact could help you determine that probablity. I’m not claiming it’s the only thing you should consider but it’s a good start. — TheHedoMinimalist
If I say that you shouldn’t rob a bank unless you are willing to risk going to prison, this would be a valid should insofar as I am making a pertinent point if you are not willing to risk going to prison. — TheHedoMinimalist
Because you're forwarding that it can somehow be objective, and you're basing an argument for that on popularity. In other words, I'm criticizing it from the context you're proposing. — Terrapin Station
That is, assuming that (a) probability really works the way people like to imagine it does, and (b) we could have data for something as ridiculously oversimplified (outside of frustrated teenagers expressing frustration) as whether people are "glad they were born." — Terrapin Station
That's still not valid. You could say that if you rob a bank you increase your chances of going to prison, but that tells us nothing about what anyone should do a la validity, which has to do with truth. Shoulds can't be true (or false). That's a category error for them. — Terrapin Station
The chain of causation relevant to potentiality can be extended into the past and the future.
You, me and everyone else are part of this potentiality chain or web if you like. — TheMadFool
There was a Siddhartha Gautama once, the Buddha, whose philosophy is founded on pain and suffering. He was right. During his time his words were true.
In the 21st century his foundational thesis, that life is suffering, is only partially true.
All of us, 21st century people, were only potential humans during the Buddha's time. Yet, here we are enjoying, even if only relatively, our lives.
Yes, there's a lot of suffering but this isn't a photograph in which we're stuck in one state/pose forever. It's more like a movie - states change - we can become happier. If I see a photograph of African slaves it saddens me. Yet, if you observe the passage of history, a movie as it were, then you see emancipation.
The potential for happiness can't be ignored and, as of habit, we don't. Don't we all go to school, sacrifice little pleasures and willingly undergo a little pain, for a greater state of happiness/contentment? The potential for happiness or greater happiness is very relevant.
It is the above element of truth that is missing from the worldview of antinatalism. — TheMadFool
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