No one can state that procreation as it pertains to humans is definitively preferential or instinctual. How could that be proven without being able to experience both separately then at the same time. Does that make sense? Much like a control study. — LuckilyDefinitive
There is the Freudian theory for starters. — LuckilyDefinitive
Freud's theory most definitely applies to this discussion. Nature verses nuture is applicable directly to whether or not ,nature vs nurture, is what drives human procreation. — LuckilyDefinitive
Also preference is most definitely not a thing derived from imperical science and that is the stance you are debating for. So I'm confused as to why I'm being told to provide evidence of my stance when yours is the more lofty reasoning? The biological need for information to survive only happens through new life. People have sex to create new life. All I'm saying is if modern theory of evolution is to be believed then instinct is what sex likely
Also preference is most definitely not a thing derived from imperical science and that is the stance you are debating for. — LuckilyDefinitive
So I'm confused as to why I'm being told to provide evidence of my stance when yours is the more lofty reasoning? — LuckilyDefinitive
The biological need for information to survive only happens through new life. — LuckilyDefinitive
People have sex to create new life. — LuckilyDefinitive
All I'm saying is if modern theory of evolution is to be believed then instinct is what sex most likely what deove procreation, even for us humans. — LuckilyDefinitive
I said that preference is NOT derived from imperical science. Yet you debate that human procreation is preferential. — LuckilyDefinitive
And I did not say sex drove procreation I said the instinct to survive is what drove the act of sex — LuckilyDefinitive
The fact that any new life has to maneuver and "deal with" to survive, maintain, and entertain lest they die is an ideology in itself.. It doesn't matter what way of life (as repeated again). — schopenhauer1
Ideology (Anthropology) ... The first use of the term refers to the system of social and moral ideas of a group of people; in this sense ideology is contrasted with "practice.
Ideology (Anthropology) - In Depth Tutorials and Information
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Ideology is the lens through which a person views the world. Within the field of sociology, ideology is broadly understood to refer to the sum total of a person's values, beliefs, assumptions, and expectations. ... Ideology is directly related to the social structure, economic system of production, and political structure.Jul 3, 2019
Theories of Ideology in Sociology - ThoughtCo
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I didn't realize there are so many different ways to understand the word "ideology". — thoughtco
Anarchism.
Colonialism.
Communism.
Despotism.
Distributism.
Feudalism.
Socialism.
Totalitarianism.
More items...
List of political ideologies - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › List_of_political_ideologies — Wikipedia
Not about one type of society versus another.. Only about having to navigate society (survival, maintenance, entertainment) in general. — schopenhauer1
Also preference is most definitely not a thing derived from imperical science and that is the stance you are debating for. So I'm confused as to why I'm being told to provide evidence of my stance when yours is the more lofty reasoning? The biological need for information to survive only happens through new life. People have sex to create new life. All I'm saying is if modern theory of evolution is to be believed then instinct is what sex likely
drove procreation in the first place, even for us humans. — LuckilyDefinitive
I understand the political ideologies but question the value of the anthropological and sociological use of the word. I am not sure it is helpful to make a word mean anything you want it to mean? Of course, tribes have their method of survival and at some stage, they will come up with stories, but an idealogy? I am not sure that is a good use of the word? I don't think believing we came out of the center of the earth is equal to the more formal political ideologies. — Athena
What? It doesn't matter if it is apple or oranges? Try making an orange pie. :lol: Aren't we arguing the difference between dealing with reality or being lost in abstract ideas? Perhaps that is what is wrong today. People willing to kill for their religion/ideology and blind to reality. — Athena
No, the goal here is to argue whether thinking it is okay to bring more people into the world IS itself an ideology. — schopenhauer1
I wanted to own a home and have money in the bank before having children. I thought a woman should be a full-time homemaker. Those are very traditional values that were strongly promoted by public education. I associate these values with democracy. But having the ideology of democracy was not the reason for having children. The reason for intentionally having children was to fully experience being a woman. — Athena
“ you are saving someone from existing”. No, you are not saving anyone from anything. It’s a lie. You have saved exactly zero people. Your imaginary “someone” is a no one. It’s nothing. — NOS4A2
A guy buys all the parts for a gun, but it's not a gun yet. He intends to use it to kill when he's finished. He puts the gun together and kills someone. The gun didn't exist until he made it. Should someone not try to prevent him before he makes the parts into a gun?
If you know he intends to kill with it, yes. — NOS4A2
Cool. My point. A person (gun) doesn't have to exist. It isn't completely analogous, the only point was to prove that the actual person in question doesn't have to exist, just the potential.
Sure, but no ethical behavior or principle can be held towards potential people by the simple fact that they do not exist, just like a man cannot kill with a potential gun. — NOS4A2
But the man would kill, if the gun was made and he has a very realistic chance of doing that because he has all the parts and know how. So, the potential victim doesn't matter because the gun isn't made yet?
My position is that there are many reasons why one wouldn’t want to have children, but I do not think it needs to be spun into a moral principle towards “potential beings”, which are not beings at all. I think ethics should pertain towards beings. — NOS4A2
With this repetition of your initial objection, you do seem to have difficulty with the analogy. The analogy applies here because the gun being created will directly affect another person, even though in that particular moment, the gun is not created yet (to affect another person).
At the same token, if someone has a potential to exist (all the parts to do this and know how is there), then certainly, when those parts come together, a person will be affected.
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