S
Okay, then answer this: unfortunate for who? Can something be unfortunate simpliciter, without being unfortunate for anyone? Think carefully, and consider what you yourself have said, before you call something 'idiotic.' — The Great Whatever
S
You cannot take away an opportunity to live, without taking it away from someone. It makes no sense to say it is just 'taken away.' What does that even mean? — The Great Whatever
This is not what anti-natalism is about. It is about birth. — The Great Whatever
S
At the same time, though, if you can't take away the opportunity to live from a potential person, then neither can you save them from future suffering. This was Cabrera's criticism of Benatar's misuse of counterfactuals. — darthbarracuda
S
At the same time, though, if you can't take away the opportunity to live from a potential person, then neither can you save them from future suffering. This was Cabrera's criticism of Benatar's misuse of counterfactuals. — darthbarracuda
The Great Whatever
_db
S
So you are essentially saying that it's better to save them from the pains of life. — darthbarracuda
schopenhauer1
_db
A state of affairs where there is a deprivation of pain is good in either the case where someone actually exists or the case where there is no actual person that the lack of pain is happening to. — schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1
However, if we use counterfactuals for the lack of pain, then we are obligated to use counterfactuals for the lack of pleasure. Otherwise it's begging the question. — darthbarracuda
The Great Whatever
how do you get around the lack of pleasure being a bad thing? — darthbarracuda
The Great Whatever
_db
But, his point was that it is not bad if there is no actual person who is deprived of good. That is the counterfactual. — schopenhauer1
The Great Whatever
schopenhauer1
If it is not bad if there is no actual person who is deprived of good, then it is not good if there is no actual person who is deprived of bad. — darthbarracuda
_db
That only makes sense if you think that pain is good. Clearly Benatar and others think that pain is bad. — schopenhauer1
_db
S
S
At its core, the argument is saying that in the specific case of procreation, there is no duty to create people that may experience pleasure, but there is a stronger case that there is a duty to not create people that may experience harm. That is the logical crux of the argument. The rest of the book goes on with conclusions that derive from this initial asymmetry. — schopenhauer1
A state of affairs where there is a deprivation of pain is good in either the case where someone actually exists or the case where there is no actual person that the lack of pain is happening to. — schopenhauer1
Benatar actually doesn't say this specifically, he uses counterfactuals to get around the absurd conclusion that the barren, icy wasteland of Pluto is overwhelmingly good because of the lack of pain. Unless of course you are willing to say that a barren, icy wasteland is good simply because there is no pain.
Unfortunately, this also leads to problems as we usually do not leap out of bed for joy when contemplating the lack of pain on Pluto. It's a "good thing" in an impersonal, "if-then" counterfactual sense, not in the actual sense. — darthbarracuda
schopenhauer1
And it only makes sense to say that a deprivation of pleasure is not-bad if you don't consider pleasure to be good. — darthbarracuda
S
The asymmetry is that there needs to be an actual person for deprivation of pleasure to be bad. There does not need to be an actual person for the deprivation of bad to be good. — schopenhauer1
_db
However, the state of affairs where a new person could possibly exist and does not actually occur, means that the possibility of pleasure without it actually being experienced is not bad. This is unlike pain "not happening" to anyone being good even if there is no individual experiencing the pain "not happening" to them.
The asymmetry is that there needs to be an actual person for deprivation of pleasure to be bad. There does not need to be an actual person for the deprivation of bad to be good. It is simply "good" that no new person experiences pain. It is not bad or good if there is no new person to exist to experience good.
This also leads to the idea that during the procreation decision, one does not have a duty to create beings with happy lives, but one does have a duty to prevent beings who suffer. — schopenhauer1
S
In fact, we might even feel sad if we don't have this child, because we missed an opportunity. To not have this child because they would experience a pinprick would be throwing the baby out with the bathwater. — darthbarracuda
_db
schopenhauer1
If you read Cabrera's paper on this, he shows how Benatar relies on a pessimistic outlook to validate the asymmetry. — darthbarracuda
schopenhauer1
To not have this child because they would experience a pinprick would be throwing the baby out with the bathwater. — darthbarracuda
schopenhauer1
What this shows is that there is an asymmetry in the value we place upon pain and pleasure. If we use counterfactuals, the absence of pain is good and the absence of pleasure is bad, but we place more emphasis on the absence of pain. We consider the pain before we consider the pleasure. We do not take unnecessary risks. And so while the absence of pleasure may be a bad thing, the imposition of extreme suffering is an even worse thing, one that seems to completely over-rule the badness of the absence of pleasure. — darthbarracuda
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