Arthur Schopenhauer argued that the value of life is ultimately negative because any positive experiences will always be outweighed by suffering which is a more powerful feeling.
Schopenhauer thought that the most reasonable position to take was not to bring children into the world:
If children were brought into the world by an act of pure reason alone, would the human race continue to exist? Would not a man rather have so much sympathy with the coming generation as to spare it the burden of existence, or at any rate not take it upon himself to impose that burden upon it in cold blood?
To wish that some sort of event had not happened is foolish self-torment, for this means to wish for something absolutely impossible and is as irrational as to wish that the sun would rise in the west. (FW)
Every good is essentially relative; for it has its essential nature only in its relation to a desiring will. Accordingly, absolute good is a contradiction; highest good, summum bonum, signifies the same thing, namely in reality a final satisfaction of the will, after which no fresh willing would occur; a last motive, the attainment of which would give the will an imperishable satisfaction [...] For the will there is no permanent fulfillment which completely and for ever satisfies its craving (WWR).
We may, metaphorically and figuratively [emphasis mine], call the complete self-effacement and denial of the will, true will-lessness, [...] the absolute good, the summum bonum (WWR).
It seems that if Schopenhauer's ethical philosophy were consistently and rigorously applied, birth would stop as a result of sex stopping. That can be seen as a kind of practical anti-natalism, which is perhaps more powerful than a theoretical anti-natalism ever can be.
Nowadays when sexual activity and birth are becoming slowly uncoupled, this might have to be qualified. But I don't think it would be a stretch to say that the denial of the Will is also incompatible with purposeful impregnation or generation of new life in any way, since the Will is the Will to life. — The Great Whatever
Nothing will change unless that orientation with the world, innate though it may be at first, is cognitively problematized and practically overturned. What is the difference between an anti-natalist who engages in protected sex or consumes pornography and a natalist who engages in procreative sex? Nothing, so far as the will is concerned. Both are still firmly mired in the primordial delusion. — Thorongil
Schopenhauer would not have viewed birth as something to be celebrated — darthbarracuda
So he definitely did not think highly of birth. — darthbarracuda
Seems to me that his anachronistic antinatalism was more of a result of his pessimism — darthbarracuda
he wasn't willing to get his hands dirty — darthbarracuda
but as a man failed to change anything significantly in society — darthbarracuda
the greatness of a man depends on the impact he has on history — darthbarracuda
To me, it conjures up images of riots, protests, steaming radicals and angsty teens, which at least to myself leave a bitter taste in my mouth. But maybe, like Schopenhauer, I just don't have the guts or resolve to get involved. I don't know. — darthbarracuda
genuine asceticism just seems to be navel-gazing self-denial. — darthbarracuda
It's nice to think that you and everyone else can achieve some kind of transcendence or escape from the will, but all it reminds me of are those soccer moms who are obsessed with detoxing their gut and getting acupuncture for their "spirit" or whatever. — darthbarracuda
I do not believe asceticism and the denial of the will is practical nor achievable, but for some it seems to provide a fragile dream of cleanliness. The very idea of escaping the will is enough to keep the ascetic going. While the optimist looks to the stars and is blind to where he's walking, the ascetic looks to the stars to ignore and avoid looking at the ground. But both are stuck on the ground. — darthbarracuda
But I doubt we can get rid of it except in short episodes of contemplation or sleep. — darthbarracuda
We need to be clear. Did he not think highly of 1) choosing to procreate or 2) the fetus exiting the mother's womb? My point was that, while he did not approve of the former, he had no strong opinions on the latter and so cannot be said to be "against birth" or some such facile formulation, which, again, is the formulation of anti-natalism. — Thorongil
And what does getting one's hands dirty look like? Becoming a professor? Schopenhauer did that. Climbing mountains in the alps? Schopenhauer did that. Feeling compassion toward animals, such as horses? Schopenhauer did that, though did not go mad when in close contact with them. Let's please not believe Nietzsche's own propaganda. He was just as much if not more of a miserable recluse as Schopenhauer was. That being said, I think allegations of Schopenhauer's supposed "decadence" and "hypocrisy" are rather overblown. — Thorongil
This never was, nor would ever be, Schopenhauer's intention. If you think it is, then you simply haven't read him carefully or understood him. — Thorongil
If by "great" we mean "wise," this is most assuredly false. — Thorongil
It's not about guts or resolve. It's about recognizing human nature and as a result not wasting one's time chasing rainbows in the desert. — Thorongil
Then you're going to have to delineate what "genuine asceticism" is. — Thorongil
I think this is an absurd comparison. — Thorongil
A clever but still wrong analogy. It's precisely by virtue of looking at both the stars and the ground and finding no great difference between the two in terms of their emptiness that the ascetic rejects them. — Thorongil
I see no reason to doubt. If the will is outside of time, space, and causality, and so is absolutely free to affirm or deny itself, which is also to say that it is groundless, then there is and can be no reason why it cannot deny itself. The will, therefore, would have to be other than it is to warrant doubt. Remember also that the denial of the will does not mean the annihilation or destruction of the will. It cannot be destroyed for the reason just given, that it is outside of the causal nexus. A synonym Schopenhauer frequently uses to describe said denial is "quieting." The will is calmed, such that one no longer suffers from it. Some degree of asceticism is inevitable in order to achieve this, but it need not take the form of a half-starved forest sadhu, unless one's character is such that starving oneself in a forest is the only way to break the will's grip. There is the general salvation of the denial of the will, and then the personal salvation of individuals according to their character. — Thorongil
It's the decision to bring another life into the world — darthbarracuda
a fetus exiting the mother's womb or by C-section or elsewhere — darthbarracuda
Both Schopenhauer and the antinatalist would agree that since the fetus exiting the mother's womb is part of the process of creating a new sentient organism, and since both would agree that creating a new sentient organism is not to be advised, then the fetus exiting the mother's womb is by proxy also not advisable. — darthbarracuda
Would you say there is difference between murder and the exiting of a bullet from a gun aimed at a person's head? — darthbarracuda
For the bullet, its exiting the gun barrel has a disvalue if it's oriented towards a person's head. — darthbarracuda
A baby exiting the mother's womb has disvalue if it is a necessary cause to the baby becoming fully sentient - in which case, all birth is disvalue because birth, ceteris paribus, involves the creation of a sentient organism. — darthbarracuda
"don't create children" — darthbarracuda
Whether you agree with Nietzsche or not, he changed the world. — darthbarracuda
meanwhile he went out and partied with friends and had a bastard child with a woman he later left, all the while claiming that asceticism was the path to enlightenment. These are not the actions of an ascetic. — darthbarracuda
None of this matters in the philosophy room — darthbarracuda
I could easily just say that you clearly haven't read Nietzsche carefully or understood him — darthbarracuda
You are not, to my knowledge, an expert on Schopenhauer, and I see no reason to believe your interpretation over my own unless you provide more justification. — darthbarracuda
I don't get this quote. — darthbarracuda
the Will controls you — darthbarracuda
But sooner or later you'll have to eat, sooner or later you'll have to take a shit, sooner or later you'll have to pay the bills. — darthbarracuda
False. I really don't know why you and others wish to force Schopenhauer into being what he is not, that is to say, a utilitarian. Consequences of actions, so far as their moral worth is considered, do not concern him in the least. It is the motive of the action that counts, as I have already explained, and alas, must explain again below. — Thorongil
Except that you never seem to tire of bringning it up even though no one asked you to! Why do you do that? — Thorongil
I haven't made any substantive claims about Nietzsche thus far, except to say that it would probably be a mistake to anachronistically label him a fascist, to which it appears you agree. So you would have no grounds for such a claim. — Thorongil
What counts as being an expert to you? Having three special letters next to your name? I know you're not that patronizing. The simple fact is that Schopenhauer never intended to change the world. He had little to no interest in politics, remarking that he minded not the times but the eternities. He was appalled by the revolution of 1848 and disavowed all utopian projects, optimistic creeds, and historicist philosophies, such as those operant in that revolution, as well as thought that the notion of progress is a myth in light of human nature and that salvation did not result from affirming the will or attempting to change the material conditions of the world, but came from within, as an internal reorientation toward the world. For these and other reasons, which ought to become rather apparent after a mere cursory reading of his works and biography, it could not be more false to say he "failed to change anything significantly in society." One cannot fail at what one never intended to achieve, and put no stock in achieving, in the first place! — Thorongil
It means that all the resolve in the world won't budge the brick wall that is human nature. I'm saying you sound like a utopian when you chastise yourself for not doing more or not have the guts to put anti-natalism "into practice." It's best that remains a bitter taste in your mouth. — Thorongil
Wrong. "You" are the will. — Thorongil
Based on this and your other comments on asceticism, you still seem to be under the impression that the denial of the will results in one being whisked away to some paradise and thus in one's disappearance from the world. No. It merely describes the will being calmed to such an extent that one no longer suffers from it. It's a change in perspective, not ontology. So it would be misleading to think that the denial of the will only occurs when in meditation or some such activity. On the contrary, if one has attained the denial of the will, it can remain denied even when eating, defecating, and paying the bills. Denying it means ceasing to be attached to these things, rather than the ceasing of these things altogether. — Thorongil
If it's the motive that counted, he wouldn't have called lovers monsters that continued the suffering, since parents don't usually wish to inflict harm upon their children. He clearly had some tendency to look at the big picture and realize that the consequence of birth is bad. — darthbarracuda
So if the motive is not to inflict harm upon the child, what is the motive? To create another life? Why is creating another life bad?....ah, the consequences of life! — darthbarracuda
??? Why are you so aggressive? Calm down, jesus. Everywhere I go it seems like there's always someone getting overly defensive of their hero.
I was reacting to what you had previously stated about Schop's hypocrisy being over-blown...so it seems like you started this. — darthbarracuda
You said that Nietzsche got practically everything wrong and was a sickly and miserable propagandist. That's pretty damn substantial and an attack on the personality traits on Nietzsche. — darthbarracuda
THIS is why I don't think he would like being labeled an anti-natalist: He wasn't interested in going public, like you said. He wasn't interested in trying to change things, since trying to change things would be an optimism. He didn't fail, partly because he didn't really try. He was world-weary and lacked any faith in humanity or the world at large and so was content with simply observing the human condition and not trying to do anything about it. — darthbarracuda
Perhaps I am idealistic. But perhaps you're apathetic. — darthbarracuda
I'm only an antinatalist in that I don't think having children is recommended — darthbarracuda
I am a manifestation of the Will - controlled by the Will. — darthbarracuda
And I contend that nobody can calm the Will without considerable sacrifices. — darthbarracuda
Whether he advocated a positive thesis on the immorality of birth, that's certainly up for debate. — darthbarracuda
True, that language comes close to a moral indictment, but in order to read him with any consistency, we are forced to admit, based on the great weight of evidence from his ethical writings, wherein he is at pains to very precisely define what he means by terms like "good," bad," right," "wrong," etc, that parents, on the whole, do no wrong in having children. One would have to throw out this great weight of careful analysis merely in order to accommodate an imprecise line of exuberant metaphor. Schopenhauer cannot mean, therefore, that parents or lovers in general commit wrongdoing. — Thorongil
I might seem aggressive, for which I apologize, because it seems like there's always someone who, when discussing Schopenhauer, brings up the alleged fact that he didn't practice what he preached. I think that charge overblown, yes, and I'm also tired of hearing it. Focus on the arguments rather than character assassination. — Thorongil
I think apathy is the wrong word, for it again implies some kind of failure on one's part. To wish for the impossible is foolish, as Schopenhauer notes above. In the present case, to wish for human beings to voluntarily stop procreating is to wish for the impossible and so foolish. The opposite of foolishness is not apathy but wisdom. Therefore, it is wise not to try to put one's anti-procreative stance into practice. — Thorongil
If anti-natalism is the position that claims that having children is not recommended, then I am an anti-natalist and Schopenhauer is too. But the definition online states that it is the philosophical position that assigns a negative value to birth. — Thorongil
Good, so you admit it's a possibility. That it takes considerable sacrifices is obvious. There's a line from a web page I like which reads: "we so dislike the idea of asceticism - or rather, the will so dislikes the idea - that we have a hard time seeing the obvious-ness of the solution." And what is asceticism, for Schopenhauer? The deliberate breaking of the will by refusing the agreeable and looking for the disagreeable. So no, you will never attain to the denial of the will so long as you keep dismissing it as too hard or unpalatable. That's proof not of the impossibility of the denial of the will, but the grip the will still has on you. — Thorongil
Antinatalism does not have to be a moral condemnation of birth — darthbarracuda
Schopenhauer asks us whether or not giving birth is a rational action — darthbarracuda
He clearly did not think we should have children, and since morality for him largely stems from compassion, he would have thought that if we had compassion for our children, then we wouldn't have them. — darthbarracuda
The difference between Schop and modern antinatalism is, again, whether or not they are supportive of political action. — darthbarracuda
Coming from an EA advocate — darthbarracuda
there isn't much excuse to not get involved in the world's affairs in some way. Intentions easily reduce to action or lack thereof. — darthbarracuda
Now originally AN was supposed to be about the negative value of birth, but it has since grown to include any and all pessimistic ideas about birth. — darthbarracuda
I just don't see what the big deal is. Who's who and what's what, it's just a semantic debate. Schopenhauer had a family resemblance and influenced future pessimists. Do we really need to go further? Is the legacy and portrait of Schopenhauer really at risk by calling him an antinatalist? — darthbarracuda
Substitute in "suicide" for "asceticism" and you'll see why I find this to be an impossible pipe dream. — darthbarracuda
The idea that asceticism can relieve us of the Will and suffering for extended periods of time strikes me as an undocumented, optimistic pipe dream. — darthbarracuda
The definition online disagrees. — Thorongil
Suicide for him is not immoral but foolish, for the reason that the suicide does not harm anyone else but is still deluded about the outcome of his action. Likewise, having children is not immoral but foolish. — Thorongil
EA? — Thorongil
This is correct. — Thorongil
then perhaps we ought to make a new term — darthbarracuda
How can an action be foolish but not immoral? Foolishness implies not rational, and rational decisions are based upon expected value outcomes. Therefore, a foolish decision can be an immoral decision. — darthbarracuda
And certainly he would have thought that a person who lacks compassion is to be condemned — darthbarracuda
It would be immoral only so long as the agent is aware of said foolishness. Otherwise, no, it would not be an immoral decision. You're still confused about the role of intentionality and about the difference between instrumental and moral goodness. — Thorongil
Why do the person's intentions have any importance, except by means of assigning guilt? — darthbarracuda
we certainly shouldn't just allow it to happen, unless we're damn sure nothing will come of it if we try to get involved. — darthbarracuda
Should we just allow them to continue to eat meat? — darthbarracuda
And modern human beings who do not require children to help take care of them have no excuse for having children. — darthbarracuda
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