Am I do see you as an oracle, proclaiming the truths of reality? Of course I believe what I think is reasonable. — darthbarracuda
LOL. I listen to the science. Sue me. — apokrisis
LOL. I listen to the science. Sue me. — apokrisis
How do you "divine" Natural Law would be the first question. — schopenhauer1
Either you go with the subjectivity being expressed by all you anti-natalists - where your personal preferences are treated as a self-evident moral ought - or you are prepared to follow the natural philosophy route that became the pragmatic scientific method. — apokrisis
So mine is the evidence-demanding approach that stands against your subjective articles of faith. :) — apokrisis
I thought it funny that you again wheel out a theory about the extremes that people will go to to avoid confronting an end to their lives when you are so busy trying to claim folk would universally be happier never to have been born. — apokrisis
Yet the choice to commit to the "pragmatic route" must also be subjectively motivated, no? — darthbarracuda
I'm fine with you going the pragmatic route, so long as you recognize that this isn't a moral avenue. — darthbarracuda
Your decision to pursue the "scientific" route here is not a God-given decree but probably something to do with your character and background. — darthbarracuda
I dislike how you claim to speak for all scientists on matters outside of the domain of science. — darthbarracuda
I didn't think it relevant, and thought you'd straw man it anyway. — darthbarracuda
But why should I accept your dualism? You can propose it. I simply show its incoherence. — apokrisis
Yet you are fine telling all natalists how they are simply irrational in their delusions about life having a value for them. — apokrisis
There must be a fallacy which is the fallacy of posters hoping to win debates by claiming every possible fallacy that springs to mind once all their other arguments have disintegrated. — apokrisis
So yes, if we go your pragmatism route then many ethical categories don't make sense. I'm saying that's an argument against your pragmatism, and a very powerful one too given your apparent inability to shrug off what you claim is romantic nonsense. — darthbarracuda
So there is a stark choice when it comes to metaphysics. You can be like me, or be like you. — apokrisis
God is dead. He never lived. Moral dilemmas can only find a grounding context in Nature itself. Get used to it. ;) — apokrisis
God didn't ground morality so much as he limited it. — darthbarracuda
When God is dead, humans are confronted with a vast sense of moral responsibility, being the sole reservoirs with any moral sense in the universe. — darthbarracuda
A constraint??? :gasp: — apokrisis
Alternatively, there is Naturalism. Wave goodbye to the Big Daddy in the sky, say hello Mama Nature. — apokrisis
Why wouldn't we want to understand life and mind, hence even morality, as natural phenomena? What good argument do you have on that? — apokrisis
Because morality is oftentimes diametrically opposed to the natural. — darthbarracuda
A morality based on the natural world would be a non-morality, akin to basing morality on a deity that, by any modern standard of morality, is a twisted psycho. — darthbarracuda
Yeah. And what would Nature be diametrically opposed to here. The Artificial? The Unnatural? The Supernatural? Which of these is your chosen basis for moral imperatives? What makes them better, exactly? — apokrisis
I might ask the same of your naturalism. — darthbarracuda
There's a common trend in philosophical trends around the globe that see the Good as transcending the material and/or natural realm, often in a spiritual way. — darthbarracuda
Antinatalism, in a philosophical pessimistic sense, is a spiritual position in that it tries to deny the immanent, natural world in favor of an alternate reality - typically Nothing. — darthbarracuda
Do you ever think all the suffering on Earth since day uno of its inception maybe isn't a good thing? — darthbarracuda
Apokrisis has failed to provide a convincing reason why we should see nature as fundamentally agreeable and right. — darthbarracuda
The attempts of apokrisis are therefore quite futile, since he doesn't understand that his fundamental assumption of the goodness of nature is precisely what naturalism is incapable of grounding... — Thorongil
Again, I never said Nature is fundamentally good. It is what it is. And we get to make it what it is - for us - to an increasing extent. — apokrisis
Yeah. The Romantic turns around to Science and says you have proved everything is in fact nothing. Existence is random and meaningless. Therefore - as a disappointed child addressing its cold-hearted parent - I want to die! I want my revenge of taking your nothingness and demanding it right now for everyone! — apokrisis
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