I think that the 'predominance' of suffering in life takes secondary importance. The fact that there is suffering that we need to overcome in the first place should at least be a matter of great concern -- more so given that a majority of humanity ignorantly/haphazardly create new beings who will inevitably experience this. — OglopTo
But the view that life cannot offer the meaning that is sought for is one-sided. Apparently Zapffe thinks life does not have what he is looking for, but perhaps he is defeating himself from the start by virtue of his prejudices, or is looking in the wrong places, or in the wrong ways, or asking the wrong questions. — John
I, on the other hand, currently believe that either there is no value/purpose/meaning in life or it is beyond human comprehension. — OglopTo
Preventing suffering does nothing to make the suffering which has already occurred better. For anyone who has suffered, the world is still just as bad as it ever was. Suffering is still unresolved where it counts. — TheWillowOfDarkness
But there obviously is, so you must be seeking some special kind of meaning. The ordinary type is good enough for me.
It seems as though you're setting yourself up for failure by setting out on a wild goose chase. — Sapientia
Do you not at least agree that all of the lives that would be worth living are of greater importance than the rationale for bringing them into the world? Aren't the results more important? — Sapientia
Most people do not regret being alive and would choose to continue living because they think that it's worthwhile. Are they lying or mistaken? I believe them over you. — Sapientia
Yes, you can say that. Only, I have stopped actively seeking it or desiring that I'll ever find it. — OglopTo
I only see the struggle for nothing ala Sisyphus -- there are no results, especially not important results.
It's tragic, in my view, to perpetuate this. — OglopTo
I wouldn't want this to come from me (it sounds elitist), but the following comes to mind: the unexamined life is not worth living. — OglopTo
Sure, it helps to seek guidance from others in forming one's worldview, but ultimately, one has to find one's own version of 'truth' for oneself. — OglopTo
Suffering is not absolved in death, only prevented from occurring again. Our end does not provide a transcendent victory over suffering. Those who lived still had horrible lives. — TheWillowOfDarkness
That's the transcendent fiction talking. In this understanding, you are ignoring the suffering of the living and treating like the absence of future suffering solves the problem. — TheWillowOfDarkness
What of the people desperate to have children? An anti-natalist policy only makes them suffer. Even as a personal responsibility, for it would be akin to someone denying an integral part of their identity-- how would you feel if you felt an obligation not to be a philosophical pessimist, yet still had the same feelings about suffering? — TheWillowOfDarkness
The end of life being a preferable/rational option doesn't help their suffering, no matter how ethical it might be. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Suffering cannot be minimised. Any instance of suffering is too great. Not even the absence of any future suffering can help. If we are to prevent suffering, it's not as an absolution or minimising of suffering which is occur. Rather, it is about preventing the instances of suffering themselves. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I don't see how I am. People are suffering, and they will continue to do so while they are alive. It's akin to taking an aspirin for a headache. You remove the source of suffering. — darthbarracuda
The suffering they experience from not having children does not, necessarily, make up for them having children. Furthermore they wouldn't suffer themselves if they hadn't been born, or had they died earlier. And if death or non-birth is too extreme for this situation, then not having children must not be that big of a deal. — darthbarracuda
It doesn't help their suffering, but it certainly would help them. — darthbarracuda
I don't see why we need to make a distinction between prevention and minimization. They're two sides of the same coin. — darthbarracuda
How is that the statement of a philosophical pessimist who full appreciates the nature of suffering? You've just given every "Suck it up. It's not so bad." excuse philosophical pessimism is trying to expose. — TheWillowOfDarkness
How exactly is a course of action which is suffering for someone helping them? — TheWillowOfDarkness
Minimisation is a lie. It foolishly generalises suffering. Supposedly, there is a certain level of suffering which is acceptable. If only we would "minimise" suffering to a certain level, then it would be all okay-- a suffering-based Utilitarianism if you will. But it's not okay. All instances of suffering are unacceptable. We cannot generalise them into some rule which absolves the problem. Every single instance of suffering hurts too much. We cannot "minimise"-- prevent to get suffering down to an acceptable standard-- only "prevent," avoid individual instances of suffering. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Because I'm also a consequentialist, and I think some actions are worse than others depending on what their consequences are. So I'm not dismissing the suffering of the potential parents, I just don't think it's as important as stopping the creation of future sufferers. — darthbarracuda
Minimization need not necessitate acceptable conditions. Only required moral actions. — darthbarracuda
Your didn't talk about any of that. The comments were directed at how the suffering of the childless family wasn't as bad as they felt it was. In that you aren't making an argument that doing something else is more important. All you were doing is trying to placate them, to say they don't really suffer as they feel.
You weren't stepping forward and saying with honesty: "You ought not have children. The ethical course of action is the agent of your suffering and it ought to be (and so your terrible suffering) to save future life from suffering." Everything went into belittling their suffering rather than recognising it. — TheWillowOfDarkness
But does not the required moral action qualify as an acceptable condition? At least in the way you describe it. The way you speak treats "minimisation" is as if it's a victory over suffering. In the way you describe suffering, you fear it above all else-- if only life would be put to end, then we could finally say the world was at its best. — TheWillowOfDarkness
A sort of deep necessity for a world without suffering, to a point where one might say: "With the presence of suffering, life is meaningless." — TheWillowOfDarkness
I think this is failed pessimism because it causes a turn away from suffering. Since any suffering person is viewed as meaningless wretch for living in suffering, it's more interested in looking to a final "minimising" than it is instances of suffering themselves. — TheWillowOfDarkness
So I can say that the suffering if the poor and ostracised individual "isn't that bad" because someone else is being tortured on the otherwise of the world? That's just dishonesty.Everything went into "belittling" their suffering in order to recognize the existence of a much worse suffering. — darthbarracuda
Think of how Nietzsche saw the under-man sneak his morality into the social sphere and thus "winning" over the ubermensch. It's a fake-victory. Similarly, ceasing procreation and going into extinction is not really victory, it's just deciding not to play the game.
Life is meaningless with or without suffering, suffering just brings this fact out. — darthbarracuda
But suffering is unavoidable. There's no aspirin to give. The very idea of such a drug is incoherent-- we don't have aspirin. We are just pointing out we have a headache.Acknowledging the existence of suffering does not help anyone. If you had aspirin and I had a headache, and you refused to give me aspirin, I'd be pissed. — darthbarracuda
[Not procreating] does not provide a transcendent victory over suffering. Those who lived still had horrible lives. — TheWillowOfDarkness
So I can say that the suffering if the poor and ostracised individual "isn't that bad" because someone else is being tortured on the otherwise of the world? That's just dishonesty.
Suffering isn't defined on some level of scale acceptability. "Worse" or "less" suffering do not define each other. A person who hurts defines the instance of either. — TheWillowOfDarkness
But that's not true. Going extinct isn't a fake victory over future suffering. It's actual. In such a world, there is no longer anyone who suffers. In acting to go extinct, we have achieved this world. We've played the game and, in terms of the world after we are dead, won a victory. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I'd also be more pissed if I had a headache and someone insisted I wasn't in pain at all. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If recognising the existence suffering is of no use, then it has no ethical relevance. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The "myth" is not that it's all pointless, that nothing is worthwhile, but the idea we were ever aiming for anything except our own existence-- up-to and including our own death. — TheWillowOfDarkness
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