Combining your DNA and you partners is using physical forces to make someone exist. — Andrew4Handel
Yes, but that's not using force on someone — Terrapin Station
There is no sense in which the child is choosing or that nature is forcing the parent automatically or that the child has expressed a preference and made a contract. — Andrew4Handel
Sure, that sounds right. But I emphasize that you, as the protagonist/experiencer, are one of the two complementary components of your experience-story, rather than only a passive result of it. — Michael Ossipoff
Are there any good modern refutations to Global Antinatalism? — OP
Making the child exist is an act of force and then its experiences are forced on it (by its nervous system etc). — Andrew4Handel
It's not an act of force on the child — Terrapin Station
.”Sure, that sounds right. But I emphasize that you, as the protagonist/experiencer, are one of the two complementary components of your experience-story, rather than only a passive result of it.” — Michael Ossipoff
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I understand but that makes having children even MORE immoral. My parents were part of the cause I was born into this world where suffering is possible.
.Now imagine if everyone in every possible life story where suffering is possible decided not to have children (became antinatalists).
.In that case ONLY life stories where no suffering exists would be left.
.Therefore let's start by preventing birth in this world so that fewer people/souls/experiencers whatever you want to call them have to experience the unpleasantness of a life story with pain.
The “if” that you refer to is about a limited separate class of the worlds of “If”. — Michael Ossipoff
It is an act of force that directly impacts the child — Andrew4Handel
it is an act of force to begin somethings existence without its consent. — Andrew4Handel
I don't see how you can describe the creation of a child as not an act of force. — Andrew4Handel
How else do you propose someone do ethics then? Your own ethical rules result in a clear absurdity for me and that is "hiring a hitman is not wrong". I truly don't understand how you can hold this view. What about putting someone in a cage with a starving lion and no defenses? After all, it's the lion that is doing all the work not the person. — khaled
But the belief changes from what is a fairly commonplace belief to something else that rejects the entirety of the world because of suffering. — Moliere
It doesn't directly impact the child prior to or even at the moment of conception. — Terrapin Station
This is rhetorical blather. — schopenhauer1
What agenda would you put above preventing suffering in the unique case of procreation — schopenhauer1
it should be noted that we live in an on average mediocre average universe with a mix and range of harms, goods, and for the most part it is very neutral to mildly annoying/negative for many on a daily basis. — schopenhauer1
The prevention of suffering isn't the belief your anti-natalist position comes from, but rather your belief about the state of the world. It's that there is suffering in the first place, for you at least, that makes the world something worth anihiliating as long as we do so without causing yet even more suffering overtly.
And that's a very different argument than relying upon the belief that suffering is bad and should be prevented (to the extent possible). — Moliere
I purposely said that this is an imperfect argument for the reasons you brought up. Since this is about the state of the world in the sense of stochastic harms and goods that can befall someone in greater or lesser variance it makes the argument hinge on statistics rather than axiological principles of harm. Hence, the more absolute and stronger argument is preventing suffering, period. — schopenhauer1
but it is hard to justify anything other than preventing harm — schopenhauer1
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