That's a good point in that "preventing suffering" is incoherent if no one exists.People need to exist for preventing suffering to amount to anything at all. — Terrapin Station
What? I need to go back and read whatever post this is supposed to be referring to, but "the more 'absolute' and stronger moral argument" isn't going to follow from anything. — Terrapin Station
The only way any moral stances are "justified" period is by someone feeling however they do. — Terrapin Station
That's what I pick up from what you are saying. What I'm getting at is that the injunction "prevent suffering" is developed in a world of people, people who are real, who feel suffering. So universal birth-prevention undermines the very basis on which such an injunction is formulated -- and therefore does not prevent suffering as much as it annihilates our ability to prevent suffering in the first place, and so does not fulfill the (commonly accepted) injunction. Universal birth-prevention is aimed at, given its consequences, the feelings of people who will not exist, which is absurd given that our ethical actions are not normally directed at what will not exist.
With birth comes real suffering, but without it comes nothing at all. — Moliere
↪Terrapin Station
@khaled has said that he is interested in arguments, from the negative utilitarian position, that would counter the AN argument, and that he personally does not subscribe to this view. — Moliere
I wasn't addressing you. — schopenhauer1
I've already explained my position on that. — schopenhauer1
Someone needs to learn how public boards work. ;-)
If you want to address just one person, private message them. — Terrapin Station
That's fine, but I'm going to point out the facts when you seem to suggest stuff that's wrong. — Terrapin Station
Yes, I know how they work. Certain people want to post like a troll to incite rather than insight. — schopenhauer1
One argument is that by preventing people, the injunction itself is annihilated. I just don't see the problem. If there are no people, the injunction is unnecessary. As long as there is the option for procreation, would this be an issue. This is supposed to be some sort of "tree falls in the woods" conundrum that I don't think really has any bearing because as stated, only in cases of decisions of procreation exist does the injunction matter. Otherwise, it's not an issue. — schopenhauer1
The other argument is that it does not fulfill commonly accepted injunctions of aiming at things that do exist, but rather it aims at the feelings of people who will not exist. Again, I don't see a problem. The people that could exist will suffer, don't have make this condition an actuality. It is odd because it is about procreation which is the only instance when life as a whole can be considered rather than various decisions of someone who is already born. This is not about improving or getting a better angle on some issue in this or that situation, but situations as a whole. That does make this unique which is why I see it as THE philosophical issue, more important than other ethical matters. Should we expose new people to suffering is the issue? However, what other priorities should take place. You didn't propose anything, but if the answer is other than harm, clearly an agenda is there, unstated. The agenda could be to form a family, to watch a new person overcome the adversities of life, etc. Either way, the parent is wanting something to happen from this birth. The non-intuitive notion, that is still valid despite being non-intuitive or unfamiliar, is that anything other than preventing harm does not need to take place, if there was no actual person to need that particular agenda to take place. — schopenhauer1
But here again I think we can see why it is the anti-natalist argument tends to fall on deaf ears. Why does it matter that we are able to evalaute the entirety of life? And, in fact, don't most persons view the entirety of life as a good thing? Perhaps if they thought suffering was so bad that any amount of it is a good reason to eliminate it by any means necessary they wouldn't think so. But most people are more tolerant of the existence of suffering than this. To the point that, in spite of life being full of suffering -- and I am not at all convinced that there is more pleasure than suffering in life, so please don't mistake me as giving the usual utilitarian retort that the pleasure outweighs suffering -- we also value life as an end unto itself. — Moliere
And also I really don't think I'm misrepresenting you at all in saying that your target isn't suffering as much as it is life itself. As you say -- procreation is the only instance when life as a whole can be considered. So your target is life, not suffering -- suffering, in any amount, is what makes life bad, for you, but your injunction is not "prevent suffering" as much as it is "prevent life, because any suffering at all is bad, and this is the only way to eliminate suffering".
Does that strike you as right or wrong, in terms of my depiction of your argument? — Moliere
Ultimately, they aren’t the reason why I was born, or why I was born in a world like this one — Michael Ossipoff
But I suggest that there’s no reason why anyone would be born into a societal-world like this one, unless they’d gotten themselves into a major moral-snarl, over a number of lifetimes, digging themselves deeper each time. — Michael Ossipoff
Wait. Right there you’re saying a contradiction. That’s contrary to the definition and nature of hypothetical stories. There are infinitely-many, and there are all of them, including the bad societal worlds in which hardly anyone is an anti-natalist. … — Michael Ossipoff
So, I agree with anti-natalism in that sense. — Michael Ossipoff
The only way birth can be moral is if the parent is committed to doing assisted suicide to his child if he asks and can't do it himself. Even if it's illegal. Also it is immoral for the parent to try to prevent his offspring from committing suicide if it's a level headed decision and must assist him/her with it. — khaled
If you risk someone else's well-being in an attempt to improve your own and it doesn't work out, you owe that person to return them to their previous state. — khaled
The answer is obviously not because it's just like the gun example, the problem isn't the "giving birth" part it's the "they'll suffer if you do" part. Just like the problem isn't the "pull your finger back part" but the "they'll die" part — khaled
Well, if life itself didn't have suffering, then that wouldn't be a target. What is it about life itself that needs to be carried out in light of the fact that no one needs anything if there is no one there to care or be deprived in the first place? That is my question to you? Isn't it all about the projection of the parent in any of these cases you could possibly present? Why does the child have to bear out this projection? — schopenhauer1
By entirety of life, I mean, you have the unique ability to prevent suffering for an entire life. — schopenhauer1
This valuing life as an end unto itself you mention as a reason, can stand in place of the "agenda" the parents have in mind when creating a child. In this case, life itself is the agenda, and the child is the bearer for this agenda. The child needs to be born in order for the agenda to be carried forward- that is life itself. Why does life itself need to be experienced by a person though?
There are things, probably lots of things, you would not like forced on you as an adult.
Now it seems your using the excuse of the child's initial non existence to impose these on someone. — Andrew4Handel
For example I was forced to go to church several times the week my entire childhood which was a grim joyless environment and read the bible and pray every day. As an adult I have never chosen to do anything like that. It is something I would never chose but my status as a child meant I was powerless. — Andrew4Handel
It is not acceptable to rape someone when they are unconscious because of the impact when they become conscious. — Andrew4Handel
Even if someone is not an antinatalist they can accept that the child did not chose to be born — Andrew4Handel
There is nothing about life itself that needs to be carried out, because needs only happen within life -- just like suffering only happens in life. Valuing life isn't an ends-to-means kind of care, so it doesn't make sense that the child is "saddled" with the desires of some parent just by the mere fact that they are born. — Moliere
Not to mention that this is kind of far astray from suffering and has more to do with valuing autonomy and individuality. — Moliere
For me, then, this is reverts back to thinking of un-real persons as receiving some kind of benefit, which is just absurd. I'd say that valueing life isn't the sort of value that one is doing for the sake of which -- hence why it seems strange to me to say it's an agenda. The child is not a means to an end. — Moliere
Why does the suffering of a person matter? Why should autonomy figure in our moral reasoning?
Of course there is no why. All reasoning comes to an end, including moral reasoning -- and the sorts of appeals being made here are not being made for some other reason. Suffering is bad, life is good, autonomy should be respected. These aren't values of the ends-means variety, but are the values by which we reason about how to act. They are a kind of terminus to moral or ethical reasoning.
The big difference here is not an answer to these questions, but the degree of attachment you happen to feel to these sorts of things. You don't feel attachment to life, or at least not enough to balance out your attachment to the badness of suffering -- suffering is so bad, and a necessary part of life, that life does not have value for you to the degree it has for others.
But is there really an answer you can provide to the answer of "why?" other than that suffering is really, really bad? — Moliere
but what does it matter to a person not born in the first place? — schopenhauer1
Do not "saddle" a child with the burdens of life by procreating them into existence is the argument. — schopenhauer1
Exactly! :D It does not matter until the child is born. Mattering can only happen if there is a someone. There is a cost associated with your axiology -- the cost is life. And people do, in fact, value life. For yourself this seems like no cost because life is not worth much. But for most that is just not so. — Moliere
There isn't an agenda, it's just something considered vauable -- that has currency. So it's not about a deprivation or a benefit to some non-entity. Valuing life isn't really about what we are doing to non-entities. The consideration isn't about saddling or burdening someone else with the horrrors of life. — Moliere
Life itself is just valuable, so procreation is as a relative good. That's the whole of it. Just like suffering has no real why behind it, but is generally seen as something that is worthwhile to avoid, prevent, or lessen. — Moliere
Just a quick side-note -- valuing life unto itself differs from thinking that we should experience life, too. We do, after all, keep people in a vegetative state because we value life, even though they do not have experience -- certainly with some hopes that they'll come back to us, but this is just to note that the experiential angle isn't exactly what I'm getting at by saying people value life. — Moliere
That is the asymmetry part of the argument. — schopenhauer1
Do not "saddle" a child with the burdens of life by procreating them into existence is the argument. — schopenhauer1
if a child does note experience whatever X agenda (pleasure, experience for its own sake, etc.) that is no loss for the potential child, — schopenhauer1
What I think gives strength to this argument over all others is the fact that there is NO COST. There is NO COST because no actual person is deprived of goods, — schopenhauer1
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