Because Antinatalists are Materialists — Michael Ossipoff
.I think that most antinatalists take issue with parents’ reasons or lack of reasons for having children.
.Which then undermines the meaning making process for the individual. The irrationality of attitudes towards procreating and parenting then leads to fear and a sense of abandonment.
.My parents life meaning and my experiences and desires are seriously at odds.
.I would like to be optimistic for the future
The moral principle of preventing suffering is a byproduct of humanity’s life affirming orientation across an enormous span of time. It exists in a context. It is not a standalone axiom of the universe. To turn it against life itself is mere rhetorical sleight of hand and this is plainly obvious to most of us. — Roke
When wasn’t I? — Michael Ossipoff
Your subconscious attributes, inclinations, wants, needs, predispositions at the end of this life determine what kind of a world is consistent with the person that you (subconsciously) are. Consistency is the requirement of experience-stories, because there are no mutually-inconsistent facts. — Michael Ossipoff
Not necessarily. I’d say probably not. A physical world is bound by logic, not made-to-order, and must operate according to its physical laws. So P2 is far from certain. — Michael Ossipoff
No, not at all. I’ve given two good reasons for Antinatalism. — Michael Ossipoff
They were just a cog in the mechanism of the physical world. You might as well blame our galaxy for your birth, or the Big-Bang. I'm not denying that your parents had a role, but not uniquely. You're giving them too much credit. — Michael Ossipoff
But if there's no need for life, then why does Schopenhauer1 think that there's need for things in life? — Michael Ossipoff
You seem to be objecting to the fact that there’s such a thing as life. To whom is that objection addressed — Michael Ossipoff
Then what is the point of railing at that obvious inevitability?? In fact what even is the meaning of that railing? — Michael Ossipoff
But, you not being a Materialist, and given the things that you said in your reply just before this message, then, if your physical world isn't necessarily metaphysically-prior to you, then doesn't that mean that Antinatalists are attributing unrealistically-much ontological-creative-power to their parents? — Michael Ossipoff
What? Things that we like are an opportunity, not something compelled on us. That's how everyone but a very few Antinatalists and Absurdists view it. — Michael Ossipoff
It's meaningless to speak of that situation as something that has been done to some pre-existing someone. — Michael Ossipoff
The definition of suffering is that it isn't great. Suffering =/= pain. Masochists think pain is great. Suffering is whatever you don't think is great — khaled
.”When wasn’t I [a Hindu]?” — Michael Ossipoff
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You never ever implied that people get reborn NOR that where they get reborn is dictated by their morality.
.Those are two MASSIVE speculations. Nothing in your framework says those have to be the case.
.”Your subconscious attributes, inclinations, wants, needs, predispositions at the end of this life determine what kind of a world is consistent with the person that you (subconsciously) are. Consistency is the requirement of experience-stories, because there are no mutually-inconsistent facts.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Who says those subconscious attributes remain after death?...That’s another massive speculation not substantiated by your own framework.
.I thought more along the lines of Nietzsche’s repeating lives in thus spoke Zarathustra
.”Not necessarily. I’d say probably not. A physical world is bound by logic, not made-to-order, and must operate according to its physical laws. So P2 is far from certain.” — Michael Ossipoff
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It IS certain.
.What’s illogical about a world with no pain? Even if you think it’s not certain…
.I’d say you can agree that it IS certain that there are worlds with less pain than this one.
.”No, not at all. I’ve given two good reasons for Antinatalism.” — Michael Ossipoff
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Ok then why did you reply to a post that was about finding arguments AGAINST antinatalism lol?
.Final note, I’m still in utter disagreement with your metaphysics
.…as it makes way too many presumptions for no reason
.…but this is not the thread for that.
There can be no objective truth in what is inherently subjective. Antinatalism, if I'm correct, needs, for it to make its case, suffering and pain to be objective facts.
Some people, like antinatalists, find life to be miserable but some find life enjoyable and worth it.
We need to be objective about this if we're to make a judgment as to who is right. However, this isn't possible for the simple reason that people's values differ both in type and degree. You don't tell people not to eat chocolate because you don't like it. Some people will. There's no objectivity antinatalism, if you ask me. — TheMadFool
That is to say that if we compiled the opinions of millions of people across various cultures and took the average of those opinions, we would get the closest approximation of the actual objective human preference. — TheHedoMinimalist
You're forwarding an argumentum ad populum. — Terrapin Station
I’ve been saying those things since my arrival at The Philosophy Forum. — Michael Ossipoff
…though I never claimed proof that there’s reincarnation — Michael Ossipoff
No pain whatsoever for anyone is a big, big thing to postulate for physical beings in a physical world operating by its own physical law, where the physical perception of an immediate &/or urgent need to avoid serious injury is called “pain”. — Michael Ossipoff
Actually, Ontic-Structural Subjective Idealism makes no assumptions or presumptions whatsoever, and posits no brute-facts (…unlike Materialism.) — Michael Ossipoff
The (Materialist) world that they believe in is indeed absurd. — Michael Ossipoff
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