I don't think that's enough because life would still remain on Earth. Perhaps evolution has led to this moment? Earth created life capable of destroying all life so that it could finally be free. We must complete our mission. — Judaka
I think we have a moral obligation as an intelligent species to end the suffering of the other animals which lack the capacity. — Judaka
I think human suffering could be reduced in different ways without total antinatalism and that would be better than the current situation. — Andrew4Handel
We could, but who wants a great project when there's so much pleasure to be had in small projects? — Moliere
There could be some calculus by which increased suffering of a mass of lives in the short term warrants a quickening of the end of life in the long term. — Nils Loc
Because great projects usually end in disappointment and frustration, whereas small projects are more often successful -- and thereby pleasurable. — Moliere
Von Hartmann is a pessimist, for no other view of life recognizes that evil necessarily belongs to existence and can cease only with existence itself. But he is not an unmitigated pessimist.[5] The individual's happiness is indeed unattainable either here and now or hereafter and in the future, but he does not despair of ultimately releasing the Unconscious from its sufferings. He differs from Schopenhauer in making salvation collective by the negation of the will to live depend on a collective social effort and not on individualistic asceticism. The conception of a redemption of the Unconscious also supplies the ultimate basis of von Hartmann's ethics. We must provisionally affirm life and devote ourselves to social evolution, instead of striving after a happiness which is impossible; in so doing we shall find that morality renders life less unhappy than it would otherwise be. Suicide, and all other forms of selfishness, are highly reprehensible. His realism enables him to maintain the reality of Time, and so of the process of the world's redemption.[4]
The essential feature of the morality built upon the basis of Hartmann's philosophy is the realization that all is one and that, while every attempt to gain happiness is illusory, yet before deliverance is possible, all forms of the illusion must appear and be tried to the utmost. Even he who recognizes the vanity of life best serves the highest aims by giving himself up to the illusion, and living as eagerly as if he thought life good. It is only through the constant attempt to gain happiness that people can learn the desirability of nothingness; and when this knowledge has become universal, or at least general, deliverance will come and the world will cease. No better proof of the rational nature of the universe is needed than that afforded by the different ways in which men have hoped to find happiness and so have been led unconsciously to work for the final goal. The first of these is the hope of good in the present, the confidence in the pleasures of this world, such as was felt by the Greeks. This is followed by the Christian transference of happiness to another and better life, to which in turn succeeds the illusion that looks for happiness in progress, and dreams of a future made worth while by the achievements of science. All alike are empty promises, and known as such in the final stage, which sees all human desires as equally vain and the only good in the peace of Nirvana.[5] — Wikipedia article
Who’s going to take care of us when we’re 90 if people stop procreating? Bet you didn’t think of that. — Noah Te Stroete
that is to simply not have future people. — schopenhauer1
And then there will be no more humans whinging about the misery of existence. — Bitter Crank
I like life and I'm glad I am alive and the vast majority of humans agree with me, so your argument stops right there. — NKBJ
Who’s going to take care of us when we’re 90 if people stop procreating? Bet you didn’t think of that. — Noah Te Stroete
We are working hard to do a good job of it. Our homeland planet is heating up; insect populations are crashing; big mammals are going extinct. Soon for us the way of the dodo bird. — Bitter Crank
Not a good excuse to use people. That has been a theme of mine actually. People shouldn't be born to be used by society. — schopenhauer1
Life is the big old monster that is the basis of all else- including suffering. — schopenhauer1
. The great human project can be that which unites us against the principle of procreating more life. This can be our great cause. It is an inversion of the usual trope that life is always good- including the pain. Humanity can finally say, "ENOUGH!" and do something about it, by non-action - that is to simply not have future people. — schopenhauer1
Well, because it's too broad. I'm anti murdering people, anti raping them and various other things, but "suffering" is too general/broad. A lot of things it's applied to by a lot of folks are things that I don't agree are bad, especially not morally bad or bad in a manner that suggests doing any and everything imaginable to avoid it. — Terrapin Station
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