I think anyone who try to justify violence should be banned. There should be a zero tolerance for justification of violence, it's easy to argue morally for such a stance — xyz-zyx
I'm not so sure we can as that could be seen as an silent acceptance. — xyz-zyx
My personal opinion is that Judaka should be spoken to about being generally rude, — NKBJ
I'm saying that they have. They have lost out on pleasure.
What makes suffering supersede pleasure in that the existence of suffering means that life should be exterminated, yet the existence of pleasure isn't an equal enough reason for propagating it? It seems to me that the existence of pleasure equally counterbalances your reasons for preventing the propagation of life.
If suffering is a good reason to prevent lives from being created, then how is it that pleasure isn't an equally good reason to create lives? — Harry Hindu
If something hurts the most rational thing to do is to examine it closely, like a doctor, diagnose the problem/affliction and treat it. For someone with my worldview suffering is a symptom of a faulty Weltanschauung. In a world of lemons it's impossible, ergo unreasonable, to look for anything other than lemonade. Plus life isn't always sour/bitter is it?
Therefore, we need to teach ourselves how to increase and prolong the pleasurable and decrease and shorten the pain in our lives. This seems more reasonable than saying life itself is the disease/affliction and needs to be prevented. — TheMadFool
What happens if there is no way around suffering- if it is intractable from the get-go? — schopenhauer1
you should be trying to help them instead, or you think their judgments are on-target, in which case you shouldn't be upset with someone saying something that you think is true. — Terrapin Station
1.the presence of pain is bad;Because of the asymmetry that Benatar mapped out: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Benatar — schopenhauer1
I don't agree with antinatalist views, but I don't agree with your comment here, either.
If something doesn't exist, we can't say it has any properties, potential or otherwise. "They never suffered" is noting that those properties never obtain relative to something nonexistent. Same for "potential happiness never existed." — Terrapin Station
I believe Judaka and Schopenhauer1 perhaps should be banned from this forum. — xyz-zyx
I hope the robot that is going to wipe my ass has a gentle touch. — Noah Te Stroete
What happens if there is no way around suffering- if it is intractable from the get-go? — schopenhauer1
.Life is the big old monster that is the basis of all else
.- including suffering.
.Not being born hurts literally no one.
.We should all be against procreation. It is what causes the suffering. I don't equate suffering itself with procreation, we all know that procreation inevitably leads to suffering. 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.
Benatar's theory is dependent upon morality being objective, when it isn't. Claiming that some state is either good or bad is subjective. — Harry Hindu
If the absence of pain is good, then how is it that pleasure (which is the absence of pain) isn't good as well? Benatar says that it isn't bad. How is that different from saying that it is good? If there is some other state besides suffering and pleasure (maybe a "neither" category), and that state doesn't qualify as suffering, then the asymmetry seems to show that suffering isn't a state that is experienced most, or even half the time, and therefore would be irrational to prevent life from being created. — Harry Hindu
I've been thinking about this one for a while and I believe you are right. There is still something to say of his aversion to talking about positives which I think I was trying to get at here. I don't know. — TogetherTurtle
You say we have no right to interfere in the lives of animals, but we are causing extinctions, and if your argument that it is good to end suffering in general by any means is correct, then that could only be a good thing, because it is obvious that, whether they are aware of it or not, animals suffer too. — Janus
I’m tired of debating Materialists and aggressive-Atheists, but the anti-life question in the Antinatalist threads interests me, and is worthwhile for discussion, because it’s about our impressions about, how we feel about, how things are. …how it affects us in the most meaningful ways. These Antinatalist threads are about the basics of how we feel about life. — Michael Ossipoff
The asymmetry which is a big part of Benatar's antinatalist argument is that absense of "good" is not "bad" unless there is an actual person to be deprived of that good. However, asymmetrically, abscense of bad is good, even if there is no actual person to enjoy this good. — schopenhauer1
Sure, universal choice of contraception or celibacy would be fine, but (as has already been pointed out here), if that were achievable, then more modest proposals, such as a really good societal-world, would be achievable too.
.
I like good sci-fi fantasy, and I’d say that a genuinely good societal-world is a better one than extinction.
.
That’s why I like calendar-reform proposals. ..not because of any claim that they’re achievable, but merely because, as I said, I like good sci-fi fantasy. …and, if there were a “Utopian-Epoch”, a grand triumphal arrival of a completely new and better societal era, then people might want a complete departure from the old ways of doing things. …a complete break with the bad-old-days. — Michael Ossipoff
The problem with that, of course, is that nothing is good or bad outside of an individual evaluating something that way, and really, there is nothing that couldn't be evaluated as either good or bad by some individual. That includes evaluating "the absence of potential people's good" as bad. They can't be incorrect about that, because no good/bad evaluations are incorrect (or correct). — Terrapin Station
So, why would the absence of a potential person's good be bad, if there is no actual person who is deprived? Is it bad you are not having a child that can experience good right now? If you say yes, I would like to know who is actually suffering from this. — schopenhauer1
Good and bad are evaluations that people make that are akin to yaying or booing. So it's simply a matter of someone booing the absence of potential persons' good. — Terrapin Station
So you'd have to define suffering and explain which negative/undesired states of body/mind count as suffering and which do not. — Terrapin Station
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