That's not true at all. Billions of actual people would be deprived of the goods (of which there are many) associated with having and raising families. — Theorem
But more to the point, I asked whether it was fair for us to make the decision on behalf of others. The no harm/no foul principle does not address the question of whether one group of people living at a specific time and place and under specific circumstances has the moral authority to decide whether life is worth living tout court. That seems like a dangerously slippery slope. — Theorem
You cannot claim someone consented to being created or signed some kind of contract with life. — Andrew4Handel
I think creating a new person gives you different responsibilities for, not just to your child, but society compared to the childless. — Andrew4Handel
People often use the phrase "our children" as if we have collective responsibility or are all endorsing the same thing. I see having a child as an endorsement of everything, everything you are exposing them to. — Andrew4Handel
The problem is you think it's profound where it is only trivially true. For starters, it's a false analogy to compare nothing with an unconscious person. An unconscious person has a will but is incapable of expressing it, nothing doesn't have a will. It's not just incapable, it's that it doesn't have any. — Benkei
But I don't really understand what you're saying here:
People often use the phrase "our children" as if we have collective responsibility or are all endorsing the same thing. I see having a child as an endorsement of everything, everything you are exposing them to.
— Andrew4Handel — Benkei
And yes, I can imagine another person existing that doesn't exist yet. But I can imagine unicorns and dragons to exist too. That doesn't mean they become moral actors because of it and something I need to take into consideration when making ethical choices. — Benkei
C'mon we've been through this. Unicorns can never exist. A potential person can. We make political, ethical, and daily decisions all the time based on future people. That's a strawman to compare future people to unicorns. — schopenhauer1
I don't see how you think the fact people did not consent to be born or assent to life and society is trivial? — Andrew4Handel
Based on future people that will exist. Those aren't potential people. That's an important difference. A potential person doesn't exist, eg. it's nothing. That makes the comparison entirely apt. — Benkei
I cannot remember what your objection was. I don't see how creating someone does not create consent problems. — Andrew4Handel
We need there to be a person capable of granting or withholding consent before consent is an issue. — Terrapin Station
This is not true. You can discuss issues of consent in general and in an abstract way and from the experiences of prior people. — Andrew4Handel
The issue is whether the person being born is granting consent or not, correct? — Terrapin Station
If someone cannot consent to being born then they are here in a non consensual manner. — Andrew4Handel
Neither can an unconscious person. — Andrew4Handel
For an unconscious person, their preferences prior to being unconscious are what matter. — Terrapin Station
How do you know what there preferences were before? — Andrew4Handel
Do you need to consider past preferences to decide that an unconscious person would not like to be set on fire? — Andrew4Handel
If you want to know whether they want to be set on fire, yes. If you don't know, then it's best not to act. But why that matters is because we're talking about a person who has preferences. You can not do this when the person does not exist. — Terrapin Station
Because they've expressed them. Sometimes formally: again, here's an example: — Terrapin Station
You can talk about the general rule that no human past present or future would like to be set on fire. — Andrew4Handel
There is no "general rule" about preferences that is universal. — Terrapin Station
Here's how you know: you ask the person in question. — Terrapin Station
It's certainly possible that someone does. — Terrapin Station
No it really isn't based on how the body responds to being burnt alive. It is unbearable. — Andrew4Handel
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