The slave-owner is doing something wrong by forcing work/challenges on someone else. — schopenhauer1
, and we also knew FOR CERTAIN that there was ZERO chance they would be happier as non-slaves...I might be willing to reconsider. But I do not see how we could ever know these things for certain.the slaves were generally happy to be born into their situation of forced work — schopenhauer1
one slave writes a whole philosophical treatise about how enduring hardships help one become a more virtuous person, and that it is good to be born a slave. — schopenhauer1
Did you expect someone to disagree? — DingoJones
In fact, most parents think they are justified in having kids because, like the slaves in the OP, they may learn to identify with the challenges in some way, and say "they like it". I think this does not matter. — schopenhauer1
So I guess this parallels what I said about not trusting the slave who writes about how good slavery is...because he has no idea what freedom is like. — ZhouBoTong
What if we can do some Gattaca/Brave New World stuff. If we completely understand neuroscience and genetics, we could BE SURE that everyone is happy; and if we also had enough resources (a la Star Trek) we could entirely remove suffering. I get these examples are possibly more outlandish than the ones you gave, but would that situation change your view at all? — ZhouBoTong
I don't think it is a possibility for humans to be happy, as suffering is structural to life. There would still be want and need. However, the situation describe may be better for contingent suffering (i.e. suffering that is based on circumstances). If people were still people though, other people and circumstances would somehow find a way to cause negative experiences and create new contingent pain. — schopenhauer1
A sort of rule comes out of this formulation. — schopenhauer1
but is enough logic for me feel comfortable that this baby will also PROBABLY prefer existence to non-existence (I do understand your point, that once they exist, what else would they prefer?) — ZhouBoTong
Oh, you are THAT guy, that keeps trying to backdoor this topic. Even worse that I thought.
Master/slave relationship compared to parent/offspring relationship is superficially analogous at best. — DingoJones
most people would think the slave-owner is wrong. Here's where it gets controversial- I think having children is also wrong for the very same reasons — schopenhauer1
1. I'm not sure you're on entirely solid deontological grounds asserting that having children is using people as a means rather than treating them as ends in themselves. Are you completely certain if your goal is to have children, you can't say that you have treated the person as an end in themselves?
Don't forget: even Kant allows us to use others to achieve our ends. We're just not allowed to treat them in a way where we're only using them as an means to an end. — Theologian
said he felt that a universe with life was fundamentally richer than one without.
I'm not saying I am wholly won over by this argument. But I am not entirely unmoved by it either. I'm a bit wild and woolly here I know, but perhaps you could all it an appeal to virtue ethics, but in this case the "virtue" and the "flourishing" belong to an entire planet, or even the universe, rather than just one — Theologian
You are comparing the state of slavery (forced challenges/suffering) with being born and living life. Living life is not forced challenges/suffering except to the very very weak. In order to compare the two you must skew life into some sort of unethical oppression. Its not, except from the weakest, most pathetic viewpoint. I understand you might just be pontificating rather than feeling this deeply so that isnt directed at you personally but to consider life in that way you must take a very weak view of the ups and downs of life. — DingoJones
I am not completely convinced that this is a circular contradiction. Let me run three arguments by you.In a sense, there is no person for there to be an end for yet, so it is always for the parent, prior to birth. Going a bit beyond Kant, I just call this a circular contradiction. — schopenhauer1
The universe does not get anything or not get anything by what humans do or feel.If so, the universe itself would be using people for a game of net good or whatnot. — schopenhauer1
1. Assume an eternalist view of time, in which the future is just as real as the past. The fact that the person you're doing things for is not around yet seems of no more relevance than whether they are around here. So doing something for someone in the future is no different from doing something for someone in a different city - or even just next door. So if we assume an eternalist view, doing something for someone who does not exist yet is not incoherent. — Theologian
2. Ask: "What is implicit in the idea that you should always treat humans as an end in themselves, never only as a means?" Doesn't this imply that humans have intrinsic value? And if humans have intrinsic value isn't creating more humans intrinsically good? — Theologian
3. Consider your own starting argument: that having children is wrong for the reasons you outline. But... is not your argument dependent on the idea that you can do something to someone who does not yet exist? So how can you now turn around and say that you can't do something for them? — Theologian
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