What about the people who really want to have children? Aren't they affected by not having them? — Terrapin Station
There is no situation in which no person is harmed. But there is a situation in which harm is minimized and ceased altogether for humans.
The pain people may feel by not having children can easily by topped by the pain created by having children. One couple having children can lead to generations of harm to people and, animals etc. — Andrew4Handel
And further many people do not value just in terms of pleasure and pain. Most life, as far as I can see, in humans and elsewhere, decides with great passion to protect their lives, even if they are tough lives. They confirm over and over that they want life for other reasons: meaning, expression of self, curiosity, some subtler underlying passion. So to evaluate in terms of pain and pleasure alone means that antinatalists are deciding how we all should evaluate life, despite how we do evaluate life which is more complicated. Any antinatalist is risking that his or her rhetoric will be effective and manyr or even all future human lives do not come to be. How can they take the risk that this is imposing their values on what would have been future life that cannot consent to these values being applied. (I realize that the consent of the not yet existent is a tricky thing, but since the ant-natalists often talk in those terms, they have to live with the downside of this for their act of arguing for anti-natalism also.) Risk abounds.There is no situation in which no person is harmed. But there is a situation in which harm is minimized and ceased altogether for humans.
The pain people may feel by not having children can easily by topped by the pain created by having children. One couple having children can lead to generations of harm to people and, animals etc.
— Andrew4Handel
I was just pointing out that it's not the case that no one might be harmed when no one has kids.
You've pointed out before that the "calculus" you'd use simply ignores the "pleasure" side of the equation. So sure, if you do that, what you're saying follows. But of course, many people aren't going to adopt that calculus, and they will figure in pleasure, too. — Terrapin Station
So to evaluate in terms of pain and pleasure alone means that antinatalists are deciding how we all should evaluate life — Coben
How can they take the risk that this is imposing their values on what would have been future life that cannot consent to these values being applied — Coben
If you are in a position to grant a good life, then you can bring a being into existence that may potentially flourish — Neir
Is art ethical? Crafting positive and negative images, granting the potential for enjoyment and disturbance, intending for the love but preparing for hate — Neir
There is a vast range of values that can be hidden in deteriorate and improve.Replace "Pain" with "deteriorating state of affairs" and "pleasure" with "improving state of affairs" — khaled
Hey, did I give you consent NOT to give me money? I don't remember doing that. How dare you not give me money then? Isn't that risking imposing your value of private property on me?
Again, if anything (future life or current) is somehow asking you for something that would improve their state of affairs, you don't have to give it. However you owe them not deteriorating their state of affairs no matter what. — khaled
Yes, but the degree to which the people that really want to have children is harmed is much smaller than the degree to which their children are harmed. — khaled
For the obvious reason that their children will also really want children. — khaled
And further many people do not value just in terms of pleasure and pain. Most life, as far as I can see, in humans and elsewhere, decides with great passion to protect their lives, even if they are tough lives. They confirm over and over that they want life for other reasons: meaning, expression of self, curiosity, some subtler underlying passion. So to evaluate in terms of pain and pleasure alone means that antinatalists are deciding how we all should evaluate life, despite how we do evaluate life which is more complicated. Any antinatalist is risking that his or her rhetoric will be effective and manyr or even all future human lives do not come to be. How can they take the risk that this is imposing their values on what would have been future life that cannot consent to these values being applied. (I realize that the consent of the not yet existent is a tricky thing, but since the ant-natalists often talk in those terms, they have to live with the downside of this for their act of arguing for anti-natalism also.) Risk abounds. — Coben
How would we measure such things? — Terrapin Station
There's no way to know this for any person until the person is around to ask them. — Terrapin Station
Good points. — Terrapin Station
You don't need to measure in this case. The harm of "wanting to have children" HAS TO BE greater than the harm of "wanting to have children" + every other harm. It doesn't matter how you choose to measure it — khaled
But it would be very unreasonable to assume that the desire for having children for one particular parent is so great that one can conclusively say it will be greater than all the suffering his child will ever experience don't you agree? — khaled
You know there is a chance that your child will be severely harmed AND that he will hate it — khaled
AND that he will not employ some morality that helps make meaning out of it — khaled
Then why do you take the risk when you could just adopt a child if you so want to be a parent — khaled
Also I seem to have lost where you were trying to go with this argument. Are you seriously suggesting that the reason having children is ethical is because the harm to the parents outweighs the harm to the child in every case? — khaled
It does not dent the argument of antinatalism in any way. That is because you don't know how your CHILD will interpret improving and deteriorating states of affairs, so it doesn't matter how you or others interpret them that is no excuse to risk creating someone that might interpret them in ways that cause him severe suffering. — khaled
Did you mean that the other way around? — Terrapin Station
"the degree to which the people that really want to have children is harmed is much smaller than the degree to which their children are harmed." That's different than the "plus" statement. — Terrapin Station
I'd say those two things are inseparable — Terrapin Station
This part I don't think I get, though. Insofar as I get it, I don't think there are humans who don't employ morality or meaning, but maybe you have something in mind that's not clear to me. — Terrapin Station
Wait, but people have to be giving birth in order to adopt kids. With antinatalism, no one would be giving birth. At any rate, I'm fine with either option folks want to choose. — Terrapin Station
I didn't say anything like that and I wasn't making an argument per se. You had said that not having kids doesn't harm anyone. I merely pointed out that that's not categorically the case. — Terrapin Station
It doesn't seem like you realize that there's no way to make this stuff not subjective. That there are no correct arguments when it comes to this sort of stuff. — Terrapin Station
How so? They sound like the same statement to me — khaled
Keyword: CAN grant a good life. It is not guaranteed. If there was some way to measure with absolute certainty that your child will find life worthwhile I'd say procreation is ethical. But with a risk it is something else entirely. Imagine someone stealing your bank account to invest all of your life saving in a company that CAN succeed. Would you permit that? I highly doubt it. Now imagine if they used the excuse: I tried to call you but you weren't available at the time so I proceeded to invest without asking you. Would that be moral? Especially if you've never met this person before and you have no idea how their values and risk assessments differ from yours? I'm hoping you're catching onto the analogy — khaled
1- doing X to someone is bad and doing Y to someone is good
2- You do not have to do Y but you do have to avoid X
It doesn't matter what X and Y are but so far I haven't seen anyone that challenges those premises. — khaled
Perhaps I could embark on a mission to prevent this from ever happening to someone else again. — Possibility
In that case we dont need a quantification method. We simply know that x is less than x + y, where both x and y are some positive, non-zero number. (Of course, we don't know that it's "much" less, but we can ignore that part.) — Terrapin Station
Fair enough, but I'm simply pointing out that existence is zero sum. If you are in a position to grant a good life, then you can bring a being into existence that may potentially flourish. On the other hand, if you view existence as a negative, I fully encourage you to not procreate, as that would weigh heavily upon your conscience. — Neir
You are granting it the potential to feel positive and negative experiences, i.e. life. The alternative is absolute nothingness, so it's just a balancing act. — Neir
Is art ethical? Crafting positive and negative images, granting the potential for enjoyment and disturbance, intending for the love but preparing for hate, it's a lot like bringing life into the world, and I don't think it's rational to judge any individual life until the work is finished, like letting an artist get into their groove and witnessing their eventual portfolio after they are finished. — Neir
So that's saying that the degree to which Jane is harmed is much smaller than the degree to which her child is harmed. That's a comparison between Jane and how much she is harmed on the one hand, and her child and how much the child is harmed on the other hand. We'd need some quantification method to compare the two, to compare the amount of their suffering. — Terrapin Station
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