Personally I have two beautiful teenagers - they bring so much joy and fear, challenges and rewards to my life, and as far as I can tell they value the opportunity to make something of their own life, regardless of how it pans out. — Possibility
I would be furious that someone distrusted my capacity to choose what to do with my own life savings. You’ve called it ‘stealing’ - I’m assuming the investment was made in MY name, not their own? Despite the audacity of the act, I would nevertheless have a vested interest in that company from that point on. — Possibility
‘Would you permit that?’ - this is the wrong question to ask. The deed is done. I can yell and scream and jump up and down at them, try to have them jailed (even though they’ve made no profit themselves from the act). I get that what they did was wrong, but now I have a choice: pull the investment (at whatever cost), or ride it out. A lot would depend on how the investment faired in the short term, but from this point on, control of the money is back in MY hands. Perhaps I would do what I could to ensure my investment in this company had the best chance of success. Perhaps I could embark on a mission to prevent this from ever happening to someone else again. — Possibility
Let’s say that your mother calls you and tells you that the money she planned to build up for your inheritance has been decimated in a financial downturn. She’d hoped to have a million dollars by now, but all that’s left is $150,000, and because of the way it was invested it might take a lengthy court case to even get hold of that. Would you wish she’d never intended to give you any money at all? Would you accuse her of an immoral act? Would you spread the word that it’s a bad idea to plan for your kids’ inheritance? — Possibility
No we wouldn't need some way to compare the two because: Jane's child will ALSO want to have children presumably to the same or similar extent — khaled
Yes it's a different sentence. I'm saying both are true — khaled
Consider your statement "you do have to avoid X" - does that only count for future generations?
Or are you buying fair-trade goods exclusively as to avoid harm to exploited workers? Do you consume only your fair share of energy and water, so that you are not robbing fellow humans of necessary resources? Avoiding harm to others is not that easily done... — WerMaat
The "not having to do good" is another one I don't agree with. I believe that helping and caring for other human beings is as much a duty as the "do no harm" part.
We are not all independent entities, living our lives largely disconnected from each other - in which case the "avoid to harm" is all we need for a peaceful and ethical existence. Instead, we live in close relation. From the social bonds of friends and family, to our social circles, our nations, and even people on the other side of the globe: with all of our choices and actions we affect each other.
I think we need to acknowledge this and take responsibility for each other. Not doing harm is only one side. If you are in a position to help and don't do it, that's equally unethical. — WerMaat
For example: Buying shoes for a homeless person in my village: Good, isn't it? But buying cheap shoes supports those companies that produce shoes under horrible working conditions in Bangladesh, thus I'm perpetuating the harm done to other people there. — WerMaat
Not to mention issues of consent... if I a bring an unconscious person to a hospital, am I doing good? Or am I disrespecting their free will, as they are currently unable to give consent, and maybe they don't want medical treatment? Well, as long as I cannot obtain consent I will just have to go with my best guess... In daily life, ethical choices are horribly fuzzy and we constantly need to make decisions without having all the necessary data. — WerMaat
Still, if you have carefully considered the matter and estimate that your child will appreciate life more that he or she will abhor the related suffering, then it is an ethical choice to have a child. — WerMaat
"Joe's experience is less than Frank's." — Terrapin Station
"Joe's experience is less than Joe's experience plus Frank's experience." — Terrapin Station
You can't really confirm this is true. Idk if you mean experience as in job experience or some subjective experience. If it's subjective you can't confirm if it's job you can confirm with working hours — khaled
But you’re imposing your values on others when you reduce a life to pleasure and pain. — Noah Te Stroete
Most people don’t do that, and very few newborns would grow up to be anti-natalists. — Noah Te Stroete
You don't have to do good, but you have to not risk doing evil is the basic premise. — khaled
Does that mean you are committing a crime by not giving me money? — khaled
Ok. And I am saying that no one here including you would employ a quantification that makes it so that a parent's pain due to not having children is so great that it is greater than all of the child's suffering do you agree? — khaled
So having children is an evil act because they will suffer at points in their lives? — Noah Te Stroete
That’s a supposition that hasn’t been supported by your example. You ARE trying to impose your values on others, values that 99.99% of people don’t share. — Noah Te Stroete
Does that mean I committed a crime because I had children and you don’t agree with it? — Noah Te Stroete
They are saying that no new people should ever be born again. — Noah Te Stroete
Yes, that's the "I can't make that much of a difference on my own, so why should I try" argument. I hear that all the time when in try to talk people into caring for politics.This is different because me consuming slightly more or slightly less energy barely helps anyone. Even if I don't eat that much food, that doesn't mean it translates to a hungry child in Africa eating it probably just means more food loss — khaled
Yes, exactly. I try for an ethical conduct in that sense, but I often wonder if what I do is enough, if I should not try much harder and give away more of my money and time.. It would be great if you started a petition to boycott those shoes until conditions improve, but you don't have to. If you think you have to then you're committing an atrocity by your own values by wasting time typing here instead of starting that petition — khaled
How come you don't think that doing good is a duty? Being caught up in an unjust system, is it enough to just draw back and not care? Shouldn't we at least try to make it a better world, to the best of our ability?In my system of values, doing good is not a must but it is encouraged (because it's called doing GOOD) — khaled
Isn't that second part of the sentence rather impossible to achieve? All of our actions have effects on other people, and our inactions, too. And we cannot always know in advance what exactly is going to happen. We're human and we're not perfect. When we consider an action that we hope is good overall, I believe that the risk of doing harm must be carefully considered, but it's not enough to veto the action automatically.however never at the expense of harming someone in the process without them knowing. — khaled
Ah, so are you admitting then, that we violate other people's right to consent all the time? That we also cause harm, be it because we don't have the right data, because we need to choose the lesser of two evils, because we didn't even notice or simply because we don't care...The stakes aren't even close. In this case you have all the necessary data to determine that 80 years of life is not a light transgression, no where near taking someone to the hospital which is a very light transgression. — khaled
But as a consequence, you're still giving up on humanity as a whole.antinatalism isn't about how you live your life it's just the simple statement that you can't take risks with other people's lives. — khaled
(b) we're talking about either (i) actions directly performed with or on someone, or (ii) actions performed that have a physical affect on someone through a material, causally-peggable chain--for example, putting toxins in a water supply, rigging a bomb to explode, etc. — Terrapin Station
Yes, that's the "I can't make that much of a difference on my own, so why should I try" argument. I hear that all the time when in try to talk people into caring for politics.
I think that we should just do our best, both in our personal conduct and in trying to change the system. — WerMaat
Yes, exactly. I try for an ethical conduct in that sense, but I often wonder if what I do is enough, if I should not try much harder and give away more of my money and time. — WerMaat
How come you don't think that doing good is a duty? Being caught up in an unjust system, is it enough to just draw back and not care? — WerMaat
Isn't that second part of the sentence rather impossible to achieve? All of our actions have effects on other people, and our inactions, too. And we cannot always know in advance what exactly is going to happen. We're human and we're not perfect. When we consider an action that we hope is good overall, I believe that the risk of doing harm must be carefully considered, but it's not enough to veto the action automatically. — WerMaat
But as a consequence, you're still giving up on humanity as a whole. — WerMaat
That's where I don't follow. In spite of all the horrible stuff I enjoy being alive quite a lot. I still have hope for us humans, and that includes future generations. — WerMaat
I never said that. I said it RISKS physically harming them. Per bomb explosion for example. (I also need to go soon so maybe later) — khaled
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