But is that a good reason to have kids? So that I can use them to give my life meaning? — petrichor
But I also feel terrible denying them the chance to become conscious, to experience love, to hear music, to inhale the intoxicating scents of a forest, to create something, to come to understand some things, even to be saddened at the injustice of death. Yes, even that latter one. There is a goodness underlying any suffering of a bad. — petrichor
Yes, loss is painful, but loss implies the existence of something valuable and truly worthwhile that can be negated by it. And there is some sort of hard-to-explain value even in the existential situation of there being a human confronting all that is difficult, even suffering the loss of beautiful loved ones. How horrible if we didn't suffer the loss of a beautiful being! — petrichor
I feel grateful for the life they gave me. And I find, even in my darkest moments, I am glad to have lived and known what I have. What a trip it has been so far! — petrichor
There is far too much to life to reduce it all down to a single, simple judgment, a thumbs-up or a thumbs-down. — petrichor
Many of us would like to feel we can give ourselves permission to die, to escape the problems of our lives, to be free of what our lives ask of us. — petrichor
What complicated creatures we are. And how richly baffling life! It certainly isn't simple or easy. And all of us are struggling in one way or another. But I see value in it all. — petrichor
Not per a decision. Per contingent statistical norms. — Terrapin Station
It is per decision that you based your policy on actions that will impact a living being capable of giving consent in the future based on statistical abnormality though right?
— khaled
Yes, of course — Terrapin Station
Yea "contingent statistical norms" is what I mean when I say "what society dictates". — khaled
The thought of no more human life or life whatsoever is an extremely sad and dark thought to me — petrichor
Reality would be better off if you had never been born — petrichor
if none of you had ever been born — petrichor
There is far too much to life to reduce it all down to a single, simple judgment, a thumbs-up or a thumbs-down — petrichor
What motivates our collecting of evidence against life? Why do some of us go to such lengths to justify our rejection of life? If we are honest, I think we know. — petrichor
What complicated creatures we are. And how richly baffling life! It certainly isn't simple or easy. And all of us are struggling in one way or another. But I see value in it all. — petrichor
Your mild sadism (which is what I call enacting suffering for others so they can "grow" from it) does not need to be enacted in the first place. — schopenhauer1
Maybe try just try chilling out, not worrying so much, and just experience and enjoy everything for what it is? — Terrapin Station
The kind of unconscious, thoughtless living that your recommendation seems to suggest is not in my nature. That's the problem with a lot of procreation. People are just too chilled out, not worrying, and not considering consequences, much like animals. Lots of horrible and needless problems ensue.
Just experience and enjoy everything for what it is? Enjoy everything? For what it is? Seriously? If I didn't know better, I'd be tempted to think you must have so far lived a fairly untroubled and oblivious life to say something like that. But I know that everyone has their share of shit to deal with and to witness, so I banish the thought. Rather, I suspect that this must be your coping strategies speaking. — petrichor
Antinatalism isn't a rejection of life, that's pro-mortalism. Antinatalism is the recognition that no matter how much we enjoy or reject life, we don't know what our children will go through and shouldn't take the risk for them — khaled
I was speaking more to a sense that we embody goodness in simply being pained by evil. It is better that some element of the world actually cares what happens, isn't it? — petrichor
World B contains more total suffering than World A. But which is a better world? Is it about simply minimizing suffering on a balance sheet? — petrichor
Suppose I am to have a kid and I can choose whether they'll care or not, and I know that if they don't care about anything, they'll suffer less. Should I choose that they won't care? Suppose I can also choose that they'll be so mentally limited that they won't know they'll die, and so will be free of much anxiety. Should I choose that they'll be so limited?
Suppose I could snap my fingers and suddenly all living beings will simply be buried in the ground in safe little pods where they'll be only conscious of the continuous pleasure from machines stimulating their pleasure centers. Would bringing this about mean that I have improved the world?
Is trading consciousness and understanding and caring for pain-reduction always simply and obviously a good thing to do? — petrichor
And if there were no consciousness to suffer to begin with, you might say there would be no reason to have people who care that there is suffering. The world would simply be better off dead. But this ignores all the value in life and the possibilty that it couldn't exist without all the suffering. It might well be the best of all possible worlds. — petrichor
We are the universe becoming aware of itself, the world waking up. Isn't there some value in the universe coming to wonder what it is, why it is, and so on? Isn't there something more valuable and amazing in a pile of clay that stands up and asks what it is, even if pained, even if afraid, as opposed to a pile of clay that remains forever just a dead pile of uninteresting clay? If you were to witness such a pile of clay rising up, would you just cleanly terminate its consciousness, just put it out of its misery before it can even really get started, saying, "There! That's better!"? — petrichor
Some often claim that the world is uncaring, that nothing matters, that nature is coldly indifferent, and they say this with a negative feeling about this lack of caring that they imagine in the world. But only a dead world is so indifferent. A living world is a world that cares. To eliminate all life that might suffer, and especially all higher, intelligent life, is to ensure that the world is indifferent and that nothing matters. If we exist, then at least part of nature cares what happens and things matter. Even the universe itself gains value and becomes something that can be appreciated and wondered at. — petrichor
There is something paradoxical about valuing human beings enough to care enough about their suffering to wish them non-existent. That anything happening to them is worth caring about suggests value that wishing to eliminate their existence seems to ignore. — petrichor
So do you think a child should be born if the risks can be mitigated to such a degree that we can be fairly sure that things won't be so bad? — petrichor
You like worrying, complaining, being neurotic, etc. basically, then? — Terrapin Station
There is something paradoxical about valuing human beings enough to care enough about their suffering to wish them non-existent. That anything happening to them is worth caring about suggests value that wishing to eliminate their existence seems to ignore — petrichor
(that depressed people can kill themselves and so it is ethical to risk creating depressed people is an actual argument I hear a lot by natalists ergo the last line about the hunger game participant killing himself if he doesn't like it. I also often hear "You don't have the right to make life decisions for someone else", the irony) — khaled
If you weren't asked to take a risk for someone else you shouldn't take it. — khaled
Because it is the only rational conclusion. — Baskol1
Its not rational to avoid suffering? — Baskol1
Maybe, but some values are certainly more useful than others. — Baskol1
I think it is very important to decrease suffering. — Baskol1
You create risks for other people in every single thing you do.
Some obvious ones are things like driving, being in public if you might have any sort of contagious illness, building houses, building any sort of device/appliance that people might use, etc. — Terrapin Station
"But the majority of people like life!" and thus no other argument is deemed necessary. — schopenhauer1
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