Before they're born--but do you mean after conception?
A lot of things that you and khaled are saying now sound like you're fine with conception, but you're advocating necessarily having an abortion after one has conceived. — Terrapin Station
The conclusions of the previous chapters are applied to the abortion question. Four kinds of interests are distinguished: functional, biotic, conscious, and reflective interests. It is argued that beings are morally considerable only when they have at least conscious interests. Because consciousness only arises in human foetuses quite late in gestation (around 28-weeks), people do not come into existence (in the morally relevant sense) until at least that time. Thus, given the harm of coming into existence, it is wrong not to abort a foetus in the earliest stages of gestation. The ‘pro-death’ argument is then defended against two famous arguments that abortion is wrong — Richard Hare's ‘golden rule’ argument and Don Marquis' ‘future-like-ours’ argument. — oxfordscholarship.com, Better Never to Have Been
That should be the goal yes. — khaled
Please give an example where there is a course of action available that produces less suffering for others as well as for oneself and where it is ethical to take anything but that course of action — khaled
However it is wrong to do something that risks causing someone significantly more risk of harm than the harm it alleviates elsewhere — khaled
You can take that as pre-birth or pre-conception. — schopenhauer1
Pre-conception, you're not doing anything to anyone by conceiving. — Terrapin Station
Offense is a problem with the offendee, something they need to learn to get past. It's not a problem with the offender. — Terrapin Station
Again, I do not agree with this. — Terrapin Station
You're suggesting a quantification that I don't think is plausible — Terrapin Station
Before someone is born, what on earth would possess someone to non-consensually cause all risk of harm to another person? What does someone need to go through in the first place in order for this to be justified? Nothing..just selfish want of that future person to be born to go through XYZ agenda (which may or may not happen the way you intended it to anyways). — schopenhauer1
I can tell you my partners thoughts for wanting to "non-consensually cause all risk of harm to another person", are essentially along the lines of, "I love you, lets have a baby", "I want to have your baby/child", "lets make a family together". She does not think in terms of potential people, consent, harm, agendas (for the child to go through). But I think it's more complex than just a selfish desire to have a baby, considering the pain/burden of pregnancy/childbirth, and then all the work that is looking after a baby and raising it into a child and then adult. If anything it's more selfless than selfish. Not sure what to make of this. — Inyenzi
If anything it's more selfless than selfish — Inyenzi
But I think it's more complex than just a selfish desire to have a baby — Inyenzi
In that case I could say you’re making them get past said thing so there is a net benefit across time even if it hurts them right now. This doesn’t count as the example I’m asking for because it has long term benefits which you can argue alleviate more suffering overall than they inflict right now. I’m asking for an example where you can do something that doesn’t hurt anyone, but you choose to do something that does hurt someone and has no net benefit across time. — khaled
This seems to forget that whether anything is a benefit or not is subjective. Anyone could interpret any arbitrary thing--or everything as a benefit or any arbitrary thing--or everything as a detriment. There's no right answer there. It's just a matter of how an individual feels about it. So there's a net benefit (to a particular person) just in case someone evaluates it that way. There's a net detriment (to a particular other person) just in case someone else evaluates it that way. — Terrapin Station
This seems to forget that whether anything is a benefit or not is subjective — Terrapin Station
Agreed. Which is why you shouldn’t offend people unless you have good reason to believe it will help them later — khaled
However, this would just be an argument for those who focus on consequences. I think it is simply wrong to promote the conditions for all suffering, where it can be prevented, which clearly you disagree with. When ideas such that, suffering must take place (whether for growth, "flourishing", the drum march of civilization, progress, more people to "do" XYZ, someone to take care of, or another agenda of the parent), when in fact, no one needs to be the recipient of this in the first place, we cannot go much further. Unfortunately for your argument, you have to bite the bullet that causing unnecessary harm is good, using people for agendas is good, and most importantly, you would have to ignore the glaring asymmetry that no person is alive before they are born to need goods of life in the first place. — schopenhauer1
whether anything is a benefit or not is subjective — Terrapin Station
Basically, there's a lot of stuff that people consider suffering that I think is ridiculous/laughable to have a problem with. — Terrapin Station
Again who are you or anyone to decide what that is for anyone else — schopenhauer1
Who is anyone to decide? The whole nut of this stuff being subjective is that there aren't right answers, and we all decide whatever we want to, or whatever we're compelled to. — Terrapin Station
You can decide whatever you want or compelled to do for yourself, not for or to others. — schopenhauer1
We went over this :roll: and I pretty much answered you here — schopenhauer1
Because it's not my job — schopenhauer1
That's just saying the same thing in a wordier way. What makes it your job or not? — Terrapin Station
However, this would just be an argument for those who focus on consequences. I think it is simply wrong to promote the conditions for all suffering, where it can be prevented, which clearly you disagree with. When ideas such that, suffering must take place (whether for growth, "flourishing", the drum march of civilization, progress, more people to "do" XYZ, someone to take care of, or another agenda of the parent), when in fact, no one needs to be the recipient of this in the first place, we cannot go much further. Unfortunately for your argument, you have to bite the bullet that causing unnecessary harm is good, using people for agendas is good, and most importantly, you would have to ignore the glaring asymmetry that no person is alive before they are born to need goods of life in the first place. — schopenhauer1
It's not about my smug evaluations foisted on someone else. — schopenhauer1
Yes it is. That is exactly what you are doing. You have made a subjective evaluation about suffering, and are arguing against and morally condemning other people (parents/would be parents) based on that evaluation (foist number one), in addition to making a decision on behalf of somebody else (anyone born!) based on your own evaluation about suffering. (Foist number 2). — DingoJones
Benatar argues there is crucial asymmetry between the good and the bad things, such as pleasure and pain, which means it would be better for humans not to have been born:
the presence of pain is bad;
the presence of pleasure is good;
the absence of pain is good, even if that good is not enjoyed by anyone;
the absence of pleasure is not bad unless there is somebody for whom this absence is a deprivation.[6][7] — Wikipedia, David Benatar article
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