No. Future life should not be introduced. Totally different things. — khaled
They are strangers until you educate them obviously — khaled
If you don’t think in terms of good and bad then how are you doing ethics right now? — khaled
"If" there was a greater purpose as you suggest to be a possibility, you are compromising such a greater purpose based on an arbitrary moral call. — staticphoton
Me not thinking in terms of good and bad is something you just invented — staticphoton
I don't think in those terms. Good and bad are far from being absolutely and universally defined values — staticphoton
Exactly. You teach them what you believe in, and that becomes their belief. — staticphoton
Yes I would be compromising such a purpose. Tell me exactly who that harms. I don’t think an act is wrong if it doesn’t actually harm anyone so who exactly is harmed if everyone decides never to have kids starting tomorrow? — khaled
I thought “those terms” was referring to good and bad — khaled
Correction: you teach them what you believe in and sometimes that becomes their belief. I’d say most people have different beliefs from their parents. Take antinatalists as an example! — khaled
A higher purpose would trump the concern for individual harm. — staticphoton
Yes, good and bad as absolute concepts, — staticphoton
Whether they accept your teachings or not does not make them strangers. — staticphoton
This urge to terminate the human life cycle — staticphoton
But other than dismal scenarios, from my perspective the foundations don't hold. — staticphoton
These were immediately discarded — staticphoton
I believe values can be passed down to offspring — staticphoton
It appears to boil down to you finding it unfair that I impose the risk of suffering on someone who is unable to approve/disapprove, and me believing that producing a life is a justifiable endeavor. — staticphoton
and me believing that producing a life is a justifiable endeavor — staticphoton
Here’s a challenge: find me a scenario in which individual A is justified to force individual B to do something A doesn’t know B agrees with or not without having B’s consent and where B is put in a much riskier situation as a result — khaled
This is the problem here. YOU believe producing life is a justifiable endeavor. — khaled
Well this is just empirically incorrect. — khaled
The idea that you can ignore all moral considerations when it comes to risking someone ELSE’S life for your own ideals was. If I saw “greater purpose” in working as a janitor let’s say... — khaled
but when considering that this is then applied to another person altogether is misguided at best. — schopenhauer1
PS: 1k replies. This thread is literally second to trump on the front page — khaled
Ah, but there is no forcing here. Nothing comes as natural as giving birth. — staticphoton
But it is all about belief, no? — staticphoton
You believe in a simple logic — staticphoton
I said "can", not "will". — staticphoton
All moral considerations? I only saw one: suffering = bad => birth bad.
Not ignoring it, just not shallowing it.
...and by "greater purpose" I had something different in mind than working as a janitor, I'll just leave it at that. — staticphoton
What is misguided at best is adopting a philosophy of life followed by closing your heart to any other possibilities. But don't feel bad, on that one you are in the majority. — staticphoton
I'll take that as a compliment! — staticphoton
And your child might have something different in mind than preserving the human race. I’ll just leave it at that. The whole POINT of the example is that working as a janitor is something most would say has no greater purpose. All I did was reduce the probability someone finds purpose in the activity in question and suddenly for you it went from “yea it’s ok to force them to do it” to “no it’s not ok, who’d ever want to be a janitor”. — khaled
And actually, antinatalism is one of the few moral theories where believing in it blindly, even if it turns out to be wrong, doesn’t hurt anyone. Natalism on the other hand.... — khaled
it is ethics applied toward beings that will never exist, “potential persons” and the not-yet-born. — NOS4A2
This wouldn't be the first example of such ethics. I would bargain you find genetically modifying children to suffer as much as possible (by, say, giving them 10 broken limbs on birth) wrong. Even though no person is being harmed at the time the modification is taking place.
True. Antinatalism doesn't claim it is "helping" potential people. As I said, you are not doing something good by not having children per antinatalism. What antinatalism is claiming is that having children is bad.
What is, in your mind at least, the most convincing reason why having children is bad? — NOS4A2
Pretty simple. Having children risks harming someone whereas not having them doesn't. And I see no other scenario in real life when people think it's acceptable to risk harming someone for no good reason whatsoever like that.
For me it's more consistency than anything really.
But doesn’t that becomes a moral imperative to avoid having a child in order to avoid harming someone that doesn’t exist? — NOS4A2
No. It's "avoid harming someone that will exist". You seem to be thinking that antinatalism is doing this to protect the poor magical ghost babies. Antinatalism doesn't say anything about magical ghost babies. It simply says: avoid the course of action that might hurt someone.
Answer this: you agree genetically modifying children to suffer is wrong right? Doesn't that become a moral imperitive to avoid harming someone that doesn't exist? (Note: genetic modification is done on sperm and egg so it's not actually doing anything to the child)
Yes it is wrong. But it seems we’re dealing with extant things here, and not the faint imaginings of a “potential human”. — NOS4A2
I’ve never seen anyone harmed by the birth of a child, but I suppose there could be an argument about overpopulation or environmental concerns, — NOS4A2
I asked why it is wrong. You're not actually doing anything to anyone are you?
How about the child? Also overpopulation is another argument but I don't use it.
That’s my problem: What child? The imagined one? — NOS4A2
I just sense some unjust reification going on here. — NOS4A2
I get the argument, but I think we’re conflating a real potential human-I suppose fertilization—and a philosophical potential human — NOS4A2
I can understand why people wouldn’t want to have children, but I just don’t see this conduct can be construed as right or wrong conduct towards something that doesn’t exist. — NOS4A2
Why can genetically modifying a child to suffer be construed as wrong conduct towards something that doesn't exist then? Where is the "unmodified child" that was harmed?
We can’t apply the same ethics to the actual processes of procreation as to the fuzzy “potential human” we keep evoking. — NOS4A2
Why not? The consequences are the same. We agree genetically modifying someone to have 10 broken limbs is wrong right? Well what if a healthy couple find out that if they have a kid he would have 10 broken limbs on birth? Wouldn't it be wrong for them to procreate too?
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