It seems undeniable that in procreating one significantly affects another person, — Bartricks
You cannot just call something "Kantian deontology" without actually looking at Kant's reasoning. There's not even any mention of the categorical imperative here. — Echarmion
The foundation proper of Kantian deontology has to do primarily with the transcendental freedom of the will necessarily, the conditional lawful moral action itself as secondary to it.
1.) law can have no exception whatsoever, otherwise it be merely a rule;
1A.) every human is endowed with a will, therefore every human is a moral agent;
2.) if procreation were deemed an immoral act, the imperative corresponding to it for any moral agent must be as if it were in accordance with a universal law for all moral agents;
3.) the universal law must be that no moral agent shall make the immoral procreatic act;
4.) that no moral agent, re: no human, shall make the procreatic act leads necessarily to the extinction of the human species;
5.) it is contradictory that the extinction of the human species shall follow from a universal law;
6.) it cannot be in accordance with a contradiction that cessation of the act of procreation be a moral imperative;
7.) the procreatic act, in and of itself, cannot be deemed immoral. — Mww
But my case above makes no appeal to actual consequences. Rather, the point is that procreative acts are ones that cannot be consented to by the affected party. So it is not consequentialist at all. There is, of course, a consequentialist case to be made too, but here the focus is on the nature of the act of procreation. Those who intentionally procreate are acting in a way that cannot be agreed to by the affected party. — Bartricks
If one, on the way to procreating, person reads this argument and does not have a child, that will change the lives of future generations in millions of ways we cannot predict. Their child might have been the best friend of someone, the police who shot a serial killer before what turns out to be 10 more torture deaths. And yes, it might be the next Hitler. But regardless you are performing an act of persuasion that will affect a lot of people, most likely, if we look forward in time thousands of years, say. but here you are performing that act without their permission,and without ours.The act of procreation has this feature. It seems undeniable that in procreating one significantly affects another person, for one thereby commits someone else to living an entire life. And it also seems undeniable that the person who is affected in this way has not consented to it. — Bartricks
1.) law can have no exception whatsoever, otherwise it be merely a rule;
1A.) every human is endowed with a will, therefore every human is a moral agent;
2.) if procreation were deemed an immoral act, the imperative corresponding to it for any moral agent must be as if it were in accordance with a universal law for all moral agents;
3.) the universal law must be that no moral agent shall make the immoral procreatic act;
4.) that no moral agent, re: no human, shall make the procreatic act leads necessarily to the extinction of the human species;
5.) it is contradictory that the extinction of the human species shall follow from a universal law;
6.) it cannot be in accordance with a contradiction that cessation of the act of procreation be a moral imperative;
7.) the procreatic act, in and of itself, cannot be deemed immoral. — Mww
Yes there is - the person who is created. You're falsely assuming that to be affected by something you need to exist prior to the affect occurring. — Bartricks
Not procreating does not necessarily lead to the extinction of moral agents. — Bartricks
We are only permitted to prevent bad outcomes using means that pass the categorical imperative. — Bartricks
Again, why? Because the nature of such acts is such that those affected by them cannot consent to them. — Bartricks
Yes there is - the person who is created. You're falsely assuming that to be affected by something you need to exist prior to the affect occurring.
Imagine you know that any child you have will live a life of total agony from the instant it comes into existence until the end. Well, are you seriously maintaining that the child is not affected by the agony it suffers because it did not exist previously? That's just silly. — Bartricks
So, it would seem that on these Kantian grounds - Kantian because it is something about the nature of the act, namely the fact the act is one that has not been consented to - we have reaosn to believe that procreation is wrong. — Bartricks
And how can a thing with no will be a member of the kingdom of ends? How would you know what the benefit is to a merely possible person? And who would formulate an imperative based on a universal law that obliterates the species? — Mww
End of story. — Mww
If no one existed in sec 1, how would they do anything in sec 1? — Mww
And having sexual relations with someone who is incapable of consenting to them is wrong, and wrong precisely because they did not consent to those relations. — Bartricks
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