We can also bring this ethic to the fact that we are forced to live.
Live = good. And from this perspective, euthanasia for example is considered a less of morality.
Socrates said to live, all life in general is like being sick. — armonie
I am proposing that it is only negative ethics that matters — schopenhauer1
I do not see why this assumption must be true that negative ethics must give way to positive or that the positive necessarily needs to override the negative. Why would the prevention of suffering take a back seat to the promotion of "well-being"? — schopenhauer1
Matters to whom and by what measure? — Isaac
Humans. Ethical first principles. — schopenhauer1
One where you would justify prevention of harm being less important than X positive ethic. — schopenhauer1
You've just changed the words. What would constitue my having 'justified' it? — Isaac
How are you determining that the primacy of positive ethics isn't itself an ethical first principle? Do ethical first principles have labels attached identifying them as such? — Isaac
Maslow's hierarchy of needs comes to mind. — TheMadFool
I'm ignoring the true complexity of the issue here. The definition of bare necessities changes and as we acquire the items in the lower rung of Maslow's hierarchy of needs they fade away and a new set of bare necessities take their place. I believe this is how it works. — TheMadFool
You've just changed the words. What would constitue my having 'justified' it? — Isaac
That is precisely what I'm asking everyone. — schopenhauer1
A person only has to label it such and explain why more important than other ethical theories (in this case negative ethics) — schopenhauer1
If I said, in answer to your question "positive ethics should have primacy over negative ethics because I prefer positive ethics" would that be an acceptable answer for you? If not, what would be wrong with it? — Isaac
Importance to whom and to what end? — Isaac
To humans, and I'm asking for what end. — schopenhauer1
This is the crux of the problem. Nothing at the level of rhetoric, where we now are, is important 'to humans'. Some things are important to some humans, other things are important to other humans, and there's no external judge to determine who's right and who's wrong about that. — Isaac
And isn't 'persuing what I prefer' an end... the only end, in fact? — Isaac
At some point in asking why people prefer the things they do, you have to defer to either their final say on the matter (usually "I don't know, I just do"), or you look to empirical evidence you see as correlating with unconscious desires (say sociology or human biology). Asking people is never going to get you further back than their own first principles, which could be almost anything. — Isaac
there is something to be said as to what should be important for all humans, being that we are all born for "some" reason (positive ethics). — schopenhauer1
Again, just imagine an answer "what should be important to all humans is the opportunity to find happiness". What's wrong with that answer? — Isaac
Right, suffering is more than bare necessities. It encompasses any negative feeling. Undue suffering is surely its own category but need not be the only one. If we define it like that, why does self-actualizing or any other higher levels in Maslow's hierarchy HAVE to be the goal over and above mitigating negative experiences? This ties into the idea that we are on a mission to self-actualize. Why is this mission to self-actualize, or to accomplish things, or to connect with people have to take place above and beyond prevention of bad experiences? Also, being that in reality self-actualization and positive psychology, etc. vascilates with negative ones, it should really be rephrased as to why does the pursuit of the positive experiences become more important than simply preventing negative ones or suffering.
To re-frame this in antinatalist terms. Why does the chance to pursue higher levels of Maslow's hierarchy matter more than preventing all negative experiences? Why experience over non-experience? Do we get a spiritual dog biscuit when we go through the experiences? Is it because we are on a mission to make more people who must self-actualize? — schopenhauer1
If it means physically bringing another human into existence, it would violate non-aggression principle — schopenhauer1
It assumes people pursuing happiness is more important than not bringing about conditions of negative experiences upon another person — schopenhauer1
I see no good ones on the other side — schopenhauer1
While not completely true, negative ethics is a thing of the past for a good number of modern humans. They're now in the self-actualization business. Much like you are and others who pursue the arts and sciences. At a very minimum the world now has the environment for positive ethics. Of course, even taking only a wild guess, the vast majority live in conditions that validate your claim for emphasis on negative ethics. Yet, the dark ominous cloud does have that thin silver lining where some are lucky to reside. — TheMadFool
Of course you don't, because the 'goodness' of a reason is subjective. You think other people's reasons are not 'good', they think they are 'good'. Unless you have a definition of 'good' on which you both agree, no further progress can possibly be made can it... And yet you persist. — Isaac
Thus the "mixed bag" approach to ethics leads to an inevitable violation of negative ethics in favor of positive. — schopenhauer1
Well, i would say that it comes from the fact that pleasure/happiness and pain/suffering come hand in hand-suffering is there so that we are discouraged from doing that thing in order to avoid suffering (for example, we do not come too near to a fire because of the pain that we would experience if we did so) while pleasure is there so that we are encouraged to do another thing in order to achieve pleasure (for example, a little child may do his homework because the mother will give him a chocolate if he finishes it) These two things make is so that we are inclined to do the best thing for our species and the species may actually function properly as a result.However, I do not see why this assumption must be true that negative ethics must give way to positive or that the positive necessarily needs to override the negative. Why would the prevention of suffering take a back seat to the promotion of "well-being"? — schopenhauer1
more refined forms of negative experience await you. — schopenhauer1
why bringing about conditions of harm, and forcing these conditions with collateral damage is necessary. That is the difference here in our current deadlock. — schopenhauer1
With ethical theories, you can have positive ethics and negative ethics. Roughly speaking, negative ethics would be about preventing or mitigating suffering while a positive ethics would focus more on creating well-being and happiness.
Apart from the unnecessary word -"violation", which has negative connations and can just be replaced by something like "trade off"-, this is exactly what people who claim that positive things have intrinsic value say. I'm not sure what your point is. — HereToDisscuss
These two things make is so that we are inclined to do the best thing for our species and the species may actually function properly as a result.
This is probably oversimplified, so there are most likely some errors. Howewer, the point is, there is no reason to treat them very seperately-they exist for the same thing (the betterment of society), they just work differently. — HereToDisscuss
Imagine a bucket with a hole. Yes the hole (suffering) must be adequately sealed (negative ethics) but the goal actually is to fill the bucket (positive ethics). — TheMadFool
I don't understand what you think you're going to get out of keeping on hammering this. — Isaac
If Antinatalism is ethical, why not genocide or mass sterilisation? Come to think of it, in order to really eliminate pain and suffering, (important distinctions which I'll get to in a moment) doesn't the problem demand a universe ending solution? Is that not a little too demanding of a principle for our small little species to have? — Mark Dennis
Suffering however, that is letting the abstract self via esteem or ego be harmed is entirely within ones own control. You can just not put your sense of self value on such shaky pedestals that bodily pain has any bearing on them. You dont have control of your body, it's out of your control. Bacteria doesn't ask our permission to make us sick its just trying to live itself. You can make choices which contribute towards positive outcomes but the outcomes themselves are mostly out of your control. You can be healthy as a horse and still fall and break your leg. — Mark Dennis
The key thing to remember is that humans are getting better at reducing pain inducing environments. — Mark Dennis
Can I ask you something which I feel is very important? How teachable is Antinatalism to a child? How would a child feel if they were told that having children is the worst thing a person could do? Pretty sure the reaction would not be a good one. — Mark Dennis
You seem to know a lot about your ethical principles, but what about your metaethical ones? — Mark Dennis
I think the assumption of a “negative ethics” is the problem to begin with, because “not bringing about negative experiences” seems to me to be the same as doing nothing. One cannot show ethical conduct towards beings that do not exist, so it turns out negative ethics is more an exercise in self-serving than an ethical stance. — NOS4A2
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