For the antinatalists in the forum, do you think that the actions of Bob are justified? — TheHedoMinimalist
What about the actions of Mary?
For all the non-antinatalists, do you consider donating to Project Prevention as a good action, a neutral action, or a bad action?
No. Bob procreated in order to use the child to bribe his parent not disinherit him. No end doesn't justifies using the child as the means. — 180 Proof
2. Mary also thinks that life is bad and procreation is prima facie immoral. But, she really wants to have children. She reasons that as long as she donates enough money to Project Prevention that prevents more people from being born than the people that she creates, it is ok for her to have children. — TheHedoMinimalist
For the antinatalists in the forum, do you think that the actions of Bob are justified? What about the actions of Mary? For all the non-antinatalists, do you consider donating to Project Prevention as a good action, a neutral action, or a bad action? — TheHedoMinimalist
Not good. Even as an antinatalist I can see that targeting addicts clearly exploits their joneses and is wrong. If the choice not to procreate is coerced in any way, then it's not freely chosen and thereby inflicts harm on the "already born". The end doesn't justify the means especially where 'prevention of inevitable harm' is an end brought about by doing harm in the first place. — 180 Proof
No. Bob procreated in order to use the child to bribe his parent not disinherit him. No end doesn't justifies using the child as the means. — 180 Proof
I think selective antinatalism is simply eugenics. While, I agree that situational anti-procreation is justified (debilitated drug addicts shouldn't have kids), antinatalism as I see it is mainly about not causing harm or aggression towards a future person. In other words, you can perfectly respect the autonomy of the individual by not enabling conditions of harm for a future person, and by not "forcing their hand" and violating non-aggression by affecting an individual by bringing them into the world in the first place. — schopenhauer1
For the antinatalists in the forum, do you think that the actions of Bob are justified?
— TheHedoMinimalist
No. Bob procreated in order to use the child to bribe his parent not disinherit him. No end doesn't justifies using the child as the means.
What about the actions of Mary?
I don't see anything wrong with her following that strong, biopsychological programming. And then encouraging others for whom it's not so strong not to procreate. — 180 Proof
For the antinatalists in the forum, do you think that the actions of Bob are justified? What about the actions of Mary? For all the non-antinatalists, do you consider donating to Project Prevention as a good action, a neutral action, or a bad action? — TheHedoMinimalist
Their counter-argument to this criticism is to point out that if you think that drugs addicts are unable to make clear-headed decisions to get paid to get sterilized then why would you think that they can make a clear headed decision to procreate. — TheHedoMinimalist
Mathematically speaking, it’s intuitive to suppose that if someone prevents 5 lives from existing and causes only 1 to exist, then they made a better impact on the world than a “passive” antinatalist who simply doesn’t reproduce. — TheHedoMinimalist
I think I am in between, personally, I plan to have NO children. But I do not feel an urge to convince others. And intellectually, I can see merits to both sides of the argument. — ZhouBoTong
Mary is going to have some serious cognitive dissonance. What else has she labelled as unquestionably immoral that she still wants to do? But other than her internal contradictions, I don't have a problem with the actions. — ZhouBoTong
I am not sure we can always simplify moral decisions with math...but I have to run and have not thoroughly reviewed your last two posts...so don't take that criticism seriously until I have time to read everything :smile: — ZhouBoTong
Given that Antinatalists often feel that even ordinary lives are bad, — TheHedoMinimalist
She reasons that as long as she donates enough money to Project Prevention that prevents more people from being born than the people that she creates, it is ok for her to have children. — TheHedoMinimalist
Thats called "license to sin" in psychology and it makes no sense. She could've donated the same amount if not more if she didn't have a child
I think Bob's case is moral though — khaled
This is a common criticism that Project Prevention receives. Their counter-argument to this criticism is to point out that if you think that drugs addicts are unable to make clear-headed decisions to get paid to get sterilized then why would you think that they can make a clear headed decision to procreate. — TheHedoMinimalist
It seems that the vast majority of drug addicts have children on accident ... — TheHedoMinimalist
... and then those children get taken away from them and they end up in a terrible foster home while suffering from opioid withdrawal. It also costs the taxpayer $500,000 to treat one infant with opioid withdrawal plus the costs of foster care. — TheHedoMinimalist
I’m surprised that you support the actions of Mary but not the actions Bob. — TheHedoMinimalist
Though, can you make a stronger argument for why the ends do not justify the means for those who are not convinced of this principle? — TheHedoMinimalist
Mathematically speaking, it’s intuitive to suppose that if someone prevents 5 lives from existing and causes only 1 to exist, then they made a better impact on the world than a “passive” antinatalist who simply doesn’t reproduce. — TheHedoMinimalist
... isn't Mary in an ends justifying means situation as well? — ZhouBoTong
Am I wrong in thinking that both would be driven by biopsychological programming ... — ZhouBoTong
... (wouldn't biopsychological include EVERYTHING that goes into our decision making process?) — ZhouBoTong
After philosophical examination, Mary realized that it’s only immoral if she creates more lives than she prevents. — TheHedoMinimalist
I tend to think of morality as the element of decision making theory which explores the benefits and harms that a decision option has for someone other than yourself. — TheHedoMinimalist
Of course, there is often ambiguity in the hierarchy if 2 things fall within the same quasi-mathematical categories. — TheHedoMinimalist
This would get us into the discussion of what types of things are intrinsically good or good in a final sense by which they can be used as appropriate quasi-mathematical points for the evaluation of decision option outcomes. — TheHedoMinimalist
No much of a counter because it misses the large social point, namely that no politician or bureaucrat or committee is "clear-headed" enough to decide upon and implement sterilization policies of marginalized a demographic or community especially if they don't belong to the targetted group. Plenty of recent historical evidence bears this out. — 180 Proof
So-called "clear-headed" arguments like these are like arguments for adversely classifying members of out-groups worthy of being coerced or deprived of XYZ on the basis of "illiteracy"-based or "low IQ score"-based or "psychiatric history"-based or "non/religious affiliation"-based rationalizations which insinuate, if not explicit, question fitness for XYZ. Fascist bs. — 180 Proof
And the vast majority of homo insapiens (& hominin cousins) for the last 2.5 million years too and currently still do. So? — 180 Proof
Mary's decision to fulfill a species need to procreate and a personal desire to parent children wagers on her being able to (as much as possible) protect from harm as well as nurture her child(ren) in order to give them the best of odds of the living — 180 Proof
Means and ends must be adjusted to one another so that the latter is not undermined or invalidated by the former while the former is calibrated to enacted the latter. — 180 Proof
She's not "justifying" her decision to procreate, rather she's trying to precede in a way that doesn't invalidate or undermine either the prospect of parenting or working for the movement. — 180 Proof
That's wrong. Bob doesn't have a species need - biopsych programming - to live any better than his ancestors did during the last great ice age. — 180 Proof
Surely their are many organizations in our society (businesses, religions, charities, schools, etc) that attempt to encourage certain behaviors? Why are they fine, but this is not? — ZhouBoTong
Doesn't an awareness of this downside largely prevent it from occurring (assuming people actually want to prevent it)?
She absolutely undermined the child reduction movement. The phrase practice what you preach comes to mind. No one is going to listen to an antinatalist that talks about how much she loves her child.
Is there any scenario where a "species need" gives men a pass on their thoughtful action like it is giving women a pass in this scenario?
Notice I can't be sitting in front of the judge for assault, and be like "what? it was fight or flight. my hormones took over."
I suppose as a white guy in this country, maybe it would work ...
...haven't we left the realm of "species need" far behind :razz: ?
No much of a counter because it misses the large social point, namely that no politician or bureaucrat or committee is "clear-headed" enough to decide upon and implement sterilization policies of marginalized a demographic or community especially if they don't belong to the targetted group. Plenty of recent historical evidence bears this out. — 180 Proof
And the vast majority of homo insapiens (& hominin cousins) for the last 2.5 million years too and currently still do. So? — 180 Proof
I don't accept "ends justify means" arguments in ethics. Means and ends must be adjusted to one another so that the latter is not undermined or invalidated by the former while the former is calibrated to enacted the latter. A version of reflective equilibrium. — 180 Proof
Atrocities are what "mathematically speaking" gets you:
“If only one man dies of hunger, that is a tragedy. If millions die, that’s only statistics.”
~Uncle Joe of Georgia
or more familiarly
"Explain to me why it is more noble to kill 10,000 men in battle than a dozen at dinner."
~Lord Tywin of Casterly Rock — 180 Proof
Well, you're right, something must be done; what's proffered here, however, causes as many or more problems than it solves. — 180 Proof
Mary's decision to fulfill a species need to procreate and a personal desire to parent children wagers on her being able to (as much as possible) protect from harm as well as nurture her child(ren) in order to give them the best of odds of the living with the least suffering while simultaneously working to support the antinatalist movement. She's not "justifying" her decision to procreate, rather she's trying to precede in a way that doesn't invalidate or undermine either the prospect of parenting or working for the movement. — 180 Proof
That's wrong. Bob doesn't have a species need - biopsych programming - to live any better than his ancestors did during the last great ice age. He's a freeloading, child-exploiting grifter. Also, he doesn't have a fundamental need to promote antinalism (or any abstrat notion). Maybe some neurological issues there (e.g. sociopathy) ... but not a fundamental drive, shared by almost every other (nonpathological) human being, that would disable or kill him if not satisfied or periodically maintained. — 180 Proof
Yes, but "EVERYTHING" doesn't equally determine or drive us to decide whether or when or with whom or even how to fulfill our species need - programming, or hormonal drive - to procreate. If more fundamental drives like metabolic, procreative, fight or flight, intentional agency attribution (e.g. theory of mind), etc weren't primary, and social or personal desires secondary, the current human species would very likely be extinct today. — 180 Proof
I am not a fan of this type of moralizing. One could define their behavior to be perfectly moral no matter how one behaves. Murder is wrong. Unless the person deserves it.
This mindset could lead to every negative that 180 Proof mentioned. Only the poor, stupid, and weak are denied children while "I" as a valued citizen can reproduce at will. — ZhouBoTong
I think this is great...unfortunately most of the world has their morality dictated to them from magical books....but now reading your objection to deontology, maybe you still view those people as choosing their morality? — ZhouBoTong
I think this is the problem that would be seen a lot...however, the more complicated the math equation, the more factors it could include (and therefor the less ambiguity it would have). — ZhouBoTong
While you could find a lot of agreement on these points, it would almost never be unanimous. I do not think this invalidates your ideas, it just suggests a type of limited usefulness (and to be fair nothing has universal usefulness, so that is not necessarily a substantial problem). — ZhouBoTong
Whenever someone starts defending or drawing false equivalences to pedophilia, I bow out leaving things at let's agree to disagree about the topic at hand. Apparently, THM, you're looking to score points rather than (re)examine (the assumptions of) your position, if only for discussion's sake, in light of my objections to it. I'm not interested in debating points. Maybe other fish will take your bait ... — 180 Proof
by exploitation: bribing addicts with money for their fix if they submit to being (medically) sterilized — 180 Proof
E.g. (a) cannibalising dead people iff starving ... (b) breaking into an empty house to shelter in place from a hurricane or other extreme weather ... (c) self-defensive violence or killing, etc — 180 Proof
Not perfect, or "ideologically pure", but good enough so long as she juggles the trade-offs conscientiously. — 180 Proof
But, I don’t see how this an exclusive critique of “License to Sin” Utilitarianism. — TheHedoMinimalist
it’s actually not clear to me if magical books dictate morality to religious people or if religious people dictate their magical books to their morality. I think it’s a bit of both. — TheHedoMinimalist
So, why are people who believe in the sanctity of life more likely to be religious? Well, it’s pretty difficult to defend their views through secular reasoning since it’s not clear why life should be valued for its own sake. — TheHedoMinimalist
If 2 decision option are pretty close in goodness then you might as well just flip a coin and not over-analyze the decision. — TheHedoMinimalist
But, my specific ideas are more designed for my own life and deciding what decisions I should make. — TheHedoMinimalist
On this thread, I defended theories that I don’t fully support like Agent Neutral Utilitarianism and “License to Sin” Utilitarianism because they are close relatives to my complicated theory. So, I need not only promote my specific theory. — TheHedoMinimalist
No. — 180 Proof
So attitude/intention matters more than action? Their actions are identical. — ZhouBoTong
If we did not know their thoughts/circumstances we couldn't tell the difference.
I assume you are tired of trying to teach me, but what am I missing?
Is it just the difference between me valuing consequentialism more and you valuing virtue ethics more? (I am probably wrong in naming these ethical stances, but it will show what I am getting at)
Once I identify an ideal, I am not going to lower it just because I am not sure if anyone can live up to the ideal. That is why it is an ideal, not "how we normally act". — ZhouBoTong
That's fair. I think I even started typing something about..."if the dictated morals are too repulsive then they would not be accepted", but then I thought it would be more accurate to say..."if the dictated morals are too repulsive, then they will gradually be phased out over a few centuries"...which suggests that culture changed that caused people to view things as repulsive that were previously just accepted (like stoning adulterers). But I will certainly agree with a bit of both. — ZhouBoTong
This actually captures a lot of my views on morality. Most of it is either grey area or so insignificant that the "right" decision doesn't matter. I enjoy philosophy and testing my decisions in hypothetical situations with the hope that I will make the "correct" moral decision in the one or two moments of my life where there is a difficult and important moral decision. — ZhouBoTong
Well, you are obviously at a higher level, but it sounds like we do this philosophy stuff for similar reasons :smile: — ZhouBoTong
Feel free to point out (i will just view it as a learning experience) any time I misrepresent or misunderstand established theories. I have almost zero formal philosophy education (shocking, I know). I do take the time to look up definitions, but some of these ideas require a deep understanding before they really make sense. — ZhouBoTong
1. Bob thinks that life is bad and procreation is prima facie immoral. Because of this, he avoids procreating and donates his spare money to Project Prevention. But, he has very wealthy parents and they want grandchildren. Those parents would only allow him to have their inheritance if he procreates. Bob knows that receiving the inheritance money would allow him to get far more drug addicts sterilized. So, he decides to have just 1 child to receive the inheritance money and he gives his only child a privileged lifestyle while still ensuring that he can donate very large sums of money to Project Prevention. — TheHedoMinimalist
Only that I'm not "trying to teach" but rather give my reasons for disapproving of Bob and approving of Mary. — 180 Proof
With respect to Mary and Bob, he at minimum, harms his offspring (not by procreating itself but by using his offspring as a means-to-an-end extraneous to his offspring's welfare), harms his parents (he's complicit in their extorting him for a grandchild and thereby facilitating their use of his offspring as a means to being grandparents rather than as an end itself) — 180 Proof
I fail to see how Bob's proximate end (avoid disinheritance) in any way justifies the means he's chosen (bribe parents give him an inheritance by procreating - we are, if I'm not mistaken, impeaching a president later today for this sort of nakedly basic quid pro quo, aren't we?). — 180 Proof
I 'marry' virtue to consequentialism in a 'naturalistic agent-based negative utilitarian / consequentialist ethics' which I summarize here (with a few more embedded links). — 180 Proof
For example, I would consider sacrificing my life in a relatively painless manner to rescue many people from suffering to be a good decision option but it’s unlikely that I will have the bravery to act on that decision option. I don’t think this should be construed as evidence that I actually don’t think that it’s a good decision option deep inside. I think we might be psychologically unable to act on what we honestly consider good because of incontinence. — TheHedoMinimalist
I actually think that capital punishment is strangely life affirming. To imply that bad people should be killed is to imply that life is valuable and death is harmful. — TheHedoMinimalist
Ironically enough, having a botched suicide attempt used to be a crime and it was punishable by death! You can’t make this shit up :lol: ! — TheHedoMinimalist
I’m actually more interested in prudential decision making than moral decision making. — TheHedoMinimalist
I also learned a thing or two about decision making by reading books by Nassim Taleb who I strongly recommend. — TheHedoMinimalist
I recently started a philosophical YouTube channel called Hedonic Minimalist in which I plan to eventually discuss all of my ideas on prudential theory and other topics. So far, I only have 8 videos made which average about 30 minutes in length but I should be able to release many more since making a 30 minute YouTube video usually only takes me like 50 minutes. — TheHedoMinimalist
You understood my very wordy comments quite well. I kinda have a bad habit of using too much philosophical jargon. — TheHedoMinimalist
I mostly learned this stuff by listening to lectures on YouTube and reading academic philosophical journals on philarchive.org . — TheHedoMinimalist
I think Philosophy is more about philosophizing than studying philosophy though. — TheHedoMinimalist
I think you have quite a talent for philosophizing though. — TheHedoMinimalist
I am an antinatalist of Bob's kind (that is, I think procreation is prima facie immoral, but may nevertheless be justified in many cases). — Bartricks
But that's not all that matters. It is also important to show respect for others in one's behaviour, and respect for free choice. — Bartricks
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