that failing to help reduce suffering when is it well within your power to do so is bad, even if that means forcing another to help (if forcing another is the only action you can take - you yourself are unable to help for some reason). — Isaac
you are claiming that people should procreate in the hopes that their progeny will reduce suffering? — schopenhauer1
You realize this is an absurd, unnecessary pyramid scheme right? By creating more people, you are creating more sources of suffering, thereby needing more people to prevent suffering. — schopenhauer1
it is also unethical to use people as suffering-reducers. — schopenhauer1
That is causing the very harm that needs reduction in the first place. — schopenhauer1
There is no reason to cause the situation for harm to take place in the first place — schopenhauer1
Is it? So one cannot call for help, because one cannot use another person to reduce suffering? — Isaac
Once born, reducing harm becomes a necessity of living in a society with people who are brought into existence already. However, to cause all cases of harm (bringing someone into existence) in the first place is unjustified. That is causing the very harm that needs reduction in the first place. It is creating the very circumstances that people have to deal with in the first place. No one needs anything prior to birth, obviously. No one needs harm reduced prior to birth obviously. No one needs prior to birth, period. And so while it is justified once born to reduce suffering, as it is "too late" to prevent all cases of harm for a person, it is certainly not justified to bring about the very situation for "all harms to take place" just because there is the potential for the harm to get mitigated at some point. There is no reason to cause the situation for harm to take place in the first place, and certainly not for a third-party agenda (thus using people for this agenda). — schopenhauer1
All one is doing by giving birth is facilitating a duty of the next generation to help reduce suffering. — Isaac
No it isn't. The harm in need of reduction is caused by other people having children. The reduction in question is caused by you having children. Two different events. All that is required to make the decision sound is that you have reason to believe you're a better than average parent. — Isaac
Have a look back at the proposition I actually opposed. Unless you are advocating the immediate annihilation of the human race then the situation in which harm takes place is happening anyway, that is not within your control. — Isaac
Nah I don't think this follows. Just because someone is doing something bad does not mean I have any moral duty to get involved to stop them. I didn't ask to be here, and I hate cleaning up messes other people make. I have enough to worry about in my own life, so I mind my own business and let others do their thing. — darthbarracuda
But surely I am justified in trying to convince people that doing something is wrong, if I believe it is wrong? — darthbarracuda
Again, my point is the idea of forcing pain on someone else for one's own benefit of alleviating pain is not a good one. — schopenhauer1
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