(B) I guess. Well, it's not. Whatever happens to a tree is not "caused" by planting the seed from which it grew. — 180 Proof
It doesn't negate it so much as make it a risky action. Have kids: Risk of harm and risk of pleasure (risky), Don't have kids: No risk of either (safe) — khaled
Causing conditions for which people will experience suffering, is a weighty matter, a moral one. At the least it is a core existential question that one must grapple with. — schopenhauer1
Is it wrong for a pigeon to shit on my car? Is it wrong for a shark to prey upon another fish? These organisms are behaving in accordance to their nature.
Procreation is an act of blameless wrong-doing, i.e. foolishness. Is it wrong for a fool to act foolishly, if it is in their nature to do so? There is nothing in procreation to justify, it's just what people do. We might think it is stupid, or that it would be better if they refrained, but demanding people give a rational justification for something that is natural and instinctive is equally foolish. — darthbarracuda
Is it wrong for a pigeon to shit on my car? Is it wrong for a shark to prey upon another fish? These organisms are behaving in accordance to their nature.
Procreation is an act of blameless wrong-doing, i.e. foolishness. Is it wrong for a fool to act foolishly, if it is in their nature to do so? There is nothing in procreation to justify, it's just what people do. We might think it is stupid, or that it would be better if they refrained, but demanding people give a rational justification for something that is natural and instinctive is equally foolish. — darthbarracuda
Why does the risk of pain outweigh all the other benefits of life? — Philosophim
More nonsense. — 180 Proof
For example, 'leading a jackass to water' may be a necessary condition but alone is insufficent for causing this jackass 'to drink'. — 180 Proof
Why? — TheMadFool
It doesn't, and I never said that it did. But that is irrelevant. We require consent for risky actions when we do them unto others.
For example: Going to a theme park has a risk of pleasure and a risk of pain. So depending on the person it may or may not be worth it to go. If person A thinks it's worth going that doesn't justify person A forcing person B to go without consent. The reason behind that is NOT that the risk of going "objectively" outweighs the risk of not going, but simply because person B MAY think that the it does. Maybe person B has a fear of heights or something or hates crowded spaces. That is why person A cannot assume person B will like the theme park simply because A personally liked it. Which is why person A must ask person B first if he wants to go. If person B is not available to be asked, that still doesn't justify person A forcing him to go.
Pretending that we require the consent of some non-existent, imaginary person seems nonsensical. — NOS4A2
Youre being ridiculous. We went over this before. If this line of reasoning is followed, then if someone who would be born, we knew was 100% going to be tortured, we wouldnt consider that future person at all because they werent born yet. So essentially the person has to be born and tortured for this consideration to be relevant. Ridiculous.
And it seems to me that a necessary condition of requiring consent for risky actions when we do them unto others is that the other must first exist. — NOS4A2
seeks some round-about praise for his masturbatory activities. — NOS4A2
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