So the fact that it doesn't say "that non-existence is the ONLY way to avoid suffering" is irrelevant if that's what the arguments imply. — Isaac
The fact that it doesn't specifically mention the sanctity of human life is irrelevant if undermining it is what the arguments imply. — Isaac
Where is this implied? — khaled
That either implies that avoiding birth is the only way to alleviate suffering, or the human life is so trivial a thing that we need not consider its extinction a good reason to seek alternative methods. — Isaac
The very fact that any suffering can befall someone, that someone can even make bad decisions that lead to ruinous consequences, the fact that conditions are present whereby one can have natural or human decision-making causes for pain is all considered equally bad. — schopenhauer1
Agreed. This seems like a specific instance of the broader asymmetry and deprivationalist account (re: intra-worldly balance) of pleasure and pain. Is it better to be put in a situation where there is a right choice and a wrong choice, or to not be put in that situation to begin with? If there is no reason or need for someone to make choices, why give them this burden? — darthbarracuda
It seems clear that someone who makes a very bad choice would have been better off had they either made a different choice (an empirical truth), or never had to make that choice to begin with (a metaphysical truth). — darthbarracuda
I have a different perspective on how to look at ethics than what you have stated. — schopenhauer1
You're not compelled by unassailable logic to look at things the way you do. Absolutely every single one of your arguments proceeds from some unusual axiom which you have simply chosen to hold despite being free to choose otherwise There are any of a dozen different ways to interpret that silly 'life on Mars' intuition, for example. — Isaac
Rather, I have a different perspective on how to look at ethics than what you have stated. The way you phrased it right there is that human life is some kind of mission, and by having new people, we are fulfilling this mission. Rather, at least this form of antinatalism that I am discussing, would look at the individual's worth and dignity rather than a cause (e.g. humanity, human life). How so, you say? Because in the procreational decision, one can prevent all future harm from befalling a future individual, without any negative consequences to that future individual. That would be actually affirming the worth, by considering that one is not foisting negative consequences, or perhaps a game that the future person would not want to play (or even have a tendency to play poorly). [And these are the reasons why I make these threads, to change perspectives on these things which only SEEM counter-intuitive. Luckily something like a PHILOSOPHY FORUM would be the place to posit these kind of counterintuitive notions.] — schopenhauer1
There are any of a dozen different ways to interpret that silly 'life on Mars' intuition, for example. You've chosen a set of frames which leads you to the annihilation if the human race as an answer. — Isaac
Anyone in their right mind would see that as a sign they might have taken a wrong turn somewhere. — Isaac
in the procreational decision, one can prevent all future harm from befalling a future individual, without any negative consequences to that future individual — schopenhauer1
the moral choice is to always prevent creating conditions/capacities of suffering when one is able. — schopenhauer1
I'm sure you don't consider the argument against procreating to be an argument for murder, but you must rely on some other principle right? Without something else you have an argument for mercy killing on a global scale. — Srap Tasmaner
the dignity of the person — schopenhauer1
The dignity of a person who doesn't exist and cannot give or withhold consent? — Srap Tasmaner
Respecting "what could be"? But that's not an individual, and they have no consent to give or withhold. — Srap Tasmaner
At any rate, it turns out you don't need a extra principle to block mass mercy killing, because you start from respect for the individual life, and believe anti-natalism can be derived from that. Yes? — Srap Tasmaner
Yeah, and this sums up exactly what I'm saying. You're not compelled by unassailable logic to look at things the way you do. Absolutely every single one of your arguments proceeds from some unusual axiom which you have simply chosen to hold despite being free to choose otherwise There are any of a dozen different ways to interpret that silly 'life on Mars' intuition, for example. You've chosen a set of frames which leads you to the annihilation if the human race as an answer. Anyone in their right mind would see that as a sign they might have taken a wrong turn somewhere. — Isaac
I think you're right on the money here, Isaac. I've always been a little suspicious of people who espouse views that they can't (or refuse to) actually live out. If someone really thinks that non-existence is the preferable state of being they're free to kill themselves (not that I am suggesting this.)
Even if society was perfect and we had eliminated war, poverty, and disease humans would still be subject to terrible, non-consensual forces outside of their control, like having to wake up from a pleasant sleep or go to the bathroom. We solve fix these problems by destroying humanity. /s. — BitconnectCarlos
Because they don't exist YET, doesn't negate this principle — schopenhauer1
Actually, I still think it would be bad to a certain extent as the way this often works is that more "refined" versions of suffering will simply become the biggest forms of suffering and be the new "standard" for suffering. — schopenhauer1
to change perspectives on these things which only SEEM counter-intuitive. — schopenhauer1
The argument here, and in previous such posts, is that we cannot alleviate suffering by our actions toward each other sufficiently to overcome the advocacy of doing so by avoiding procreation. — Isaac
That either implies that avoiding birth is the only way to alleviate suffering, or the human life is so trivial a thing that we need not consider its extinction a good reason to seek alternative methods. — Isaac
You're not compelled by unassailable logic to look at things the way you do. — Isaac
Anyone in their right mind would see that as a sign they might have taken a wrong turn somewhere. — Isaac
Why? This is the question I'm really getting at. Why would you do this. We've just established that the axioms which lead you here are chosen voluntarily. Yes, if you choose to look at things a certain way you could logically end up with anti-natalism — Isaac
We know of no way to alleviate suffering 100% ... If you offer an antinatalist a button that makes sure no children will ever be born again and a button that makes earth a utopia he would pick the utopia without hesitation — khaled
We have no right to force others to seek alternative methods without even knowing if they are possible just because we want said methods.
How would you feel if you were born into some dystopian society forced to work to the bone, hating your life and it was all justified by: "Your great great great grandchildren MAY not experience suffering". A bit of an extreme example just to illustrate the point. — khaled
This is the case for every single ethical argument. So why do you have such a problem with this one? — khaled
"Why not?" is a possible answer. — khaled
You cannot on one hand stress how moral interpretations are subjective and baseless and on the other hand try to imply that this particular interpretation should be changed to a "better" interpretation. — khaled
It is very common for people to post on this site to debate the beliefs they already hold. — khaled
It is only necessary that suffering is outweighed by pleasures — Isaac
Fine. How would you feel about the prospect of the entire human race becoming extinct? — Isaac
then later when your conclusions clash with other intuitions (here, that annihilating the human race is a bad thing) claim to have demonstrated those second intuitions to be thus wrong — Isaac
That you personally might have no issue with that — Isaac
Yes, I absolutely can. That's the whole point of moral relativism — Isaac
You can debate the validity of a conclusion presuming shared axioms and an agreement as to what constitutes a rational step and what doesn't. — Isaac
Here the argument is based on some flimsy logic applied to unpopular axioms and the consequence is the end of humanity forever. — Isaac
It's just that I don't think the sadness that I will feel over human extinction gives me a right to have a child to prevent it. — khaled
Using moral relativism to undermine an ethical position doesn't really work because it undermines all ethical positions not just the one you take issue with. — khaled
And what shope is trying to do is trying to debate whether or not a shared axiom is correct. I don't see a problem with that. — khaled
As I said before (and you conveniently ignored), the axioms antinatalism needs are not unpopular at all. — khaled
The inference only holds because one or more of the premises fail, so it's vacuously true, which doesn't seem like much of a foundation for an ethical position.
If that's really it, then no wonder no one ever persuades you (your position is logically defensible) and you never persuade anyone else (the key inference is only vacuously valid, but not sound). — Srap Tasmaner
It shows that we're both on the same page that the anti-natalism objection is less to do with society and more to do with just a general objection to being. — BitconnectCarlos
However, there is a necessary deprivation to being- that doesn't go away. — schopenhauer1
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