As I said before, I think you've misunderstood moral relativism. A moral claim is a claim about how others should act, not a claim about one's personal prefernces. — Isaac — khaled
That's a question you should ask shope not me. — khaled
But if we're still talking about that then I wasted about 1.5 hours misreading you, sorry about that. — khaled
Where have I suggested the antinatalist doesn't believe this? — Isaac
Here:
No. I know antinatalists have this weird idea that you can't do anything for a person who doesn't yet exist, but tell that to the parent who's saving up children's toys for their as yet un-conceived grandchildren — Isaac
Which is why I said this is a criminal misinterpretation of the argument. — khaled
If I really really like a game and I know you would probably really like it too, it is still wrong for me to tape you to a seat and force you to play it for 5 hours. — khaled
It wouldn't be a stupid mistake if everyone believed it because that includes you and if you believe it it is obviously not stupid from you POV :wink: — khaled
I have no excuse for this one. I just straight up misread. Sorry for all the trouble. — khaled
I guess we're done for real this time as I don't really have an opposition against the two points you're arguing. — khaled
second would be someone making a good balanced choice for me — Isaac
Genuine questions arise when we face situations never contemplated before in the long history of our living together in communities — Srap Tasmaner
The premises in such exercises simply do not have the sort of standing that you think of the premises in a logical argument as having — Srap Tasmaner
When a thought experiment is proposed ("What if it was your daughter?") the idea is to activate our intuitions, give them something more concrete to work with. — Srap Tasmaner
If it doesn't feel right, or if several of us, or millions of us, reach different conclusions, all we can do is try some other starting points we think generally right and talk to each other. — Srap Tasmaner
Is having children a new phenomenon among human beings, something our double inheritance has left us ill-equipped to deal with? — Srap Tasmaner
and it's clear how genuine moral questions arise. — Srap Tasmaner
An idea that, if carried out by the members of a social group, would lead to the disappearance of that group, cannot count as moral for the members of that group. — Srap Tasmaner
Similarly then, I think life is just about the most serious thing you can get someone without their consent (meaning that if they don't want it, it does the most damage out of anything else) so, similar to a house, I don't get it to people without their consent. I don't think life is easy enough to justify that. — khaled
I say: evolution produces animals that are capable of thinking about and acting in accordance with morality. Evolution did not create morality. Just as evolution did not create light, but rather eyes that can sense light. — darthbarracuda
Antinatalism is in accordance with a set of perceived moral laws that transcend the survival of the species. — darthbarracuda
Morality is social. Always has been — Srap Tasmaner
So, just to clarify, for you my second caveat to "Get the consent of others before doing something potentially harmful to them", the one about taking part on wider social objectives, that's just completely irrelevant? — Isaac
You have moral intuitions about sacrificing your preferences for the sake of others I assume, so is it just that any such duty must be secondary to one's personal preferences? — Isaac
I'd feel perfectly within my moral bounds just going ahead and making that purchase on those grounds. That's how communities function, they have a goal which is more important than any individual. — Isaac
yet the part we play is still going to need playing — Isaac
The point I'm making is actually no different to Srap's (I think). Morality is a story we tell ourselves to explain the feelings our biology and early childhood experiences have left us with. It can't be 'worked out', but it is vitally important, and that story is about the community, not the individual. The morality story wouldn't even make sense at an individual level. — Isaac
You have moral intuitions about sacrificing your preferences for the sake of others I assume, so is it just that any such duty must be secondary to one's personal preferences? — Isaac
I don't see how that follows from me thinking that social goals are not a good enough reason to force people to do things they don't want to do. — khaled
Otherwise what prevents an individual from benefitting from a community's protection, safety-net, shared resources, etc., and then when the time comes to give something back saying "you've no right to tell me what to do"? — Isaac
But you have the "correct definition" of morality so I guess Kant was just confused too. — khaled
1. Thou shalt have no other gods before me.
2. Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image...
3. Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain...
4. Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy...
5. Honor thy father and thy mother...
6. Thou shalt not kill.
7. Thou shalt not commit adultery.
8. Thou shalt not steal.
9. Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour.
10. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's house, thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing that is thy neighbor’s. — God
I think sustaining the society is a byproduct that has to come out of individual action. — khaled
Well yeah. My position is that the "conviction" that kin-harming is wrong almost certainly comes wired in, but it doesn't come wired in as a belief. It shows up in our behavior (and in the behavior of ever so many animals), and it shows up in our feelings — Srap Tasmaner
I've got some big hitters on my side too though — Srap Tasmaner
As a child I benefited from a considerable amount of societal boons, right from birth. — Isaac
So how should I handle the duty that accrues, in your system? — Isaac
Similarly, I benefit from the fertility put into my soil several generations ago, how should I absolve my repayment of that debt? — Isaac
How, under your system would anyone undertake any project whose benefits will only accrue to future generations? — Isaac
The child above shouldn't ever have been put in that position because they should never have been born. But in this case it's not so much your moral system leading to antinatalism as antinatalism being required in order to make your system coherent. — Isaac
I was just citing an example to show that my way of thinking isn't this alien, confused thing you've never heard of before — khaled
And then from those feelings we come up with beliefs that explain them and inform us on what to do in novel situations. And antinatalism is one such possible belief. — khaled
Not alien, no, and not unheard of, but I still think the Kantian approach is wrongheaded. — Srap Tasmaner
But to me this is clearly a mistake — Srap Tasmaner
If the whole point of the underlying system is lost by abstracting principles from it and then spinning out new deductions from those principles, either your inferences are faulty or your principle-abstraction process has gone wrong. — Srap Tasmaner
you have to have a way of judging how well you have reconstructed our moral sense as a system of principles — Srap Tasmaner
hold yourself to the same standards of model building that scientists use. — Srap Tasmaner
As a child I benefited from a considerable amount of societal boons, right from birth. — Isaac
And you knew that eventually you'd have to hold a job and make your own living as a contributing member. And I'm willing to wager you didn't protest because the terms are very very good. — khaled
I doubt whoever fertilized the land expected anything out of YOU specifically so no deal there. — khaled
And I don't get this bit at all. Remember this line of argument started from "I find it repulsive for societies to force their members do fullfil "societal goals"". This argument isn't even needed for antinatalism it's a whole different debate. — khaled
Whose fault is everything really? — Srap Tasmaner
Any takeaways for you? Anything you've learned from participating in this thread? — Srap Tasmaner
Do I not owe society anything for all that? — Isaac
The people who give this support do so because they see their community as a moral good in its own right, but they wouldn't be so keen to contribute to that good if those who benefitted most from it incurred no duty to similarly nurture it. — Isaac
Once born you will inevitably be looked after by 'society' and benefit from its boons, without your consent. — Isaac
I'm fairly certain that your neo-liberal 'morality' would lead fairly rapidly to a vicious and unpleasant world of ruthlessly competing individuals — Isaac
I find it interesting that often the individual is indeed the locus of blame/responsibility/accountability when it comes to making bad decisions, working a job, obeying laws (like paying that speeding ticket let's say), but this same individual that will be born (such as myself and you and him and her and any one) cannot (in decisions surrounding procreation) be considered (apparently to some) for the suffering, burdens, general "dealing with life" that will incur to them, except as lumped in as a vague part of continuing the goals of "humanity" in general. — schopenhauer1
It is the individual which should be considered in this crucial of decisions that will affect that person, not an abstract cause, where the locus or carrying out of the burden is actually carried out. — schopenhauer1
As I (and I believe khaled) have reiterated over and over, moral theories at some point rely on one's intuitions and premises. Thus at some point, there is no going past the initial premises. To not recognize that we have stated thus and laid that out from the beginning is willful ignoring of what was said — schopenhauer1
The point is not to castigate ONE moral theory for doing what most (normative and applied level) ethical theories do. — schopenhauer1
Do I not owe society anything for all that? — Isaac
As I said, you owe it to become a productive member. Or to at least try to. — khaled
The people who give this support do so because they see their community as a moral good in its own right, but they wouldn't be so keen to contribute to that good if those who benefitted most from it incurred no duty to similarly nurture it. — Isaac
Agreed. But "nurturing it" doesn't have to take the form of having kids. As proven by the fact that people don't scoff at those who choose to not start a family nor suddenly think that those people are taking from the community's resources without giving back. As I keep saying, being a productive member is good enough payment.
An even better example is that we still give these societal boons to people who can't have children. Which shows that "having children" is not required payment. — khaled
What I find repulsive is forcing someone to do something for a "boon" they didn't ask for or don't want. — khaled
I think the prices of these "boons" should never be paid by those who never asked for said boons and in return they shouldn't enjoy said boons. — khaled
Once born you will inevitably be looked after by 'society' and benefit from its boons, without your consent. — Isaac
You don't need consent to benefit someone if you know that it will be a benefit. — khaled
I'm fairly certain that your neo-liberal 'morality' would lead fairly rapidly to a vicious and unpleasant world of ruthlessly competing individuals — Isaac
I don't see how. — khaled
So if that debt can accrue to me for benefits given without my consent to the deal — Isaac
If "being a productive member is good enough payment." for the boons that previous generations gave then that is almost literally the definition of doing something for a boon they didn't ask for. — Isaac
We don't 'know' they'll benefit. We just have good cause to believe they will. If that's still all that's required then it's OK to bring someone into being without their consent on the same grounds - that we've good cause to believe they'll overall benefit from that action. — Isaac
Have you been to America? — Isaac
how people are motivated to do things which help future generations in your system where there's no duty at all on the beneficiaries of those actions toward the common good that has been thus built. — Isaac
We don't 'know' they'll benefit. We just have good cause to believe they will. If that's still all that's required then it's OK to bring someone into being without their consent on the same grounds — Isaac
Under what circumstances are they 'not considered' for these sufferings. Why do you think people are so worked up about climate change, biodiversity loss, soil degradation, pollution...literally every social and environmental movement of that last hundred years has been out of concern to reduce the suffering of future generations. — Isaac
No-one has said that this is not the case. The argument has been entirely (I even wrote the damn thing out in a single paragraph a few posts ago) that the premises are unusual, and that the conclusions are repugnant to many. This is quite significantly not the same as merely pointing out that your conclusion relies on your premises. — Isaac
Antinatalism does not do what most ethical theories do. Most ethical theories attempt to formalise that which we find ethical, and to thus help resolve dilemmas which we find difficult to otherwise see the right course of action in a way we find satisfying. They do not attempt to use some sketchy logic based on selectively filtered premises to reach a conclusion no-one finds in the least bit satisfying. — Isaac
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