Actual suffering and benefits takes place for individuals.. even if it is in the context of a whole society with institutions, historical contingency, technology, ideas, and the like. Again, institutions et al. do not suffer. They don't carry out 0-100 years of life of actually living it out. To then go a step beyond and to say that individuals NEED to be born so that these institutions et al. can be carried forth is also immoral because individuals are thus used by society to keep it going- disregarding or foregoing the individual that is being affected — schopenhauer1
You can claim that this is just how it is, and because it exists, it must be good, but that is simply not the case. — schopenhauer1
That's classic appeal to nature or the naturalistic fallacy. — schopenhauer1
And again khaled brought up that Kant had some what some might characterize as "unusual" conclusions. — schopenhauer1
I can give plenty of examples of things that "we find satisfying" that might not be "ethical". — schopenhauer1
Argument from indignity is not an argument — schopenhauer1
People have a right not to be harmed — khaled
I've never seen someone reject the "deal" that is society. But if someone says "I don't want to live in a society where I must work to survive after I become an adult" they're welcome to leave. I always thought there should be some service that does that, allow people to just leave and dump them in some random jungle somewhere since they hate society so much. — khaled
humanity vs. individual — schopenhauer1
individual vs. society — schopenhauer1
And I claim that the substance of morality is how we must treat each other if we're going to live together in social groups — Srap Tasmaner
You simply restating what you consider immoral doesn't get us anywhere. We all know what you consider immoral, we've established that such a limited view is not widely shared, why are we going over this again as if it were a debate? You repeatedly telling us what you think regardless of what anyone else has said is not a discussion. — Isaac
Where have I claimed anything like this? — Isaac
. You say it as a natural fact, as if this is how humans have developed. I mean it is true, humans need community to survive through cultural transmission of information. That is essentially what that quote is getting at. However, just because that is how we function, doesn't mean people must be born to carry it out. Circular reasoning.A community needs members to carry out it's functions (and those functions are important to the existing members). We each play our part in those (as we each benefit from them being done), we know that one day we'll die, yet the part we play is still going to need playing, so we have children, to carry on that role. — Isaac
Naming it a fallacy is an insufficient argument. You'd have to show how morality is something other than feelings which are, in part, biological. — Isaac
Unusual and repugnant are two very different categories. As I was very careful to say, ethical theories can sometimes be useful when they highlight a solution to an ethical dilemma, or perhaps motivate us to do what we, deep down, knew was right. — Isaac
This is an order of magnitude away from reaching the conclusion that we should end the human race and, rather than doubting one's route there, doubling down and insisting it's right. — Isaac
Notwithstanding that. If Kant's conclusions are truly that unusual then there is little point in discussing them either. — Isaac
No you can't. You can provide me with examples of things some people find satisfying which others don't. The search to prove anything is objectively 'ethical' has been ongoing for two thousand years and has come up with absolutely nothing. — Isaac
You've just repeated the same unsupported assertion I called you out on before (which you just ignored). Why is what I find repugnant (like ending the human race) labelled as pearl-clutching 'indignation' and not worthy of consideration, but what you find repugnant (like causing harm without consent) is somehow raised to an objective law? — Isaac
2. The terms 'moral', and 'ethical' are not soley used to mean only 'harm avoidance'.
Limiting a discussion about what is moral to what causes harm is just a misuse of language. — Isaac
And I claim that the substance of morality is how we must treat each other if we're going to live together in social groups, and nothing else. I don't know what else it could possibly be -- well, short of it being your duty to God or something I assumed is not on the table here. I don't see how ethical questions arise at all if not among groups of individuals. I don't claim morality is your duty to some abstract thing, but to the others you live with and among.
And that's why I conclude that whatever anti-natalism is, it cannot be a moral claim at all, because its only possible result is for there to be no people let alone groups of them. — Srap Tasmaner
I don't understand why social groups have to be in the equation, and not just how we treat each other. — schopenhauer1
Social groups are a byproduct of how humans survive, sure. — schopenhauer1
Leaving all that aside, the result is that what engages our moral sentiments is other people, moral behavior is behavior that involves other people in some way, and that it doesn't even make sense to talk about morality outside the context of people interacting with each other. — Srap Tasmaner
Thus while you seem to take the admirable moral position of standing up for not mistreating certain individuals, something is clearly wrong because your position calls for there to be no individuals. — Srap Tasmaner
I do not have to pinpoint what's wrong with a paradoxical argument to know that its conclusion is absurd; figuring out how you got there is interesting, but we know something is wrong somewhere, because we know from the start that the conclusion is absurd. That's why it's a paradox. — Srap Tasmaner
I claimed that morality is done to the individual. If you want to debate that, go ahead, STOP POSTURING.. That is all that is. If you have a substantive issue with it, say it. — schopenhauer1
You say it as a natural fact, as if this is how humans have developed. I mean it is true, humans need community to survive through cultural transmission of information. That is essentially what that quote is getting at. However, just because that is how we function, doesn't mean people must be born to carry it out. — schopenhauer1
Something isn't good or moral just because it is natural or the way humans survive. You would then have to prove that this is indeed the case, — schopenhauer1
It's the indignant only at this philosophy when philosophy is full of unusual ideas, that makes me think it is some sort of odd bias and thus debating out of bad faith. — schopenhauer1
So yeah slavery and mass murder are obviously bad, and you would think as intuitions even, but those concepts took violent wars to become as mainstream — schopenhauer1
Mine somehow has some personal cache that the others don't because its about procreation. — schopenhauer1
If harm/suffering is not involved, it seems to be rather outside morality — schopenhauer1
Can't just debate.. have to make it to the man,, right? — schopenhauer1
we haven't had that yet either. — Isaac
It's always to the man. Anyone pretending otherwise is just kidding themselves. Morality makes claims about what we ought and ought not do, it constrains us and judges us. It's entirely personal and always has been. — Isaac
The paradox is immediate: the only way to make sure others are treated as they should be is to make sure there are no people at all. (As I said a very long time ago, this is to prefer the vacuous truth: no balloons are popped if there are no balloons.) That cannot be a moral claim because it leads directly to the end of the circumstances in which moral claims make sense. (But if we allow the vacuous truth any force, we have paradox at best.) — Srap Tasmaner
Are you under the impression I'm defending the existence of the abstract object "set of all persons" rather than the existence of the individual members of that set? — Srap Tasmaner
And I'm not actually doing either; I'm saying if your vision morality requires there to be no individual persons, or collections of them, then that's not what we mean by "morality". — Srap Tasmaner
The effort it takes to change a societal practice is neither here nor there. The 'morality' of both those practices clearly had nothing to do with avoiding harm. They had everything to do with (screwed up) ideas about how to perpetuate the communities from which they arose. Fortunately for all, better ideas prevailed. Veganism may well be the next societal change. Antinatalism is unlike any of these because it seeks to annihilate that which it benefits. The campaigns for all those changes were made for the good of the community, they all had a similar goal in common (a better society). — Isaac
The outcome is no people. — schopenhauer1
How could slavery and mass murder not be a harm to those individuals done to? Of course it is about harm. — schopenhauer1
Antinatalism, does NOT SEEK too annihilate humanity. Rather it seeks forcing conditions of harm on a future person. If that ends in annihilation of humanity, that is a resultant not what is sought. — schopenhauer1
That is not a possible result for a "moral argument" if there is such a thing. Morality is for people dealing with each other — Srap Tasmaner
Bringing about a world in which no one is harmed because no one exists is not what we were looking for in a morality. — Srap Tasmaner
An answer that leads to there being nobody to treat anybody any way at all is not the right kind of answer. — Srap Tasmaner
Please give me why the right kind of answer is for people to have to exist. — schopenhauer1
There are no moral issues without people; eliminating people undercuts what is presupposed in any moral position. You're cutting off the branch you're sitting on and insisting it's the same thing everyone else does, but it is not. — Srap Tasmaner
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