the second are not caused by because it's not a sufficient condition without proximate causes — Benkei
The fact that all living things suffer at some point in time, is not a valid argument to conclude that living is a sufficient condition for suffering so this does not resolve the causal chain. — Benkei
In both you seem to be saying that since birth does not guarantee suffering, you cannot say that having children causes suffering, and therefore it is okay to have children.
If that is the case then the fact that the act (pulling the trigger) does not cause harm should be enough of a reason to say pulling the trigger is okay. — khaled
People who are born are guaranteed to suffer but being born doesn't cause suffering. There's an important moral difference here and the analogy breaks down because of it. — Benkei
I'd go further to say that there is no such thing as a "positive moral duty". If it's a duty then doing it is what is expected, it is not positive. — khaled
If you have a duty not to harm others for instance, and so you do not harm others, you are not being virtuous, you're doing the bare minimum. To be virtuous you have to go out of your way and actually help someone with something, which I repeat you don't have to do. — khaled
The universe guarantees life. The big bang did it! That would be the bs. — Benkei
There's certainly a value to philosophical pessimism. I don't believe in progress as much as the next because of philosophical pessimism — Benkei
Because I am part of this calculation too. The "expected value" of the harm I would cause unto others is much lower than the "expected value" of the harm I would cause myself by killing myself. So I continue to exist. You have to consider alternatives. — khaled
So, in your view, do you consider the expected harm a person being born will experience through life greater than the expected harm experienced by those who wish to have children if they follow antinatalism? — Pinprick
I’d also be interested to hear how you quantify harm. For example, is 1,000 people getting paper cut equal to one person breaking their leg? — Pinprick
It's a positive duty because it obliges you to act in a specific way. — Echarmion
If virtue is to act in accordance with a system of morality — Echarmion
There are almost unlimited ways to formulate rules/obligations/imperatives — Echarmion
I don’t have many of those. Outside of having to try and make up to someone after harming them you don’t really have to do anything morally speaking outside of just not harm people in my view. — khaled
The idea that you're an island whose only duty is to not interfere with other islands unless in a transaction is not only counterfactual, it's downright distopian. — Echarmion
And also not my idea. Where did I say "Whose only duty is not to interfere". You can help if you want, you just don't have to. I don't understand why whenever I share this view people worry that it will somehow suddenly make people cold and uncaring towards each other. The idea that I don't have a moral obligation to save a drowning person doesn't mean I won't.
Also, counterfactual? Since when are we talking about facts? — khaled
I'd like to ask about your view then. Do you think that people are obligated to donate to charity? And if not why do you think people are obligated to save others from drowning when they can but are not obligated to donate to charity? — khaled
That society regards your assistance to someone in immediate need as an obligation — Brett
This sense of obligation means that you will receive it if in need yourself. — Brett
If you live within a community and receive benefits from that community in the way that communities function then you are obliged to live according to the mores of that community. — Brett
No one feels obliged to do it. — Brett
But why shouldn't something we'd all agree to do be a duty? — Echarmion
If it's what we should do, then it is our moral duty. — Echarmion
but I think one can establish a moral duty to give to people in need — Echarmion
Donating to charity is an impersonal process. There are
also manyy different kinds of charity. So "donating to charity" is too broad to make any singular moral judgement about. Helping a specific drowning person is a concrete situation you can judge. — Echarmion
Lets assume we have found the "perfect charity" where you know exactly what your money is getting used for and it directly improves the lives of others. If such a thing existed would people be obligated to donate now? — khaled
I don't think morality should be deduced from what we all would do. — khaled
It's not what I should do if "should" implies that I would be wrong not to do it. — khaled
By that standard our society is totally morally bankrupt. — khaled
If helping homeless people was a duty, there would be no homeless people. — khaled
Lets assume we have found the "perfect charity" where you know exactly what your money is getting used for and it directly improves the lives of others. If such a thing existed would people be obligated to donate now? — khaled
If someone drowns and there are 20 people watching, do they get incarcerated? No. So I don't think society sees this as an obligation. — khaled
How come you can find countless videos of people asking for help to no avail and everyone just walking by? How often do you see beggars without anyone donating anything to them? — khaled
If you live within a community and receive benefits from that community in the way that communities function then you are obliged to live according to the mores of that community.
— Brett
Agreed. However you have yet to show that part of these obligations is that one must save a drowning person. — khaled
How else could it be deduced, other than by asking, in some form, what rules we would want everyone to follow? — Echarmion
I don't think morality should be deduced from what we all would do. — khaled
What use would morality be if it didn't tell you right from wrong? — Echarmion
This doesn't follow, since even if everyone agrees to a single moral philosophy, not everyone would always act in accordance with it. — Echarmion
in this context we're basically already starting that it would be moral to give to it. — Echarmion
I don’t see how you connect a moral obligation to law. — Brett
Exactly. This is the consequence of refusing their obligation to others. See how it ends up? — Brett
Okay. Then you fail to understand the idea of community and so you are part of the problem. — Brett
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