What is community then?
— Brett
A group of people living in a place. — khaled
What does that mean? — Brett
They don’t make it a duty. — Brett
That you do not see an obligation to assist someone who needs help. — Brett
I did. I said it’s regarded as a gift. — Brett
“In a seminal 1986 study, McMillan and Chavis[8] identify four elements of "sense of community":
membership: feeling of belonging or of sharing a sense of personal relatedness,
influence: mattering, making a difference to a group and of the group mattering to its members
reinforcement: integration and fulfillment of needs,
shared emotional connection.” Wikipedia — Brett
Right. But "what rules would we want everyone to follow" is not answered by "What does everyone usually do" (in this case save drowning person). — khaled
Yes but I find it easier to believe that people do not agree on a single moral philosophy than that we do agree, but are just morally bankrupt. — khaled
The problem I see with your argument is you don't give enough account for what we know about the impositions of life. We can generalize what they are without knowing each particular case. We know these would be impositions. The Big Bang and other non-deliberative things cannot evaluate this and prevent these impositions but we can. I think this is a case of ignoring what doesn't fit your case. We know the impositions that occur, both structurally, and even contingently what is in range of what people often have to deal with. There is even the case that because we don't know all the contingent harms, this is even more evidence that it is best to prevent those unknown harms from occurring. But, even if you think unknown harms are not enough reason, even if you don't believe in necessary harms, even the known contingent harms should be enough evidence to prevent it. — schopenhauer1
No, but it's still weird to insist it cannot be an obligation even though you'd not expect anyone to object to doing it — Echarmion
But do you not also consider having children "morally bankrupt", to use your words? — Echarmion
To establish that you are not obligated to have kids because of the good it will do. In the same sense that you’re not obligated to help others with problems you didn’t cause. For the people saying “You are denying life” — khaled
I’m just saying that not everyone thinks they have this moral obligation to help with problems they didn’t cause. — khaled
I don’t think it’s weird. Everybody eats. Doesn’t make it moral or immoral. — khaled
Yes, obviously. Of course people tend to underestimate the problems they do cause. — Echarmion
It's interesting because one of the things that's most significant about having children is that you take up some of the strongest obligations possible. — Echarmion
Aren't impositions a right and proper part about being human? — Echarmion
i don’t think it’s weird. Everybody eats. Doesn’t make it moral or immoral.
— khaled
I get it, you're no longer interested in this conversation. — Echarmion
So are pain and heartbreak. Yet we agree you shouldn’t cause those. — khaled
I don’t know where you get that. I’m just saying you can’t derive a should from a would. — khaled
Instead of rehashing the same arguments made on this forum a dozen times before, I'd like to look more at the underpinnings of your view. Why is it a principle "not to cause an imposition"? Aren't impositions a right and proper part about being human? — Echarmion
Without any qualification? If you're in an abusive relationship, surely you should cause heartbreak. It'd be just as easy to come up with situations where you should cause pain. — Echarmion
But this wasn't really where I way going with the argument. I was wondering what's so bad about having obligations, impositions, being in relationships with others, in the abstract. — Echarmion
"things that I think are virtous and that I would do" and "thinks I should do, in the sense that I am morally obliged to", which I cannot make much sense of. — Echarmion
The OP says quite clearly there's two types of suffering. Intrinsic and contingent. — Benkei
Intrinsic isn't caused by living — Benkei
for contingent life is never a sufficient condition on its own and never a proximate cause and almost always even intervened upon by other circumstances. In my view there's no causality any way you cut it 99% of the cases. — Benkei
We can generalize what they are without knowing each particular case. We know these would be impositions. The Big Bang and other non-deliberative things cannot evaluate this and prevent these impositions but we can. I think this is a case of ignoring what doesn't fit your case. We know the impositions that occur, both structurally, and even contingently what is in range of what people often have to deal with. There is even the case that because we don't know all the contingent harms, this is even more evidence that it is best to prevent those unknown harms from occurring. But, even if you think unknown harms are not enough reason, even if you don't believe in necessary harms, even the known contingent harms should be enough evidence to prevent it. — schopenhauer1
One is about inter-wordly affairs (should we impose existence, and the harms and challenges to overcome that come with a usual life) — schopenhauer1
In the intra-worldly scenario, it is an instrumental case. Survival, comfort, entertainment is necessary, and when the child becomes an adult has no other choice (unless they are okay with death or somehow finding a remote wilderness to hack it alone) to follow the impositions of a given society. — schopenhauer1
But none where you cause more pain than you alleviate. When I talk of “harm” I mean causing more than you alleviate. So vaccinating a child isn’t harm, even though it hurts and is against their wishes. — khaled
It’s not bad in itself. But forcing it on others is wrong. Take forced labor for example. — khaled
Why not? — khaled
I wasn't aware we were traveling between worlds in a literal sense. — Echarmion
See, here is the negative framing again. That the only reason anyone would accept having obligations imposed on them, or having to endure suffering, is if they were forced to in order to survive. This seems to me a very reductive view of human sociality. As I have alluded above, if that were true, noone would be having children in the first place, since having children comes with both obligations and suffering attached, and it certainly is not necessary for survival nowadays.
But it really applies beyond that, to all forms of human community. Engaging with others always comes with impositions and the possibility of suffering. Beyond anti-natalism, your view seems to imply that the best way to live is as an individual detached from all obligations, and therefore all relationships. — Echarmion
Yes, then you would be correct. Different states. — schopenhauer1
But these are also different cases. These are self-imposed. I have nothing against that. It is creating unnecessary harm and impositions, in an absolute sense for someone else. This is the height of paternalism (and again, not in a literal sense.. which it is too, but meaning that someone knows better for someone.. and worse knows better to the point that suffering and impositions have to be overcome by the person born due to someone else's decision.. even if intentions are good that it is for the child's "benefit"). — schopenhauer1
There are some choices, but certainly not the choice to not have these choices in the first place. That can never be when born. — schopenhauer1
If it's about avoiding suffering, it's not necessarily obvious why we care about concepts of choice or consent. Why aren't we paternalistic and just make sure no one suffers, regardless of choice? — Echarmion
In other words, there are qualifications. So it would really come down to your personal assessment of whether life is worth living. — Echarmion
What about being forced to do the dishes every other day? — Echarmion
There doesn't seem to be any practical difference. — Echarmion
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