I still think it is wrong to put any cause above unnecessary (unprovoked) suffering when it comes to making decisions on other people's behalf. — schopenhauer1
Yeah, I don't care if you do it to yourself. — schopenhauer1
I am not forcing you to follow or read them. Certainly I didn't cause your very existence where this suffering for you has taken place ;). Don't worry though, you'll suffer again and again and again.. — schopenhauer1
You'll have to forgive me for not remembering the specifics. — Echarmion
We do allow people to engage in very dangerous sports for example, even though the overall suffering of the world might be much reduced if everyone refrained from doing it. — Echarmion
Just historically speaking, this is manifestly false. You can maybe claim this about some especially well working justice systems, like in the nordic countries. You certainly can't make the claim for the US, or any early 20th-century european country. — Echarmion
But it is suggestive of the idea that the whole of interconnected humans is more than just the sum of it's parts — Echarmion
and that in some way, it ought to continue. — Echarmion
And I just continue that thought to conclude that, since responsibilities are sociall mediated, rather than attaching to mere physical fact, causation is a common starting point for responsibility, but it's not a necessary or even a sufficient one. — Echarmion
How would someone ever know? — Echarmion
It's wrong because it's malicious — Echarmion
Yes, but this kind of reductio only works so long as we're on common ground, which we're not for the most part in this discussion. You consider things absurd that I don't, and vice versa. — Echarmion
Internal consistency is not the same as disagreeing with a premise. It would be a sign of lack of internal consistency if you would agree with my premises but still disagreed with the result. You won't find a system that has premises that you agree on and is internally consistent, because if this were the case, we'd have the same opinion. — Echarmion
And no one is actually concerned with the consequences for the child themselves? Sure.... — khaled
So, again, I believe we have a natural instinct to project onto the future and actually care about potential future people. How else do you explain the difference in reaction? — khaled
Right, and I disagree. I don't see how your position could consistently avoid dystopian scenarios where everyone is forced to conform to some exact code of conduct so as to avoid all possible suffering for others. — Echarmion
Non-sequitur. Do you disagree that humans don't always try to avoid suffering? — Echarmion
I just wonder whether or not you realise that you're doing at least as much preaching as everyone else here, and that there is no difference between you arguing for your position and I arguing for mine. Noone of us has any more or less right to influence other people's thoughts. — Echarmion
There is no moral good for the child. — Kenosha Kid
This is acceptable to me, and knowing that your potential child has a high risk of such a disease is a good reason: since the cause, degree and nature of the risk is understood. — Kenosha Kid
we cannot possibly have a natural instinct for it since the possibility of acting on that instinct is only decades old. — Kenosha Kid
Why is it a good reason? There is no moral good for the child. You’re not doing anything good by having the abortion. So it must be that you think the future child’s suffering is a bad thing. Which is the instinct I’m referring to. — khaled
There are people who choose not to have kids in war torn countries for example and not purely out of scarcity, but also because they don’t deem the standards of living good enough for a child. — khaled
but it isn't an instinct: it's a rational decision based on abstract information, not an automatic reaction to instantaneous environmental stimuli. — Kenosha Kid
The biological underpinnings of sociality are not based on guesswork. They are based on empirical physiological and neurological data about people reacting to various stimuli — Kenosha Kid
the data doesn't support the conclusion — Kenosha Kid
the premise is clearly incompatible with natural selection. — Kenosha Kid
So when I cringe when hearing about the guy who genetically engineered his child to be blind that’s not an automatic reaction? I had to carefully deliberate to find something wrong with his behavior? Nah, that’s not what happened. — khaled
Sure. I would say if you looked for it, you could very easily establish the existence of a physiological and neurological reaction that people have when it comes to potential future people. — khaled
Cite me the data proving the non-existence of a reaction when talking about future people. — khaled
Not really. — khaled
rather wicked on the grounds that he deliberately blinded his own kid. — Kenosha Kid
Again, believing that it's true and therefore the evidence must exist is not empiricism, that's Trumpism. — Kenosha Kid
my gut reaction is that it is wicked — Kenosha Kid
Are you aware of the difference between evidence supporting something and evidence proving or disproving something? — Kenosha Kid
the data doesn't support the conclusion — Kenosha Kid
He didn't though. Don't you see? There is no kid! He didn't blind anybody! This is what I said a while ago by the way. I said that our empathy can extend to "future people" and you claimed it can't, yet here you are clearly extending empathy to "future people". — khaled
If all you meant to say was "there is no data to support the conclusion" sure. — khaled
the data doesn't support the conclusion — Kenosha Kid
So I would say it's reasonable to assume that the same will be found in others. — khaled
I meant once the kid was born. — Kenosha Kid
But empathising with things that don't exist and have no representation is a bizarre idea. Why let facts have anything to do with it in that case? "And why did you assault the victim?" "Because he killed Jenny-Wenny Classy-Lassy." "Who the fuck is that?" "Oh, someone I made up once " — Kenosha Kid
In principle though, when you have the chance to not cause harm on someone else's behalf good idea to do not do that, and certainly not one that causes a whole life time worth of harmful experiences. — schopenhauer1
I don't assume because some people do this, I therefore should do it on behalf of another person, just the same as if you like a certain game you shouldn't force someone else to play it, or if you like some harmful activity others should be a part of it to cause you insist. — schopenhauer1
Similarly, it is not okay to force others into harmful situations because we insist it is good for them. — schopenhauer1
In the case of heartbreak you are not forced to endure the pain, you accepted the risk by going into the relationship. — khaled
And when did I say we shouldn’t do that? The only case when we shouldn’t is with dependents. If your child suggests taking up parkour with a bunch of shady kids 15 blocks away from home you have a responsibility to stop him as a parent. Your responsibility is, more precisely, to minimize his suffering. Which probably means you’d try to fit in his interest in the least dangerous way. — khaled
What is absolutely wrong though is forcing people who are not even your dependents to play dangerous games. I’m sure we can agree on that. But as I said, everyone is free to risk their own suffering as much as they want, just don’t risk anyone else suffering unless they’re your dependents and you’re doing it for their own good. — khaled
And this is another non sequitor. “More than the sum of its parts” doesn’t lead to “should continue”. Again, you’re just shoving that part in there. “Should continue” is its own premise. — khaled
Agreed, causation is not necessary for responsibility, as you can get it in other ways (socially mediated). But it is almost sufficient in my view with the conditions I outlined in the car example. — khaled
Which is what makes it pseudo impossible. Very hard claim to reasonably prove. — khaled
Well no it isn’t. Malicious definition by google: Intending to do harm. There is no one being harmed here. I called it malicious because I (reasonably) recognize that we should consider these “potential people”. But that’s just naming. And you think they shouldn’t be considered at all, since they’re not harmed. — khaled
What if the intention of the parent was just purely preferential? He just likes blind people for some reason. Just a fancy. Now is it ok? Surely not. But why? — khaled
If I agree with the premises, and the logic, I must agree with the result. Maybe you have a way to get “having children is acceptable”, logically, without relying on premises I disagree with, that I haven’t heard yet. I’m not omniscient, I don’t know every argument there is. If you did find such a way, I’d probably not be an AN anymore. But so far I haven’t found that way. — khaled
That may be a good enough heuristic in many cases, but that doesn't make it a convincing principle. — Echarmion
But you apparently do not think this is because we respect other people's right to make choices for themselves. It's all only about reducing suffering, except in any of the cases where suffering doesn't seem all that important, like when we allow people to drive personal motor vehicles just for their own convenience even though doing so massively increases the risk of causing suffering for other people. — Echarmion
But that's just the claim you make. We aren't forced to agree with it. — Echarmion
That's not really how emotions work. You can't decide to not be heartbroken. — Echarmion
I still don't see why you say that we should care about suffering for future people and dependants, but for independent adults only their choice matters, and the suffering caused is suddenly no longer relevant. — Echarmion
But everything from driving your car to going mountain climbing risks other people suffering. If that was really the standard, we'd have to all lock ourselves into our rooms and interact as little as possible. — Echarmion
Isn't it kind of a problem to have a moral system that requires things that are practically impossible? — Echarmion
This would seem to imply that at least the ethics of reducing suffering are not monolithic, i.e. they aren't derived from a single principle, but rather multiple competing ones. — Echarmion
You can intent to harm people in the future, including people who don't even exist yet. Intent always references a future state of affairs. — Echarmion
they already existed before you decided to cause them to exist. — Echarmion
I think the most basic thing we'd need to agree on for you to consider my view convincing is that choice is more important than suffering - that what life is about is being who you are, not just trying to get it over with as painlessly as possible. — Echarmion
Not from the perspective of either of the children, but from the perspective of everyone else. So we can ask ourselves whether the principle that "I should act according to my fancy when deciding on the capabilities of my future children" is a moral one. Can we want that to be a universal principle? — Echarmion
Then you're just wrong. He did not, in fact, blind his kid when his kid was born. — khaled
Difference is Jenny-Wenny Classy-Lassy will never exist but Blind-Billy will. — khaled
Imagining the suffering of a non-existent being and then arguing that it's existence, on that basis, should be averted is circular, again reminiscent of Republicans telling voters that there must have been voter fraud then reporting in Congress that voters have concerns about the election. It is dangerous territory in which otherwise unthinkable acts can be justified by imagining oneself into a rage against anything.
One thing that is most certainly absent from your argument is the suffering of the child whose future eexistence is apparently an argument for AN. If the child lives a perfectly happy life, doesn't matter right? He should not have been allowed to be born. This is even worse: we're supposed to empathise with the imagined suffering of an imagined thing and then use this as a justification for disallowing a real thing. Reality is disavowed; fiction is paramount. — Kenosha Kid
If the child lives a perfectly happy life, doesn't matter right? — Kenosha Kid
He should not have been allowed to be born. — Kenosha Kid
He didn't though. Don't you see? There is no kid! He didn't blind anybody! This is what I said a while ago by the way. I said that our empathy can extend to "future people" and you claimed it can't, yet here you are clearly extending empathy to "future people".
— khaled
I meant once the kid was born. — Kenosha Kid
That’s not what I meant. I meant you accepted the risk of heartbreak when going into a relationship. — khaled
Only responsible not to increase it. — khaled
False and I explained this. Sigh. If I don’t drive my car I won’t get to work. I NEED to drive my car. Therefore we do a calculation: Is the harm I avoid by driving comparable to the harm I am likely to cause by driving? If the answer is no (ie, I’m a bad driver, or I’m drunk, etc) then I shouldn’t drive. If the answer is yes then I can drive. — khaled
Please explain to me how it implies that because I don’t see the connection. Or more importantly, the significance of this observation were it true. — khaled
Agreed but that’s not what’s happening here. Billy’s parent is not plotting to blind billy at his 15th birthday. No. Billy’s parent is genetically engineering Billy to be blind. There is no billy at any point to be harmed here. If you want to say Billy got harmed or blinded you have to treat billy as if: — khaled
Which is exactly what you do when you claim that by genetically engineering them to be blind you blind them. Just look at the structure of the sentence. “By genetically engineering billy to be blind you blinded billy”. “You blinded billy” clearly assumes the existence of Billy. You reject this. You say we can’t assume this. So why is genetically engineering someone to be blind wrong. Because “intending to harm people in the future including those that do not exist yet” is FACTUALLY not what’s happening here. Billy’s parent has no such intentions. In fact he intends to be a model parent for his blind son. — khaled
Assume the parent of said child did this. And answered “Yes, this should be a universal principle”. Now what? Is it ok? — khaled
Also I like how here you don’t consider the perspective of the child even though a paragraph ago you were saying that poor billy got blinded. Which is it? Did billy get harmed or not? — khaled
Agreed. Ok now what? Because that doesn’t lead to your view. What WOULD lead to your view is something like “Choice is more important than suffering therefore I am allowed to inflict suffering on others so that they have choices”. I don’t think either of us can agree with that one. — khaled
You conflate your personal philosophy about how one should live with how one should treat others. I can consider that there is more to life than minimizing suffering. But it takes an extra step to then say “Therefore I am allowed to inflict suffering on others if I deem that it would maximize their choice” — khaled
I agree with the sentiment here. Obviously one should be humble and careful, well aware of the possibility of making a mistake. But I don't think we need to avoid dangers at all costs either. Nor do you. So the difference between us isn't really that I inflict suffering on other and you don't. It's just that I consider different reasons sufficient. — Echarmion
But that's the point.. do not create dangers for others unnecessarily, when one does not have to. Do not assume people should be forced to play a game because you like it. — schopenhauer1
We just disagree on the "have to". When do you "have to" do something? Taken literally, you almost never "have to" do something, unless it's a reflex or urge you just cannot control. So what "have to" means comes down to your personal moral code. Some people think they "have to" have children. You may think they're wrong, but telling them "don't do it if you don't have to" doesn't help. — Echarmion
Heartbreak isn't limited to relationships though, is it? — Echarmion
Wouldn't it be better though, if we decreased it? — Echarmion
I don't get why I should stop worrying about suffering just becasue "it's not my responsibility". — Echarmion
This supposed calculation is imaginary though. You're not really doing anything like comparing the suffering of the two scenarios. How would you even go about doing that? How much suffering does taking the bus or the train cause you? 10, 100, 167? How much suffering is the potential of a car crash worth? Does it matter whether you just got your license vs. having 20 years of experience? — Echarmion
You need at least a third principle to decide when to apply which. — Echarmion
I think I do agre with that. Not in any given case, but yes, in some cases it's ok to cause suffering so that those that suffer (or sometimes even other people) have more choices. — Echarmion
But you do intent to have a blind child instead of one can see. That intent can be malicious, as I explained below. — Echarmion
Nor do you. So the difference between us isn't really that I inflict suffering on other and you don't. It's just that I consider different reasons sufficient. — Echarmion
But also I want to know what the sufficient reason is in the case of having children. Because it can't be for the children themselves, as they don't exist. — khaled
That this will involve suffering on the part of the children is not more or less relevant than that the children will be subject to the laws of gravity. — Echarmion
As I said before: I still think the game scenario is the best analogy. It's as if after being kidnapped into the game, the person was like "But I prepared you for the game, didn't I?" — schopenhauer1
The thing is that life isn't a game. Life isn't optional. You can kill yourself, yes, but killing yourself is, ironically enough, also something you do while living. — Echarmion
Your argument, in simple terms, is that people suffer if they exist, and therefore they shouldn't exist. All this other stuff about "forcing people to play games" is just a bunch of false equivalence, because it all treats life as an option for souls floating around in the aether, which it is not. — Echarmion
But claiming that there shouldn't be people because there shouldn't be suffering is propping up suffering as a metaphysical evil, totally abstracted from anyone actually suffering. What's the reason that there shouldn't be suffeirng? Is it because people don't like to suffer? But then, it makes zero sense to delete the people as the solution to the problem, does it? — Echarmion
Hahahaha. . Great option, dude.. Play this game, or kill yourself.. I mean, "It's an option!". :roll: You see how cruel that sounds? Maybe not. :meh: . — schopenhauer1
Once someone exists, the suffering that will incur is bad. Don't allow this to happen, if preventing this is possible. — schopenhauer1
It is true that there are fundamental principles which can only be understood, but not proven. If this is one, I don't understand it. And if, after 24 pages of debate, I still don't, then I suppose another 24 won't help. — Echarmion
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