But where the probabilities of how it affects the aggregate is practically immeasurable (the butterfly affect), the actualities of birth negatively affecting the individual that will be born is 100%. — schopenhauer1
And I don't really find "You couldn't know that having children will result in them helping people more than average" convincing but it was my first line of defense. Most people have a positive impact overall I'd say. — khaled
The argument would be that it is not ethical to force someone into such a position. Like forcing someone to play a game. — khaled
And the reason I don't buy it is what Isaac basically just said. — khaled
The comparison is not correct because the someone in question does not exist before conception. Parents give life to their children, their force no one, they give life to one. And if that one rejects the gift, then that's his or her choice. — Olivier5
But to think that to give life is always inherently morally wrong, in any time and at any place, to me that's courting the kind of (admittedly flippant) response I gave you: if you hate life so much, you're welcome to quit. Will make room for the rest of us. — Olivier5
But to think that to give life is always inherently morally wrong, in any time and at any place, to me that's courting the kind of (admittedly flippant) response I gave you: if you hate life so much, you're welcome to quit. Will make room for the rest of us. — Olivier5
What great alternatives you have now imposed on someone! — schopenhauer1
Life is often better than the alternative. That's my point and it is indeed a very simple point. — Olivier5
Life is often better than the alternative. That's my point and it is indeed a very simple point. — Olivier5
I think it is wrong to use individuals for some cause beyond the individual (which is my main contention). — schopenhauer1
The fact that someone was put into the situation of "play the game or kill yourself" is the point. — schopenhauer1
The fact is that nobody was technically 'put' in such position, because to exist is to be in that position, and no one even existed before they were in that position. — Olivier5
The fact is that nobody was technically 'put' in such position, because to exist is to be in that position, and no one even existed before they were in that position. It's not like you can summon the soul of your future child and ask him whether he wants to exist or not... — Olivier5
This not-replying-to-me-but-really replying-to-me just looks childish. Grow up. — Isaac
this in itself is a bad situation you are putting someone in. — schopenhauer1
Because it is destroying a major part of why life is worth living, of the beauty of life, for strictly no reason. — Olivier5
Why is that such a bad situation, may I ask? — Olivier5
In order to make a human embryo grow blind, you have to destroy something. At a minimum you have to take a huge number of genes and delete them from someone's gamete, knowing full well that the result will be a blind child, who would see perfectly well if you hadn't edited out hundreds of genes from his genome...No it isn't. Nothing is destroyed here. — khaled
I think it is wrong to use individuals for some cause beyond the individual (which is my main contention). — schopenhauer1
Yes, but living doesn't only entail suffering, but rather it enables it — in humans, anyhow. — Cobra
When this occurs, and we introduce ethics, it is not a matter of cause/effect, but of enable/disable. — Cobra
But suffering is not "unique" nor dependent on the person and how one experiences or remembers it, because what causes harm and suffering is not determined by the person, nor is deciding such a thing dependent on their understanding of it. — Cobra
I think the fact that you can utilize "all other animals get diseases as well," demonstrates this point. — Cobra
I reject this. The opposite is true. If I make my decisions solely based on "negative outcomes", then all my decisions are dictated by other people. And this, if applied universally, turns everyone into a zombie only ever reacting to other people's emotions. — Echarmion
I think it is wrong to use individuals for some cause beyond the individual (which is my main contention).
— schopenhauer1
This is just a really weird thing to say as a justification for not allowing individuals to exist.
Like your argument is that we must respect the individual, and you express that respect by making sure no individual ever gets the chance to be. — Echarmion
How convenient. This way you get to just avoid having to deal with any lines of argument you can't answer. — Isaac
Just imagine you are not debating me, your bitter opponent apparently- can you see ways, even if you cannot under "Echarmion" just somehow, looking beyond what you think to be the case, see how possibly "already existing" and having to compromise to survive in a community is not the same as starting a completely new person, where we indeed do not have to compromise? This is not special pleading either. That would be if the situations were truly the same. They are not. I'm not asking you to agree with me, but to at least see where I'm coming from with the difference. I'm not even asking you to reiterate your claim, as I've seen it several ways. — schopenhauer1
I can see how this does seem weird at first. However, if the axiom holds true to "Not cause unnecessary conditions of harm that affects other people than this isn't so weird. People don't need to exist for any X reason. But one should not start the conditions for harm on others. Doing anything outside of this would be violating the axiom.
Again, going back to compromise. Once born, survival, etc. becomes part of the game. We do have to make compromises to survive. It's not ideal. — schopenhauer1
Starting a new person is something where no compromise on another's behalf has to be made. Remember, this is coming from a person-affecting view. It is absolutely unnecessary for the person this will be affecting to cause this condition for them to be harmed. If you want to take it a step further, they then in turn will not be born to violate axiom of harm in the less absolute state of affairs of someone who exists and has to live in the world. So to sum it up surely, once alive, it is best not to violate harm knowingly, but it will happen. This ideal simply will not be lived up to once alive. It is almost in conflict with how survival is carried out. Here is a case, however, where a very simply non-action leads to no harm for someone else. — schopenhauer1
I tried to ask you to stop with the vitriol and you refused. That's your deal. — schopenhauer1
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