if everyone abides by the rule: "Only have children when it is likely that doing so prevents more suffering than the alternative" then it becomes sustainable. Even a population of 1 billion would suffer less than the original 100 if everyone abides by the rule. — khaled
You do it when you drive a car, you do it when you wear a mask in public (or not), when you teach others, when you take decisions for a collective (e.g. a general deciding to attack or something). — Olivier5
It's called taking responsibility. I don't see it as always morally bad. — Olivier5
Then I realized that, had this been the case I would not be me, but somebody else, so the thought morphed into: I could not have been born; the world would just exist without me. And such a thought led me to a sense of gratefulness for being alive, for existing. And I haven't lived a blessed life but I'm still grateful my parents took this decision for me (or didn't, I mean my mother wasn't taking the pill back then, but that too was her decision I guess). — Olivier5
Suicide is only a bad thing if life is conceived as inherently good (as I do). — Olivier5
You never responded to this argument though — Olivier5
why is that such a horrible horrible argument, pray tell? — Olivier5
Your own shock at the suicide argument only proves that you agree that life has inherent value — Olivier5
you guys do — Olivier5
But if you truly disagree with that, if you can put the life of a future child in a balance and conclude it's not worth living, why can't you apply the same logic to your own life? — Olivier5
So you are saying that there ARE cases where you would violate dignity to reduce harm. — khaled
False. You’re still forcing them into a dangerous game. Just one you know they’ll enjoy.
To use the gaming analogy, you’re still kidnapping them, taping them to a chair, and forcing them to play the game, they just happen to enjoy this whole process. And you knew they would enjoy it. — khaled
Again, false. You keep saying this but by not procreating you are harming the people in the room. And if harm done to the child should not be treated differently to harm done to the people in the room, then there will be cases where it is acceptable to have the child. And you can’t use the dignity argument either because there ARE cases where you would violate dignity to reduce harm as we’ve gone over. There should be no reason the dignity of the child is in any way different from the dignity of anyone in the room. So if you are willing to violate dignity in “inter-room interactions” there should be no difference between that and violating the child’s dignity with the goal of reducing suffering. — khaled
Say the human population is exactly 100 people. I can buy that those 100 people having children and increasing the population to say, 250 would overall reduce harm on the entire group. But I cannot buy that continuously having children can ever compare to the original suffering prevented by the first act. I cannot buy that a population of billions is suffering less than the original 100 suffering due to childlessness. As shope said: It's kicking the can down the road. In the end, if you look purely at consequences, having children is always the more harmful option.
Edit: Nevermind it doesn't really work as a rebuttal. Because if everyone abides by the rule: "Only have children when it is likely that doing so prevents more suffering than the alternative" then it becomes sustainable. Even a population of 1 billion would suffer less than the original 100 if everyone abides by the rule. Though we'll likely never get to 1 billion doing so. Which I think is a win-win honestly. And saying "But there is no way everyone abides by the rule" is not an argument against this as it can also be used against AN (much more effectively).
I'll just leave this here if anyone thinks of arguing along the same lines. — khaled
There is no having to compromise anything to do with violating harm or dignity. — schopenhauer1
1) You have no choice but to do mini-versions of "kidnapping" someone against their will (causing indignity by overlooking the harm you do to someone), but you can try to do this as little as possible.. and 2) You have the ability to completely prevent kidnapping someone against their will if you simply don't do a certain action. — schopenhauer1
2) The indignity comes not just from the kidnapping (the decision made for the other) but kidnapping with knowing of harm.. — schopenhauer1
The indignity is putting someone else in a position of harm, putting other considerations above this. — schopenhauer1
If someone did indeed realize that the best scenario was the the least people being born bringing the least amount of harm, and this resulted in eventually no people born, would you accept it? — schopenhauer1
For example, if it was found that all the models noted that when you ran it completely, everyone suffered more by continuing the next generation rather than abstaining from continuing it, would you accept that model? — schopenhauer1
And saying "But there is no way everyone abides by the rule" is not an argument against this as it can also be used against AN (much more effectively). — khaled
I think that there might be a "hidden assumption" in the model...something to do way back with how community is above and beyond the consideration of the child that will be affected here. So this presents as a straight up utilitarian thing, but is really more of an argument to "keep the community going at all costs". — schopenhauer1
In all these cases NOT doing these things is more harmful. That's why we do them. — khaled
. I am also grateful to be alive. — khaled
What's your reaction to reading this: "We'll rip his eyes out and if he doesn't like it he can just kill himself". There is nothing that cannot be justified by this "argument". — khaled
Suicide is only a bad thing if life is conceived as inherently good (as I do).
— Olivier5
False. It is also a bad thing if death is conceived as bad. I never understood what "life is inherently good" even means. — khaled
But if you truly disagree with that, if you can put the life of a future child in a balance and conclude it's not worth living, why can't you apply the same logic to your own life?
— Olivier5
For the same reason that I would not press the button for someone else even if I would press it for myself. It is irresponsible. Or so the argument goes. Because there is (supposedly) a safer alternative. — khaled
You don't know for sure when you take the wheel to go do some shopping, that you will not kill a dozen people in some horrible accident. — Olivier5
My reaction -- as already posted -- is that destroying somebody's eyesight is an act of violence, of life destruction. It is not comparable to act that affirms life, it's the opposite. — Olivier5
If life had no inherent positive value, why would death have any inherent negative value? — Olivier5
IF an AN argues that the hypothetical life of a hypothetical child entails risks that are too great to take, why can't the same AN proponent conclude that her own life entails risks that are too great to take? — Olivier5
would most certainly — Olivier5
Because if everyone abides by the rule: "Only have children when it is likely that doing so prevents more suffering than the alternative" then it becomes sustainable. Even a population of 1 billion would suffer less than the original 100 if everyone abides by the rule. — khaled
How would you respond to that? — khaled
But I can reasonably guess that I won't. The odds of this happening are so slim that the harm I bring to myself by not going to the store and doing that shopping is probably greater. — khaled
Again, we don't take risks with others unless the consequences of not doing so are worse.
But, barring either genocide or a 100% compliance with AN regulations, you know there's going to be a generation 2, and a generation 3, and so on. So your actions ensuring two further kids to supply these further generations with sufficient numbers are justified by the same logic — Isaac
Having a child now reduces suffering in their generation, but it also ensures that there are people willing to have children themselves to reduce suffering in the following generation. — Isaac
Since you can be almost certain that no matter what you do, these generations are going to happen anyway, you can be almost certain that setting in motion a chain of events to ensure a continuous supply of harm-reducers is a moral choice. — Isaac
If you can take chances with the lives of others because you need to do some shopping, you can take chances with having kids because you need kids. — Olivier5
Key word: probably. What justifies taking the risk? — Olivier5
That I need food or I’ll die. So I’m going to go buy it. — khaled
less convenient too though — Olivier5
All the time, without ever calculating them because it's impossible to do so accurately. We just figure it's gona be okay. — Olivier5
You and I do it all the time. Because we want a life too — Olivier5
It involves taking decisions with insufficient information. It involves taking the risk of harming others. And yet we go on living. — Olivier5
However, not bringing a new person into the world is preventing wholesale all suffering for that person. — schopenhauer1
We have sufficient information to conclude that not having children results in less harm than having them. So to go on to have children anyways is irresponsible and immoral. Is the argument. — khaled
not knowing means you are taking a risk with another person and you have no right to; — Srap Tasmaner
schopenhauer1 seems to hold a position that, even if we knew for a fact that life is always and only pure bliss, it is a violation of that person's dignity (or perhaps "autonomy") to force them to lead such a blissful existence without so much as a "by your leave". — Srap Tasmaner
But the point is: it is still not good enough. Compare the suffering that Adam and Eve would have had to endure due to childlessness to the suffering of all mankind thus far. It pales in comparison. Adam and Eve [...] decision to have children resulted in way more harm than they would have had to endure at step 1. — khaled
More harm, but also more joy. Why are you not counting the joys that life brings? If your only measure for life is the amount of tears shed, of course it's always going to be negative. — Olivier5
I find that we never use joys to trump considerations of suffering irl — khaled
We make duties about not decreasing other people's joy though. It's not okay to be a killjoy. — Olivier5
I find that we do this all the time. Dunno what you're talking about here. — Srap Tasmaner
We must not have the same things in mind because examples are infinite. — Srap Tasmaner
And yet you would want Adam and Eve to have killed all the joys ever to be had by the whole human race. — Olivier5
And I have pointed out that living, at least in society, involves taking chances with other people's lives. By that I don't mean that it's okay to be reckless, so there should be limits — Olivier5
A non-existing person has no dignity to lose, and as soon as she exists, her primary objective will be to stay alive. — Olivier5
Curiously, we find the reverse of your scenarios particularly praiseworthy: that is, risking harm to yourself or knowingly sacrificing your own well-being in order to benefit someone else. — Srap Tasmaner
What do we make of all this? — Srap Tasmaner
A killjoy is someone who decreases people's joys as you defined it. That clearly doesn't apply here. As there are no people. — khaled
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