The result of your computation is determined by your frame of accounting. Mine is different; unlike you I include future joys in my computations — Olivier5
I would think it our moral duty to procreate — Olivier5
Okay so accounting for future harm of hypothetical generations is something you can do but not accounting for their future joy, for some mysterious reason. — Olivier5
doing good for another at no cost to yourself is good, but even better at great cost to yourself — Srap Tasmaner
I am accounting for both. — khaled
Both of these are true but only one is a moral claim. 1) says that you are obligated to cause indignity to reduce suffering elsewhere. I would disagree with this actually. My point is not that you must wake up the life guard or save the drowning person, I don't think there is an obligation there. My point is that you could. And that a system that has it where you cannot wake up the life guard or save the drowning person is ridiculous, I think we can agree there.
But 2 is only a statement of fact. Yes you do in fact have the ability to completely prevent kidnapping someone against their will. But in doing so you harm others. So it is not clear from this fact alone that the action should be taken (not having children) as we know there are cases where harm to others trumps "kidnappings" -as you called them- as a consideration. — khaled
Again, true, but only a statement of fact. This does not lead to it being wrong to nonetheless do that thing that enables harm, if the harm alleviated elsewhere is enough. — khaled
My point is your argument is not unilateral. You cannot conclusively say "having children is wrong". Since you do not mind violating dignity elsewhere for the sake of preventing harm.
Unless you would argue that the child's dignity is somehow "special" and different from the lifeguard's dignity. I don't see a reason it should be. — khaled
Expressing your position in terms of tenseless indicatives is not only misleading, it's unnatural: there should be a future tense in here somewhere, or a subjunctive. ("If you have a child, they will suffer." "If I hadn't been born, I wouldn't be suffering." "If you were to bring a new a person into the world, they would suffer.")
But of course then you would have to describe a possible future world that includes the hypothetical person, and they would then hypothetically have exactly the same standing as everyone else, the same rights and duties, the same potential for good to their fellows or evil, the same potential to be helped or harmed. In describing that world, it's not clear why one person is singled out for special consideration above all others. — Srap Tasmaner
you are taking a risk with another person and you have no right to; 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".
I'm with you: this whole "summing up" of a life is a bizarre and pointless approach. But even granting that, anti-natalism claims to be, as it were, defending someone's rights, albeit in the strangest way imaginable. That's a whole different confusion. — Srap Tasmaner
life has suffering for everybody (it's not a paradise), — schopenhauer1
That's quite the understatement you got there. Life is unmitigated, absolute HELL. That's what it is. I can't wait for it to stop, personally. — Olivier5
That is not true. — Olivier5
But you are not able to understand anything I say right now, obviously. — Olivier5
Thanks for cheering me up! — Olivier5
There are two scenarios here. One can absolutely be prevented. One can only be relatively prevented. Always do the absolute if it's available. If it's not available, that is indeed an impossibility. — schopenhauer1
Again, I see ethics as person-affecting, not aggregate. — schopenhauer1
However, if we were starving, I am not going to justify killing someone from a different tribe and eating them as the solution to our problem. That is essentially what you are doing here. — schopenhauer1
At the same time, do you see there to be a qualitative difference in (since I'm already born) waking up the life guard, and then kidnapping the life guard and forcing him to save everyone I can think of? — schopenhauer1
But no, that would be violating his dignity in a MAJOR, reckless, and unnecessary way. — schopenhauer1
One can absolutely be prevented. One can only be relatively prevented. Always do the absolute if it's available — schopenhauer1
Good point now that I think about it. Ignore my previous response. — khaled
Since there will be future generations regardless of what you do it’s good to try to create a “family tree of harm reducers”. Since by doing so, by following CN strictly or near strictly, at every step you will always be reducing harm. And since genocide and AN compliance are both impossible then NOT having that family tree around is the more harmful option, since every generation the number of people in the room grows ad infinium, and so does the number of people that you harm by having the child but a lot more slowly (by definition). Would be a pretty small one though due to the nature of CN. — khaled
AN increases harm significantly, then goes to 0. CN keeps a mostly steady level of harm going forever. It is clear which is more harmful overall. — khaled
But considering real conditions, and not idealizations, it is clear that the next generations will exist anyways. In this case it also becomes clear that new people are added to the room each generation you consider. So applying CN is better in real scenarios, applying AN is better in ideal scenarios. — khaled
It's one of the most classic critiques of utilitarianism, which negative utilitarianism doesn't suffer from. — khaled
This is effectively special pleading though. Because in no other scenario is it possible for harm to be absolutely prevented. I don't understand why the child's dignity and suffering should be placed above the dignity and suffering of the people in the room, just because one can be prevented entirely and one partially. — khaled
There are people in the room, not some mass of goo. — khaled
I don't see why the fact that harm can be absolutely prevented in an instance makes it more valuable to prevent than harm that can be partially prevented. You make it a qualitative difference when it is a quantitative one in every other scenario. — khaled
For the reason I wouldn't make a society of life guards to defend the public or cannabilize a person from the next tribe to help my tribe out. — schopenhauer1
Because in the procreation decision, there is only one way to violate dignity- overlooking harm of that person for any other reason. — schopenhauer1
That is a qualitative difference, not one of degree. — schopenhauer1
There's no universal metric to measure harm, and therefore one cannot actually compute harms. — Olivier5
There's a story about a zen farmer whose horse ran away. Upon hearing the news, his neighbors came to visit. "Such bad luck," they said sympathetically. "We'll see," the farmer replied. — Olivier5
But you would wake up the life guard. How come? This is a quantitative difference. You only make it qualitative in the one case by giving harm done to people that aren't here yet special value over harm done to people that are here. — khaled
For the same reason that just because the lifeguard wasn't doing anything wrong doesn't mean he gets special treatment in the calculation. I won't absolutely abstain from harming the lifeguard at any cost just because he did nothing wrong. And neither would you, as you would in fact wake him up. — khaled
You don't look out for certain interests of people already born, like letting them die, you are violating the dignity. — schopenhauer1
However, in deciding on procreation, harm is the only consideration for that child, not whatever else you might want to "see" happen from its birth. — schopenhauer1
There's no universal metric to measure harm, and therefore one cannot actually compute harms.
— Olivier5
That's not the critique I'm talking about. I'm talking about the "Colosseum" argument. "How many spectators must there be in the Colosseum before their pleasure from watching someone get mauled by a lion justifies having someone get mauled by a lion". — khaled
This is the exact point I disagree with.
Because it leads to things like: The lifeguard did nothing wrong, therefore when considering whether or not to wake him up, the only consideration is harm for that lifeguard, not whatever else you might want to "see" happen from waking him up. Anything else is violating the lifeguard's dignity.
Point is you consider it fine to violate dignity sometimes, and to consider harms outside of the lifeguard/child. — khaled
I know the story. However it is crazy to use it as a justification for stealing people's horses. There may not be a universal metric here but we can make pretty good guesses on which is more harmful, to steal or not to steal. — khaled
In other words, you can't actually compute harms and joys because the story never ends, and is not predictable. — Olivier5
One thing leading to another, an event that looks good as and when it happens may lead to unsavory consequences later, and vice versa something that feels wrong or painful can help cause a good (or harm reductive) consequence later, and nobody can tell for sure. — Olivier5
We're all guessing. — Olivier5
Does the life guard exist? Does the child exist? — schopenhauer1
Their interests are more than "not being woken up". — schopenhauer1
Rather, it becomes a much more stark, "Do not enable harm, if it can be prevented". — schopenhauer1
I don't think it should matter. Never have. I don't think that just because the child doesn't exist his suffering gets special value in the calculation. — khaled
But that IS one of their interests. But you consider more than just their interests and so wake them up, for a purpose outside of themselves. But refuse to do the same with the child because the child doesn't exist yet, but agai — khaled
I don't agree that "enabling harm" is the problem as I said. If it was then having a child who would lead a perfect life would be wrong, because harm is still being enabled there. — khaled
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