But can Tom make his own arguments? Now this changes the path this takes. — schopenhauer1
I now have to choose to argue your particular line of thought. — schopenhauer1
If you want to. But that got us nowhere last time. — khaled
Because not doing it is also harmful. To the people already here. — khaled
But proponents of antinatalism are doing the same thing: they want to see other people stop procreating because they (ie. the antinatalists) have a vision that just needs to happen for the other people.I am very concerned people want to see X from another person because they have a vision that just needs to happen for the other person. — schopenhauer1
But proponents of antinatalism are doing the same thing: they want to see other people stop procreating because they (ie. the antinatalists) have a vision that just needs to happen for the other people. — baker
Antinatalism, precisely because of its specific anti-life content, is not a stance that can be backed up by empathy or compassion for other people. — baker
If someone argues for selective natalism/selective antinatalism (as has typically been the case throughout human history, such as in the form of forbidding sex outside of marriage, killing defective newborns, or stigmatizing unwed mothers and their children), then this can still be motivated by empathy or compassion for one of more parties involved. — baker
But with antinatalism, there can be no such motivation -- other than to please the ego of the antinatalist (who will be dead within a few decades anyway, so why care about him). — baker
IOW, you haven't consistently practiced pessimism.Have you ever consistently made an effort to have a pessimistic attitude to life, yet were able to dilligently get up every morning and do your work well?
— baker
Much work gets done because it has to be or X will happen. — schopenhauer1
Yes, we've been over this. I'm not seeing anything special in this. You need to break eggs in order to make an omelette. Most people don't cry over the eggs being broken.One of the points of the OP is not only do we survive, we can evaluate any given task needed to survive (in the socio-economic-cultural superstructure). That's why I see this situation as a negative. Here we are, being able to negatively evaluate the very tasks needed to survive (and find comfort and survive).
What do you mean by "find comfort"?(and find comfort and survive).
merely dilettante pessimism. — baker
Yes, we've been over this. I'm not seeing anything special in this. You need to break eggs in order to make an omelette. Most people don't cry over the eggs being broken. — baker
What do you mean by "find comfort"?
Are you saying that you see the futility of life as it is usually lived, but you nevertheless find ways to feel comforted? By what, how? — baker
But since, if the antinatalist is successful in convincing other people not to procreate, the potential future people will not exist anyway, so no compassion or empathy for them, so the point is moot.Antinatalism is about empathy or compassion for the future people that would be created by the procreators. — schopenhauer1
It's empathy and compassion for existing people -- such as for those who are burdened with looking after orphans or the defective. Social norms are there to protect and serve the normal, the majority.This actually seems unempathetic.. being more akin to eugenics and nefarious programs in the past. I also don't see how shaming people is compassionate.. Rather, it's just more social pressures to see a certain outcome- ends justify the means.
But there are not going to be any future sufferers!The motivation is to prevent future sufferers from suffering.
It looks more like the final drop of pleasure that the antinatalist is trying to squeeze out of life.That seems pretty egoless being that the antinatalist has nothing themselves to gain from it, since they already exist and all.
Consequent pessimism is paralyzing. You're at most, talking about occasionally having some pessimistic thoughts. I'm talking about real, consequent 24/7 pessimism. That's the kind that makes one see the futility of every human action, 24/7.merely dilettante pessimism.
— baker
You'd have to explain that. Pessimism doesn't mean an utter inability to do what one doesn't want to. — schopenhauer1
But since, if the antinatalist is successful in convincing other people not to procreate, the potential future people will not exist anyway, so no compassion or empathy for them, so the point is moot. — baker
Compassion and empathy are meaningful only in relation to already existing entities. — baker
The compassion and empathy you're talking about are idle perversions. — baker
It's empathy and compassion for existing people -- such as for those who are burdened with looking after orphans or the defective. Social norms are there to protect and serve the normal, the majority. — baker
But there are not going to be any future sufferers! — baker
It looks more like the final drop of pleasure that the antinatalist is trying to squeeze out of life. — baker
False. Consideration can be motivated by other things than just empathy and compassion. Habit, pathological altruism, pride or the desire to look good in the eyes of others can result in acting in ways that can seem as being motivated by empathy and compassion.Compassion and empathy are meaningful only in relation to already existing entities.
— baker
Not true, otherwise people would have no consideration whatsoever for the outcome and welfare of a future person, baby, child. — schopenhauer1
It's like having compassion and empathy for fictional characters in a book or a film. It's not a meaningful way to have empathy and compassion.The compassion and empathy you're talking about are idle perversions.
— baker
Not sure why it can't be extended to people that would exist but are prevented from doing so if otherwise not precautionary.
All along, I've been privately comparing your antinatalist stance with the antinatalism that can be found in Early Buddhism. I don't recall ever seeing the argument that the reason why one should be celibate is out of compassion for others (although the point does come up in popular Buddhist discourse).Defective? Damn look who's harsh here. Ok, well, new social norms have and can be implemented. One where compassion extends to people who might exist, but can be prevented from doing so. Compassion the harm that could have taken place.
It goes back to what's in it for the antinatalist.It looks more like the final drop of pleasure that the antinatalist is trying to squeeze out of life.
— baker
Final drop of pleasure-- because it is suggesting to current people born to not screw with other people by procreating them? They are not saying to not do X, Y, Z for themselves.
Do list at least three such ways.There's many ways one can try to find happiness without it involving other people's states of being.
False. Consideration can be motivated by other things than just empathy and compassion. Habit, pathological altruism, pride or the desire to look good in the eyes of others can result in acting in ways that can seem as being motivated by empathy and compassion. — baker
It's like having compassion and empathy for fictional characters in a book or a film. It's not a meaningful way to have empathy and compassion.
It's a compassion and an empathy that doesn't take the other person into consideration as they actually are, as persons -- and it can't, because that other person doesn't actually exist. It's not emapthy and it's not compassion. It's pity and it's patronizing. And people have plenty of that indeed. It seems to make them feel really good! — baker
All along, I've been privately comparing your antinatalist stance with the antinatalism that can be found in Early Buddhism. I don't recall ever seeing the argument that the reason why one should be celibate is out of compassion for others (although the point does come up in popular Buddhist discourse).
I certainly don't find your line of reasoning convincing, even though I would, for all practical intents and purposes, describe myself as at least a selective antinatalist. — baker
It goes back to what's in it for the antinatalist. — baker
Do list at least three such ways. — baker
Not in this case.I find it hilarious that when it comes to these forums future conditionals go out the window in the name of "metaphysics". — schopenhauer1
It's like having compassion and empathy for fictional characters in a book or a film. It's not a meaningful way to have empathy and compassion.
It's a compassion and an empathy that doesn't take the other person into consideration as they actually are, as persons -- and it can't, because that other person doesn't actually exist. It's not emapthy and it's not compassion. It's pity and it's patronizing. And people have plenty of that indeed. It seems to make them feel really good!
— baker
Um, so if a couple KNEW that by procreating there is a 100% chance that the child that would exist would live a horrible life, they should not take this into consideration? Get outta here.
Not according to Buddhism; and this is because merely dying doesn't guarantee cessation of suffering.Buddhism is its own can of worms. Even though technically suffering can be achieve with antinatalist policy within a generation,
What do _you_ get from other people not being born?It goes back to what's in it for the antinatalist.
— baker
Preventing yet another person from suffering. Keep it nonexistent please.
Granted, one can try to find happiness those ways. The operative term being "try". The problem is that there is no lasting happiness to be found in those things.Um, any activity you do outside of childrearing or related to childrearing. That's literally millions of things. Sports, hobbies, recreation, entertainment, anything.
Not according to Buddhism; and this is because merely dying doesn't guarantee cessation of suffering.
Your "solution" to the problem of suffering doesn't solve it; it amounts to "no man, no problem". It's akin to saying that the solution to global warming is to nuke planet Earth out of existence.
But Buddhism proposes a solution to the problem of suffering that people can actually experience.
Not that I'm a Buddhist, BTW, I'm just comparing your approach with another one. — baker
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