Because the arguments you put forward are simply not convincing.Why not take it at face value and just argue or defend or simply comment on the arguments that antinatalists make rather than try to find these underlying and dubious motives? — schopenhauer1
So your main point seems to be that we can't help but expect others to work-to-produce so that we ourselves can survive. — schopenhauer1
You can choose to NOT put other people in this situation of having to produce to survive in the first place. Is that not true? — schopenhauer1
Is putting people into a situation where they have to produce in order to survive, its own exploitation of people? If not, why not? No one chose that the initial conditions of how life works (like producing something for someone to survive), yet we assume that it is good that people must endure. Why? How is this not immoral/evil and at the least exploitative of people?
Fix it? No that wasn’t the proposed motivation. The motivation was: My child will likely be a positive influence, thus not having him is the riskier option. Similar to how not waking up the swimmer is the riskier option, and so you can choose to wake up the swimmer. — khaled
Is it violating the dignity of the swimmer? Well you’re imposing on him so yes.
Justice? Idk about that one it’s too vague a word. — khaled
Because the arguments you put forward are simply not convincing. — baker
It's ill to care about whether someone else even exists or not. So when someone proposes to care so much about others, the simplest answer is that there is something else going on.
A simple argument from misanthrophy, for example, would be far more convincing than yours are. — baker
A) Firstly, do your stances stem from the formalized edifices of Hedonic Morality? — Aryamoy Mitra
B) Placing a constraint (if not an outright preclusion) on individuals seeking to forge new life, is likely to encroach onto their fundamental liberties. Are you solely promulgating a moralistic perspective, or would you be willing to enact your beliefs in the real world (if accorded the opportunity)? — Aryamoy Mitra
C) Lastly (and this is solely cursory), what are your views on Schopenhauer's Will to Live (since I imagine you'll bear a tremendous degree of expertise, on him)? I understand that it (presumably) manifests in the aftermath of one's birth; could procreation, however, fall under the purview of the Will to Live (that is to say, instinctively electing to 'live on', by bequeathing one's genetic character)? — Aryamoy Mitra
It's not a fallacy. The fallacy is thinking we are exempt because we are a different species. My main point is that people are natural. — James Riley
You can so choose, however, you cannot choose to not benefit from those who chose to do so.
Edited to add: Likewise, you can choose to not be exploited and that will work out for you just like it works out for those who try not to benefit from those who exploit those who produce. There are participants, and there are those who are dead. Nature is not a fallacy. — James Riley
It wouldn't be exploitation because survival doesn't necessary involve the forced appropriation of unpaid labor. One must labor for his survival, sure, but it makes little sense to say one must be exploited in order to survive. — NOS4A2
We enforce negative conditions on others all the time without their consent. Taxes, schools, etc. So your premise that it’s always wrong to do so isn’t justified. Unless you think taxes and schooling are wrong. — khaled
Is putting people into a situation where they have to produce in order to survive, its own exploitation of people? — schopenhauer1
But is it always about "unpaid" labor? How about forced labor in general onto another person because you simply like labor yourself (or don't mind it).
It seems people generally think that the joys of life outweigh its sorrows, and that as such, life is worth living and the socio-economic system is worth perpetuating.If existence has known sufferings, annoyances, and negatives — schopenhauer1
The problem is that you're trying to objectivize the matter, take the persons out of it: as if arguments are good in and of themselves, objectively, regardless of people, and that you have special and superior insight and are the arbiter of the goodness of an argument.One has nothing to do with the other. Motives and arguments being good. Or you haven't made that case. — schopenhauer1
Yet people typically don't have a problem with that. Humans are an exploitative species.It's just saying it's unfair to put others in a game because its your preference.
And yet such is life. People do this all the time, in so many ways. Other people can unilaterally force a war on you.You shouldn't be forced into doing something because another person thinks the game is good and others should play it.
It doesn't compute in _your_ mind. It computes in so many other people's minds.I like an existence where people work to survive and go through various harms and suffering big and small THUS others should do this too. Doesn't compute.
I’m opposed to forcing labor of any kind on another. But I don’t believe my parents forced me to labor by birthing me. In fact, they labored for me for quite a period, and I was wholly dependant on them. At any rate, I choose to labor for my own survival. — NOS4A2
It seems people generally think that the joys of life outweigh its sorrows, and that as such, life is worth living and the socio-economic system is worth perpetuating. — baker
The problem is that you're trying to objectivize the matter, take the persons out of it: as if arguments are good in and of themselves, objectively, regardless of people, and that you have special and superior insight and are the arbiter of the goodness of an argument. — baker
Yet people typically don't have a problem with that. Humans are an exploitative species.
You're arguing for a view that is alien to so many people, on so many levels. A view that is estranged from life. — baker
And yet such is life. People do this all the time, in so many ways. Other people can unilaterally force a war on you.
Some say it's naive, childish to wonder about whether something is just or moral. — baker
It doesn't compute in _your_ mind. It computes in so many other people's minds. — baker
The lifeguard and anyone else already existing is ALREADY in the inescapable game. It's too late to prevent their being forced into being in negative situations IN THE FIRST PLACE. — schopenhauer1
Do you recognize different states of affairs and thus principles apply differently? — schopenhauer1
1.) If MY computation is right, no ONE suffers (cause no one is born, of course). — schopenhauer1
I'm leaning towards the enforcement of negative conditions on others being always unjust. — Tzeentch
I'd like to be persuaded otherwise, but it seems any attempt at justifying such behaviors goes down a slippery slope that leads to a justification for any and all behavior — Tzeentch
No because you haven’t pointed out a principle that applies differently to the different situations. But I do recognize the different states of affairs and how they’re different. You haven’t explained why the difference matters. — khaled
I never bought into your totalizing method where this isn't a consideration, only the totalizing outcome of harm or good or whatever utilitarian thing you are claiming. — schopenhauer1
1.) If MY computation is right, no ONE suffers (cause no one is born, of course).
2.) If the procreator-sympathizers are right, SOMEONE suffers. — schopenhauer1
Once placed in the position, then it would be not recognizing people's dignity by ignoring their humanity. — schopenhauer1
The indignity happens when putting people into the condition in the first place. — schopenhauer1
There are countless stopgaps you can implement. Like: Only force a negative condition if the forcing does less harm than not forcing. Is a good one. — khaled
To not wake the lifeguard would be to overlook the dignity of the drowning person. — schopenhauer1
Dignity here is something akin to recognizing people's suffering and wanting to help or prevent it if possible, but realizing that the conditions of life can't prevent it all for those already born. — schopenhauer1
Again, putting people into enslavement is not the answer to helping the enslaved, but abolishing the enslavement — schopenhauer1
Oh that counts? Right then to not have the child would be to overlook the dignity of the people they would have helped — khaled
Ah I see. So in the end you do only care about suffering inflicted. — khaled
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