Like it or not, this is exactly what is happening.Cool, so if a majority of people like baseball should people be force recruited to play the game? — schopenhauer1
Yes, and all too often, they wander off into lalaland.I'm in a philosophy forum, where people make arguments about things like morality.
And I've got my neighbor's chimney and AC exhaust into my living room and bedroom windows to prove it.Actually, all of life is a big argument and whether you know it or not, people's arguments are affecting/effecting your life.
It's not comparable. People arguing against slavery were arguing against just one aspect of the until then unquestioned socio-economic project called "life as it is usually lived". You're questioning the whole project.Okay.. slavery not just being the natural course of things also seemed alien for many generations, mainly before the Enlightenment and even then it took until the mid-1800s for it to really start being considered legitimate moral sentiments.
Who has the problem here: you, or the pronatalists?Some say it's naive, childish to wonder about whether something is just or moral.
— baker
Really? Why?
So? It's still your problem.It doesn't compute in _your_ mind. It computes in so many other people's minds.
— baker
Well, let's take two outcomes from the different computations.
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.
I'm sure you know this but you can have two things be true. Your parents labored for you, and now that you were born, you must work-to-survive. You choose to labor or you die from neglect and starvation. That is the situation.
There is something wrong with this. — schopenhauer1
where before you did not when it was just to wake him up to save the drowning child. — schopenhauer1
Laboring to avoid neglect and starvation is one thing, forced labor and exploitation is quite another. Either my parents forced me to labor or they didn’t. They exploited me or they didn’t. In fact, they took care of me when I couldn’t do so for myself, and equipped me with the knowledge to survive. — NOS4A2
I am also bringing up the idea of exploitation in terms of people forced into labor. Why is this not an issue? In any other case where someone is forced into a situation when not necessary, this would be unjust. However, why does generalizing this concept to life itself rather than a particular circumstance get an exemption? What about the generalization makes it "too general"? There really doesn't seem to be a good answer for forcing in a particular instance unnecessary and the more general instance of bringing into life itself. — schopenhauer1
And it’s a much larger imposition. — khaled
if for whatever reason we DID need to force the Lifeguard to teach life guarding lessons (there’s a shortage) would it then be okay? — Albero
. If to you it’s still wrong then I respect your moral intuitions but It just doesn’t seem like a safe alternative is possible to me. Your moral system and Khaled’s system lead to 2 giant bullets I’ll have to bite, and the aggregate amount seems more appropriate. — Albero
you are not recognizing in my argument the distinction between starting a life (and challenges and problems that a person would face), and helping people out who are already dealing with the challenges — schopenhauer1
But by using people to such a degree, you are indeed overlooking that person's dignity as a PERSON. — schopenhauer1
I am also bringing up the idea of exploitation in terms of people forced into labor. Why is this not an issue? In any other case where someone is forced into a situation when not necessary, this would be unjust. However, why does generalizing this concept to life itself rather than a particular circumstance get an exemption? What about the generalization makes it "too general"? There really doesn't seem to be a good answer for forcing in a particular instance unnecessary and the more general instance of bringing into life itself.
So for you there are impositions that are simply “too much” and having children is one of them.
You could’ve just said that. — khaled
Why don't you just ignore my threads if you think the argument not worth your time? — schopenhauer1
I see a whole bunch of threads on here. I even see a professional philosopher, David Pearce. You can argue you heart's content at other people and things. — schopenhauer1
Anyways, you are wrong here because khaled is looking for a conclusion with a premise. — schopenhauer1
Well at least for me: because it’s irritating seeing someone make (what I thought was) a flawed argument over and over again. Now I just think it’s begging the question. — khaled
It’s also irritating to see someone repeatedly playing the victim when they post on a public forum and their post gets a response that shows the weakness of their position. You said the same thing to me too. Is this how you react with everyone who disagrees with you. “You didn’t have to say that stop being such a meanie!” — khaled
Why don’t you take it at face value and assume Isaac is being a perfectly friendly commenter who happens to have a different view from you? — khaled
If you don’t want your motivations to be talked about, and would rather focus on the argument, don’t talk about the motivations of others and instead focus on their argument. — khaled
What does this even mean? — khaled
sorry I didn’t mean blame as in people who have kids deserve punishment, but that people who have kids are morally responsible. — Albero
you actually just debate the topic and not make this a meta-argument about the topic. — schopenhauer1
No you two specifically do the same thing — schopenhauer1
ANd like i said, you at least argue the fuckn case rather than making speeches about the me arguing the case in the first place. — schopenhauer1
But I've NEVER went to another thread just to say that they shouldn't write their thread, — schopenhauer1
That you were looking for my premise (dignity, etc.) an explanation of that, not the conclusion. — schopenhauer1
Yeah, no wonder one hates life and wishes to never have been ... — baker
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