It's only good to prevent suffering if there's someone existing to benefit from that prevention. — Benkei
Again, you are misunderstanding me. If a potential parent exists, whereby the consequent is a new person who suffers, the rule is in play- prevent said suffering. How is that a reductio? — schopenhauer1
If existence was nothing but suffering, then your point regarding the undesirability of creating new life would stand. — Janus
But existence is not nothing but suffering, therefore your point fails; because there is no adequate calculus with which to accurately measure suffering against happiness. Some lives may contain more suffering than joy and others more joy than suffering, — Janus
Some lives may contain more suffering than joy and others more joy than suffering, — Janus
Personally, given the impending problems humanity faces, I wouldn't want to be responsible for bringing a child into this world — Janus
So all I am disagreeing with is what I see as your unjustified proselytizing. — Janus
Well, that is actually something I was going to bring up. What calculus would sufficiently be considered the threshold as "too much".. I had an argument with another poster on this... — schopenhauer1
And who are you to be the decider for someone else? If you guess wrong? Doesn't matter? — schopenhauer1
The point is that there is no calculus of joy and suffering such that anyone could make a fully informed decision whether or not to have children, so it must come down to personal feeling. — Janus
We know what your feeling is, which is fair enough for you, but you are not rationally, or in any other way, justified in attempting to universalize your personal feelings on the matter. — Janus
Anyways, why am I not "justified" to persuade people on a logical reason to not do X action? — schopenhauer1
Because it is not a logical, merely an emotional, reason, given that your premise (feeling) that life is overall more suffering than joy, cannot be substantiated. — Janus
I don't see any reason to reject life on the basis that it involves some suffering. How much suffering would it need to involve in order to warrant rejection? If it was nothing but suffering it would warrant rejection. How about 90%? 80%? 70 %? — Janus
It seems that anything substantially more than 50% suffering could plausibly be argued to be grounds for rejection of life. But since no percentage can be established even in relation to an individual life, much less all of human life, then it seems there cannot be rational grounds for general rejection of life. — Janus
I would say anything less than a paradise, honestly. — schopenhauer1
if the person kidnapped into lifeguarding school actually ended up identifying with his kidnapping and enjoyed it 50% of the time, it was thus justified? No. Forcing an X on someone unnecessarily and suffering unnecessary is never right. — schopenhauer1
These individuals are therefore, in both good and bad, responsible for the emergence of a certain person. — Antinatalist
The idea that "not having children" is a good act is absurd. It is at best neutral. If you want it to come out as "good" you run into a lot of problems. For example: "Not shooting people" is now also a good act by the same reasoning. Therefore someone who owns a gun and chooses not to shoot someone can justifiably walk up to you and say "Why observe what a paragon of virtue I am! Can you see how many people I haven't shot!". And the more guns they own and choose not to use, the better they are.
This seems absurd. Choosing to not harm someone is not in itself a good act. It should go:
Have a child:
Risk of suffering- bad, risk of pleasure- good
Don't have a child:
Prevention of suffering- neutral, prevention of pleasure- neutral — khaled
↪Antinatalist Nice explanation rebutting Benkei's causation objection. — schopenhauer1
Have a child:
Risk of suffering- bad, risk of pleasure- good
Don't have a child:
Prevention of suffering- neutral, prevention of pleasure- neutral
not
Don't have a child:
Prevention of suffering - good, prevention of pleasure - neutral — khaled
I have to agree with you. — Antinatalist
But if you mean having a child and not having a child are both neutral acts, then I have to disagree. — Antinatalist
Have a child:
Risk of suffering- bad, risk of pleasure- good
Don't have a child:
Prevention of suffering- neutral, prevention of pleasure- neutral — khaled
You start by positing harms and here the non-existence of the un-concieved child doesn't matter - they will exist and so one can consider the harms that will befall them. But here, the aggregate argument carries. There will be more harm by not conceiving them than there would by conceiving them (if you have a reasonable expectation that they'll mostly enjoy life). — Isaac
There's no person who's dignity or will needs to be considered. We're not kidnapping someone against their will, there's no person who exists yet for their will to be considered. It's a unique situation not analogous to any other we face in life. so we have no other intuition on how to handle it that the one most people have about conception (that it's morally fine). — Isaac
If you want to continue the discussion qua discussion, address the arguments, don't just ignore them and move on to fresh meat you hope might not spot the flaws, that just makes you seem like you're recruiting, not discussing. — Isaac
All the stuff about harms has been discussed and resolved - no need to bring it up fresh as if it hadn't. If you take an aggregate harms position there's an argument that not having a child causes more harm than having one for some prospective parents. There's a threshold of autonomy/dignity above which we all cringe at considering aggregate harms (such as your kidnapped lifeguard). So harms are now completely irrelevant to the argument because it has moved on the the threshold of dignity/autonomy and its relation to conception. — Isaac
You're view on this is that childbirth is like kidnapping, but you've not provided anything to support that view. Most people think childbirth does not cross the threshold of dignity/autonomy, mainly because the person whose will we'd normally consider doesn't yet exist. — Isaac
Nothing here is about the 'logic' at all, nothing about the discussion. It's all about that view. You think conception is like enough to kidnapping that your intuition about kidnapping applies to ti. Most others think conception is dissimilar enough to kidnapping that their intuition about kidnapping does not apply to it. Since conception and kidnapping are certainly dissimilar in many ways you can't show anyone to be wrong about that by necessity. There's therefore no 'argument' to be had. — Isaac
The idea that "not having children" is a good act is absurd. It is at best neutral. If you want it to come out as "good" you run into a lot of problems. For example: "Not shooting people" is now also a good act by the same reasoning. Therefore someone who owns a gun and chooses not to shoot someone can justifiably walk up to you and say "Why observe what a paragon of virtue I am! Can you see how many people I haven't shot!". And the more guns they own and choose not to use, the better they are.
This seems absurd. Choosing to not harm someone is not in itself agood act. It should go: — khaled
As I say, if someone dies they are deprived of life's pleasure. Is it only different for the unborn because they are not someone? Because that is what Benkei is saying. — Down The Rabbit Hole
It's not about act, it's simply the state of affairs of not being harmed/in pain/suffering/negative, etc. — schopenhauer1
Don't have a child:
No suffering- neutral, No pleasure- neutral — khaled
Don't have a child:
No suffering- good, No pleasure- bad — khaled
It's not a strong "do this!" simply a common "don't do this!". — schopenhauer1
then that would indeed be violating the other rule about dignity as you are looking at outcomes other than the person the decision is being made for. — Albero
perhaps another issue might be that the asymmetry seems (at least to me) to extend to infinity. As I’m sitting here typing, I can list off a million potential harmful situations that aren’t happening, and saying “it’s a good thing I’m not being murdered, raped, or my house is currently on fire.” — Albero
that’s why he adds that most people have bad lives and have optimism biases and all that stuff to make the arguments stronger. — Albero
By what standard is a state of affairs where someone is not suffering worse than one where there is someone suffering, but at the same time a state of affairs where someone is not having pleasure is just as good as one where someone is having pleasure. — khaled
Sure, but that doesn't make "not doing this" good. I think there is a difference between what is moral and what is good. Sometimes something is moral but not good, as in it is a minimum requirement. "Not killing people" is definitely moral, but not enough to be called good. You're not virtuous simply because you haven't killed anyone. — khaled
My only argument against schopenhauer1 is that his argument is not logical though he makes it seem so. He accepts that the whole preservation of dignity thing is and should be violated sometimes. As such, he can't really argue that having children is unilaterally wrong without begging the question (assuming that having children is already one of the instances where dignity violation is not acceptable). He could try to argue for that separately so as no longer to beg the question by taking a misanthropic angle, and trying to show that in most or all cases, having a child is a heavy enough burden, and doesn't alleviate enough to be considered acceptable. But he doesn't do that. So as it stands I think his argument begs the question at worst, or is insufficient at best. — khaled
Antinatalist too
It's not about act, it's simply the state of affairs of not being harmed/in pain/suffering/negative, etc. is in some way "good". — schopenhauer1
Benatar has also stated his asymmetry can be used in any normative ethical system, so it could be deontological or utilitarian, for example. — schopenhauer1
If you have the gun, the rule would be to not cause the the unnecessary suffering (preventing bad). It's not a strong "do this!" simply a common "don't do this!". — schopenhauer1
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