Based on all this, your position seems to be deontological of the negative ethics variety, which is about where mine is too :up: . That is to say, the concern lies in what not to do (preventing force of autonomy if possible, preventing unnecessary harm if possible, etc.). — schopenhauer1
For your first sentence, maybe so. But I´m not sure, I have forgot so much of the philosophy, that I have read in my life. — Antinatalist
In moral philosophy, deontological ethics or deontology (from Greek: δέον, 'obligation, duty' + λόγος, 'study') is the normative ethical theory that the morality of an action should be based on whether that action itself is right or wrong under a series of rules, rather than based on the consequences of the action.[1] It is sometimes described as duty-, obligation-, or rule-based ethics.[2][3] Deontological ethics is commonly contrasted to consequentialism,[4] virtue ethics, and pragmatic ethics. In this terminology, action is more important than the consequences. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deontological_ethics
In any event, the wording would only matter to deontologists. The asymmetry argument is of no use to a pure consequentialist? — Down The Rabbit Hole
For your first sentence, maybe so. But I´m not sure, I have forgot so much of the philosophy, that I have read in my life.
— Antinatalist
In moral philosophy, deontological ethics or deontology (from Greek: δέον, 'obligation, duty' + λόγος, 'study') is the normative ethical theory that the morality of an action should be based on whether that action itself is right or wrong under a series of rules, rather than based on the consequences of the action.[1] It is sometimes described as duty-, obligation-, or rule-based ethics.[2][3] Deontological ethics is commonly contrasted to consequentialism,[4] virtue ethics, and pragmatic ethics. In this terminology, action is more important than the consequences.
— https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deontological_ethics — schopenhauer1
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
The absence of pain that could have occurred, is always good. The absence of pleasure for someone who does not exist but could, is neutral. — schopenhauer1
So some conclusions might be:
A universe devoid of people with pain is just a "good" state of affairs.
A universe devoid of people with pleasure is just a "neutral" state of affairs. — schopenhauer1
Thus nudging the lifeguard to wake up is not to the degree of violating dignity or unnecessary suffering prevention that forcing the lifeguard into a lifetime of teaching lifeguarding lessons would be doing. — schopenhauer1
Even if we were to "know" the greatest good would come from this, the dignity threshold has been violated — schopenhauer1
Certainly, there is a balanced calculus that has to be made regarding how much unnecessary suffering and dignity violation is happening. — schopenhauer1
Violating unnecessary suffering prevention: Yes
Violating dignity using people for aggregate: Yes
Violating dignity, forcing a game on them: Yes — schopenhauer1
If you could save person A from untold suffering for 30 years by forcing person B to play League of Legends for 4 hours with toxic teammates that make him want to tear his hair out, would you do it? — khaled
I would at least find that permissible. Even though it meets the 3 criteria above. So it’s not like having all 3 guarantees that “violating dignity” wins out. — khaled
This comes from conflating the state with the personal opinion of someone. — khaled
Even if we accept these (which I still don’t), it doesn’t help his argument. You can’t get AN from this. — khaled
But I explained earlier that it isn't binary but a matter of degrees meeting a threshold. — schopenhauer1
The violation happens only after the threshold is met. — schopenhauer1
The point is, "absence of good" is only bad when there is actually a person affected by this. Not so with the absence of suffering — schopenhauer1
But you argue for a binary position. Having kids is wrong. Period. — khaled
And you haven’t shown that the threshold is met in the case of birth. If that’s your intuition that’s fine, but it’s not a common one. — khaled
Absence of suffering is also only good when there is a person actually affected by this. Idk where you’re getting otherwise. — khaled
No that is true.. but that is after the threshold is met — schopenhauer1
So the objection that this means that a bunch of things not occurring is "good" I guess would be yes for Benatar. — schopenhauer1
No because I would add “a bunch of good things not occurring is bad”. A no for Benatar. — khaled
Don’t you also say that having a child already meets the threshold in every case? — khaled
Yes, it always meets the threshold. — schopenhauer1
Where do you get this? That’s the main point. You don’t have a real argument unless you can argue for this premise. — khaled
Yes, the calculus does have to be worked out because intuitively I can say the waking of the lifeguard doesn't meet it while kidnapping the the lifeguard for a lifetime does. Thus, the situation you provided does not necessarily violate it, as it doesn't meet the threshold. The violation happens only after the threshold is met. — schopenhauer1
Where there did you argue that having children meets the threshold of “too much dignity violation”? — khaled
Procreation meets the threshold, similar to the lifeguard example. — schopenhauer1
Why? On the basis that both are “for a lifetime”? — khaled
I would say there are some things that are ok to force onto people for a lifetime because of the suffering doing so alleviates. Like taxes. — khaled
So “for a lifetime” doesn’t seem to be enough to unilaterally say that too much dignity is being violated. — khaled
Right, an intractable game of challenges forced onto someone and cannot be escaped easily. — schopenhauer1
We could agree to disagree, but you furthermore seem to want to establish some objectivity to your view. That it is a matter of fact that the game of life is over the threshold of acceptable impositions. That’s why I ask you to argue further to establish that. — khaled
No it can certainly be used by a consequentialist. The least amount of suffering is preventing birth, and there's no downside to the absence of good in reference to non-existence. — schopenhauer1
We can argue over whether or not the absence of good should be defined as a downside to being unborn, but considering that that good would be experienced should they be born, to a consequentialist it wouldn't matter. — Down The Rabbit Hole
We can argue over whether or not the absence of good should be defined as a downside to being unborn, but considering that that good would be experienced should they be born, to a consequentialist it wouldn't matter.
— Down The Rabbit Hole
Not for a negative utilitarian: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_utilitarianism — schopenhauer1
as the consequence of not giving birth is absence of the good that would have been experienced if the unborn had been born. — Down The Rabbit Hole
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