↪Antinatalist Your sentence doesn't make sense to me in that I'm confused what you're trying to say. In your last post people are either suffering or they are not. People are doing something. If there are no people, it no longer makes sense to talk about suffering because that is something people do. In other words, "suffering" is a state, which presupposes the existence of living people. — Benkei
Nothing absurd about if you stop replacing meaningful terms with meaningless ones. There's no presupposition between X and second X, so of course, THAT results in an absurdity. But only because it's an obvious straw man. — Benkei
Oh yes, let's return to where you never proved living causes suffering (not a sufficient cause) and just kept repeating "but you have to live to suffer", which coincidentally reinforces my previous point that suffering presupposes living. Just like any property of a person really. God, this is so fucking tedious it isn't funny anymore. Just some idiots with a belief and forgetting about basic logic. — Benkei
Even if it is person-dependent, that someone will not be harmed is good. — schopenhauer1
You keep replacing "conditions of" with "causes". Your choice to misquote all the time. — schopenhauer1
For some (many?) people, life is like being caught in a trap. — baker
Once born, however, a human being is highly unlikely to have the sufficient skills to commit suicide before the age of five — Antinatalist
When this wish arises and the individual aims to fulfil it, surrounding people strive to prevent the suicide almost without exceptions if they only can. — Antinatalist
not even suicide guarantees that the individual will achieve the state or non-state where s/he “was” before the decision of having a child was made. (Be it complete non-existence, for example.) — Antinatalist
I am not a utilitarian, at least in that aggregate sense, so wouldn't matter for my argument. — schopenhauer1
In my point of view, it´s relevant to say it is better that there is a world without people suffering, than a world with people suffering in it. Or even that there is no world, no people, no suffering - and I concern this better than the world with people suffering in it. — Antinatalist
the state of affairs of X will do (being trapped in a harmful game). — schopenhauer1
The indignity is overlooking the person who will exist for some other cause, but in some egregious way. But what is this egregious way? — schopenhauer1
I actually agree that given climate chaos, the scourge of neoliberal capitalism, and the rise of authoritarian governments that having kids is a decision on behalf of someone else that will be unreasonable in the near future. But this still doesn't get us Hard Antinatalism, only "don't have kids under predatory capitalism and severe climate breakdown" which seems to be popular given how lots of people aren't having kids. — Albero
In my point of view, it´s relevant to say it is better that there is a world without people suffering, than a world with people suffering in it. Or even that there is no world, no people, no suffering - and I concern this better than the world with people suffering in it.
— Antinatalist
Yes, this fallacious intuition is shared by many. Unfortunately there's nothing logical about it. Better for whom? — Benkei
↪Antinatalist How about you answer my question first? It should also clarify why euthanasia is different. — Benkei
In other words, "suffering" is a state, which presupposes the existence of living people. — Benkei
See my response to Antinatalist. Life is not analogous to being trapped in a game. Being trapped entails that there are other options you'd prefer but cannot obtain (the trap prevents them. If a trap left all options open to you that you might desire, it's not a trap, by definition. There are no states one could prefer other than states within life because when not alive one cannot prefer anything. People who do not like their current state of affairs want that state of affairs to change to some other state of affairs. Existence is a prerequisite for experiencing any states of affairs. — Isaac
The sticking point, and the point at which I'm afraid I have, and will, lose my civility, is this neo-liberal bullshit about individual harms being the only matter in moral decisions. I'm afraid I just find that kind of view toxic and can't just discuss it as if it were a reasonable option. We're social creatures, we don't just think for ourselves. Even a six month old child shows degrees of empathy and concern for others, it's deeply ingrained in our core being. It matters. I mean, how many great stories have been about people caring about their own suffering and screw everyone else? — Isaac
Until you can explain how nothing cannot suffer, we're done. What you call absurdity is logical rigor, but because it doesn't answer your intuitions you dismiss it.
Yes, you have to exist to not suffer or suffer, because it's something people do. — Benkei
No, you stupid cunt, there's no such thing as a non-existent future person. — Benkei
You try to dismiss things like potentialities, conditionals, and counterfactuals like they don't exist, but they do. — schopenhauer1
straw man as usual. Nothing has no properties, so no potentiality either but I'm perfectly capable of entertaining if this then that's. — Benkei
So when the decision not procreate is made, there's no future person who you saved from any harm. This is simply incoherent — Benkei
The problem with this is that it is almost an inevitability that some people will have kids. There will be a next generation which will have to live in those conditions. As such it is only necessary for you to think of yourself as an above average parent and your children will be more likely to help that next generation that they will to worsen it. Given that, even in these difficult times, most people still prefer to live than not, the harms you imagine your future child will have to suffer in order to bring about this benefit are relatively small (relative to the benefit, that is).
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