Benefitting you. If you believe that producing children is evil, and you refrain from producing children, then you have successfully omitted an evil action.benefitting who? If that decision doesn't benefit anyone, it's not a moral choice. — Benkei
f one's mantra is "always reduce suffering" it seems intuitively correct to give birth to someone who will lead a lousy life but you know for certain they will cure 10 different types of cancer. Alternatively, it seems completely wrong to force someone to be a lifeguard for 40 years even though they'll save thousands of lives. — Albero
this is the Benkei absurdity of "You have to live so you can not like suffering". But it's preventing another person from suffering in the first place and being in the game in the first place. — schopenhauer1
how do we draw the line at who is able to parent? Can they only parent if they have good reason to believe their children will only be harm reducers? — Albero
benefitting who? If that decision doesn't benefit anyone, it's not a moral choice. — Benkei
I really can't see how any of that actually meets the charge of neo-liberalism. It seems completely unrelated. Hyper-individualistic notions like "why should I suffer any inconvenience for the sake of others" are toxic. Your philosophy boils down to the principle that we cannot expect anything, even the slightest inconvenience, from any individual, for the benefit of their community. I've simply no time for that kind of bullshit. — Isaac
The word game here is where you dismiss logic as a word game. The rest of your post just repeats the same that has been previously demonstrated to be false. — Benkei
"Is morally irrelevant if nobody actually benefits"? What does that mean? — khaled
There are not just a few people who believe that they suffer more than enough for "the community" because they put up with some particular person being alive and that they are doing this person a favor by not killing them. They also score as "normal" on a psych evaluation test. I've known such people.Hyper-individualistic notions like "why should I suffer any inconvenience for the sake of others" are toxic. Your philosophy boils down to the principle that we cannot expect anything, even the slightest inconvenience, from any individual, for the benefit of their community. — Isaac
I'd love for you to be in my shoes, to have a neighbor like I do. I really do. I want to see how you'd handle that.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
The reductio ad absurdums
Finally, two unexamined points that occured to me.
If living causes suffering we should be killing everything on the planet and murder would be a just act. — Benkei
If the anti-natalist plan is succesful, there would be no moral actors around to judge the world to be a better place, leading to another metaphysical nonsense comparison between what we have now and nothing - or at least a world where there are no moral actors to experience anything and have an opinion on the matter. Saying such a world is better than this one is meaningless. — Benkei
Antinatalists (god they're so fucking annoying) — darthbarracuda
He Benkei thinks that if the no person is born, that "no person born" does not benefit from being prevented from existing. — schopenhauer1
What does saying “Not having kids is not good for anyone” do here? It’s true but... irrelevant. — khaled
Do you believe that you are "suffering an inconvenience for the sake of others" when you read posts here that you disagree with? — baker
I'd love for you to be in my shoes, to have a neighbor like I do. I really do. I want to see how you'd handle that. — baker
I want to see what you consider "suffering an inconvenience for the sake of others".Do you believe that you are "suffering an inconvenience for the sake of others" when you read posts here that you disagree with?
— baker
No, not particularly. Why do you ask? — Isaac
Not at all. I want to put your humanist notions to the test, seeing how you'd deal with someone who doesn't care whether you live or die and who has no qualms about endangering your property and your person. And the authorities side with them!I'd love for you to be in my shoes, to have a neighbor like I do. I really do. I want to see how you'd handle that.
— baker
What an odd thing to want.
I want to see what you consider "suffering an inconvenience for the sake of others". — baker
seeing how you'd deal with someone who doesn't care whether you live or die and who has no qualms about endangering your property and your person. And the authorities side with them! — baker
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