Can't choose parents, can't choose parents circumstances, can't choose your physical characteristics, potential for illness or disease, etc. One cannot choose the hand one is dealt. One can make the best of it, or not. The choice is theirs. — MikeF
"Justification" is besides the point for 'a priori biological programming'. — 180 Proof
Ethical concern begins with natality which, therefore, perpetually raises the question of "justifying" whether one has prevented increasing and reduced the misery of offspring or one has not. — 180 Proof
Species breed – reproduce (biology 101). Natality, in that sentence, means viably at birth. — 180 Proof
Well this is news to population geneticists and actuaries! Explain why we still exist after two hundred-odd millennia if, as a species, h. sapiens in the aggregate isn't "just reflexively breeding". — 180 Proof
Can you explain this? Presumably we know where babies come from and can prevent it. I'm not trying to be sarcastic or anything, but just countering the idea that procreation (not even saying sex) is so determined. The brain-states involved in "Wanting X" isn't necessarily the same as immediate physical gratification. Wanting X (Like "Sally wants a baby") is a very deliberate and personality-contingent-based thing (similar to "Sally wants a new house"). — schopenhauer1
Explain why we still exist after two hundred-odd millennia if, as a species, h. sapiens in the aggregate isn't "just reflexively breeding". — 180 Proof
You cannot select the option for no option. — schopenhauer1
I feel it misses that, ordinarily, selecting no option is just part of what a choice involves. — Antony Nickles
But your birth could never have been a choice you made. Is it just that that choice is made for you. There was no choice to opt out, and here is something more important possibly than any other decision and you could never have made it for yourself.
It brings up another question, just because all choices X are due to the condition of being born B. Does having choices X as a consequence of B, justify B which itself was a condition that did not even allow for choice? Is simply having the ability to make choices X override the first (possible) injustice of B (never having a choice for the whole course of life itself, which granted have subsequent choices one can make)? — schopenhauer1
Thus, your imposition (and continuing) idea of causality is manufactured as a backwards version of the part that responsibility plays in choice. If we take you seriously, the condition of being alive makes you responsible, as anyone is, but your choices are not caused by your birth. You are in the condition of answering for yourself (even if you do not choose); you may want to abdicate that responsibility, but then are you alive? are you (being) human? — Antony Nickles
The conditions of having choice (as any other condition, PERIOD), is from being born, so not sure about that underlined emphasis there — schopenhauer1
So here's my big takeaway — schopenhauer1
You are mixing together "condition" and "causality". We would say birth puts us in a condition, or position, but not that it determines or forces anything (or whatever you imagine causality to do). — Antony Nickles
If you actually wanted to make the case, say: how parents are responsible for the choice they make in bringing a child into the world, this world, their inadequate world, and the possible justifications and qualifications, this is currently not that discussion. — Antony Nickles
That's the discussion I'm trying to have — schopenhauer1
You cannot select the option for no option. Is this just? — schopenhauer1
You're wasting typing by repeatedly pointing out that "life is an unconsented imposition". So are many things you find ok. We are now arguing about whether it is bad enough. — khaled
Right, so it is a (what you call) extent argument I am making, at this point. That is to say, starting life for someone else is sufficiently meeting a threshold that is crossed to make it a violation and thus wrong. — schopenhauer1
We both agree that a certain amount of imposition is too much. Except you, want to convince everyone that birth does objectively fit the bill of too much imposition. How can you do that with any objectivity?
— khaled
I never claimed there was any "objectivity". You seem to ignore that. The case is made and people either find it compelling or not. — schopenhauer1
Thus, antinatality is mostly a pathological aberration like clinical depression or Tourett Syndrome; where it's a deliberate stance, such as in my case, it's (mostly) a matter of moral luck when one achieves it. — 180 Proof
Not: the state of the world, our finances, the possibility of passing on an illness, that the baby may resent what is seen as a selfish act given our simple desire for a baby compared to the eventual impact on them, etc? A category of consideration for what it would mean to be just in this case seems to be: weighing having the child against our situation (including our desires and opinions). That someone asks the parents (or they ask themselves) "Why would you want to bring a child into this world?" Taking into consideration all that and more, if we say to the parents "But the baby has no choice!", what difference would it make? i.e., why say that? — Antony Nickles
So yes, sometimes impositions of this nature are ok. It depends on whether or not the options given are "bad enough". This was what you said 3 months ago. As to what determines "bad enough": It's a subjective feeling according to you, and there is no objective way to determine it — khaled
I can make a case similar to above that surprise parties are not analogous to not being born. Presumably, it would be a bad idea if you knew the person made it known they hate surprise parties or they can easily get a heart attack.. You do know the person presumably. However, if we go to the extent argument- the surprise is temporary, a set period of time, and is it an imposition really? That definition can be debated for the kind argument but it can also work for the extent argument that it is finite, temporary and very little in the imposition scale. — schopenhauer1
Another way of determining "bad enough" is how most people would react to the options. — khaled
It is unjust to force or coerce another to make a choice. But you cannot force or coerce another to make a choice if that other doesn’t already exist. The question arises as to who it is we’re being unjust to. — NOS4A2
:up: Hence why I consider procreation to be an act of blameless wrongdoing. — darthbarracuda
Presumably, it would be a bad idea if you knew the person made it known they hate surprise parties or they can easily get a heart attack. — schopenhauer1
However, if we go to the extent argument- the surprise is temporary, a set period of time — schopenhauer1
and is it an imposition really? — schopenhauer1
That definition can be debated for the kind argument — schopenhauer1
but it can also work for the extent argument that it is finite, temporary and very little in the imposition scale. — schopenhauer1
If a magician can snap his fingers and bring a person into a situation that they would not want, knowing the outcome will be a future person in harmful/unwanted situation, what say you then? Is the magician justified to make that choice for someone else? — schopenhauer1
I never claimed there was any "objectivity". You seem to ignore that. The case is made and people either find it compelling or not. — schopenhauer1
Yes. Since you didn't consent to it for obvious reasons. — khaled
So is life.... — khaled
I don't think so. You have to show it, you can't just say "Oh you can come up with a definition that suits my view". My definition of an imposition is something that is done to you without your consent. I think this is reasonable. You think this isn't sufficient so present your definition of imposition that makes life an imposition and surprise parties not. — khaled
Depends on how bad the position is and why the magician is doing it. — khaled
Also I'm assuming you went back on this?:
I never claimed there was any "objectivity". You seem to ignore that. The case is made and people either find it compelling or not. — khaled
I am not sure I would classify it as an imposition if people like it. — schopenhauer1
If a surprise party is harmful then it is an imposition. If it is simply unexpected, I wouldn't necessarily say it's an imposition. — schopenhauer1
life itself can be classified as suffering from a Buddhist standpoint. — schopenhauer1
I wouldn't necessarily say it's an imposition. A burden, a thing one must "endure" (not relish in). — schopenhauer1
However, with what I was saying earlier, much of life is full of burdens and inconveniences and harms etc etc. and its simply the post-facto reports that say, "Life is good" or "Good to be born", etc. — schopenhauer1
A surprise party at its worst might be an inconvenience for someone, but then that is situational to the person — schopenhauer1
A burden, a thing one must "endure" (not relish in). It is an inconvenience at the least and a terrible burden at most. A surprise party at its worst might be an inconvenience for someone, but then that is situational to the person. — schopenhauer1
Okay, so the lifetime of the subject a lifetime of all such possible harms small and large vs. one temporary event within that lifetime. These are the types of things that make this non-analogous in the first place. — schopenhauer1
Yes as stated earlier, at the least inconvenience at most terrible burden and harm. — schopenhauer1
This was a meta-argument about ethical arguments. There is no way I can "prove" to you "objectively" any of my claims — schopenhauer1
You seem to think they're not wrong to do, so I take it you think that if most people don't find a situation harmful, then it's not an imposition. Cool, so life isn't an imposition! — khaled
No Buddhist ever claimed life is suffering. The original quote is more like "Life has suffering". Not a groundbreaking discovery. "Life is suffering" is a problem not a serious philosophical position. — khaled
Again, most people relish in the burden of life. Few find it a thing they must endure. — khaled
How do you know if a surprise party was burdensome or not? You ask the recipient right? And each recipient will give a different answer but most will likely agree the party was good. — khaled
Why exactly? They're both post facto reports. Why should one be dismissed in favor of "Actually, you're wrong, life is at best an inconvenience and at worst a terrible burden and harm" while the other should be trusted? — khaled
This is an extent argument. You're saying life is "too bad" while surprise parties aren't bad enough. You are in the minority in thinking this. Yet you want to make a global statement, that having children is wrong (at least in 99% of cases) and that life is suffering despite you thinking it's fine (at least in 99% of cases). You have provided no support for this. Because extent arguments can't be true for everyone.
Not everyone is going to think that vanilla is too sweet and chocolate isn't sweet enough like you do. You telling them that they're wrong and actually both are too sweet, just doesn't apply. Your position is just as valid as theirs when it comes to this. — khaled
One is still subject to all possible harms even during a surprise party, it's not different in that sense. So the only difference is the length of the imposition.
All analogies break down at some point. However this isn't relevant. The length of the imposition shouldn't matter for what we're discussing. — khaled
Again, this is an extent argument. Most people wouldn't say that life is "at least an inconvenience". They would say something like "At best an incredible joy, at worst a terrible burden (leaning more towards the former)". Again, the statement you're making is your view of life, and it is the minority view. Yet you want to say that this view is true of everyone, and that their post facto evaluations should be dismissed. Yet you don't dismiss post facto evaluations when it comes to surprise parties (you don't tell people "Actually you're wrong, and surprise parties are absolutely Satanic"). Why is that? — khaled
I mean objective as in: True of everybody. Do you think that having kids is wrong for everybody or at least the vast majority? — khaled
Unless we are talking about surprise parties then they are to be trusted :up:
See the problem? — khaled
It's not just to limit someone's freedom like that.So you have a whole range of X, Y, Z, etc. options. You cannot select the option for no option. Is this just? — schopenhauer1
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