It's not just to limit someone's freedom like that. — Wheatley
Limiting someone's freedom to just three options: x, y, and z. — Wheatley
Birth can be an accident. Should we limit sexual intercourse?So the point is with birth, there can never be an option to opt-out. Is this just? — schopenhauer1
Your question only makes sense only if humans are individual organisms that can act unconstrained (though not wholly detrrmined by) by their species biology. And we can't. Biology 101. 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
I can maybe agree with that. What is your own justification for that? What I don't get is wanting a child is a discursive, deliberative thought. It is not an immediate need, nor even something as compelling as pleasure or the aversion/reflex away from pain. The statement, "I want a car" and "I want a baby" are absolutely the same as far as I see. One does not have any more unconscious pull than another. The wanting of something is simply the wanting of something.
I guess you can make the case that the "heat of the moment" outweighed the thought for whether or not to have a baby, but with the ubiquity of all sorts of birth control, this isn't as big a deal either.
So really, it is more of a cultural and personal want than a universal biological drive.. unless you want to argue that wanting anything is a drive itself, but then we are speaking about wants and not this specific wants.. Wants then can be mitigated like all other wants.. I want this Ferrari but I cannot afford it, best not try to buy it. I want X but... — schopenhauer1
Birth can be an accident. Should we limit sexual intercourse? — Wheatley
:roll: wtf.So not sure what Biology 101 would have to do with procreating ... — schopenhauer1
1) The same may apply.. People can report one thing and experience another, — schopenhauer1
A surprise party lasts a certain duration with a set period of time. Life itself is a lifetime obviously. — schopenhauer1
You cannot compare the two. — schopenhauer1
Again, I don't believe this is analogous to life itself because of the vast difference in duration — schopenhauer1
and the fact that one is one experience while the other is a lifetime of all experiences. — schopenhauer1
Enduring and "finding it a thing they must endure" is almost the same as the experience and the report later of the experience so this is just restating what we are arguing as far as I see. — schopenhauer1
But I would agree that a particular event of a surprise party might align the experience and report as good. — schopenhauer1
Being that this is disanalogous to life itself, being that life is the sum of all experiences — schopenhauer1
vast difference in duration and the fact that one is one experience while the other is a lifetime of all experiences. — schopenhauer1
Even if this was correct, one major difference is I am not forcing the ice cream on others. — schopenhauer1
At least if you are going to be talking of extent, try to make an analogy of things that are daily X set of multiple experiences that are continuous and non-stop until death — schopenhauer1
But it does, especially if we are talking about an extent argument. — schopenhauer1
Because I can probably agree that actual lived experience and reported experience are more aligned in the case of surprise parties. — schopenhauer1
Again, it's a meta-ethics thing about where it fits into the world of phenomena. — schopenhauer1
However, to the point of "objectivity", you may be referring more to "universality in belief" — schopenhauer1
I mean objective as in: True of everybody. — khaled
Perhaps there are universal appeals to wrongs- things like murder and theft. — schopenhauer1
No, because as repeated over and over, the analogy is dis-analogous. — schopenhauer1
But you think it applies to one and not the other. Why? That's the question I'm asking you.
You trust people's reports when it comes to surprise parties but not life, why is that? — khaled
A lifetime is a "certain duration with a set period of time". The only difference here is length. — khaled
You can't just keep stating this, you have to explain why you cannot compare the two. So far the only difference you outlined is the length of imposition which shouldn't be relevant (see next paragraph). — khaled
Irrelevant. The point of the surprise party example isn't to say "Surprise parties are ok so life is ok". That would be a stupid argument. — khaled
The point is to show that acts that don't relieve any harm, while having a chance of causing harm, can still be ok to do. That's all I'm trying to argue. — khaled
And SINCE this is the case (again, you agree that surprise parties are ok even though they don't relieve harm, and can cause it), you have no objective basis for arguing that life is too much of an imposition. That's what I'm arguing, not that "It's ok to impose life" but "You have no objective (true of everyone) justification to say that it's not ok to impose life". — khaled
A surprise party is not a unitary experience. It's a duration full of experiences just like life is, just much shorter. This is not a real difference. Again, the only difference you pointed out is length. — khaled
You are claiming that no, these reports can be wrong, and that life is objectively "a minor inconvenience or a terrible burden for everyone". That would be a tenable position, if you didn't also take people's word for it when it comes to surprise parties with no explanation as to why you treat them differently. Length is not a factor when it comes to the degree to which the reports align with the lived experience. — khaled
Which one of those explains why the report is not to be trusted in the case of life? I don't see how either should be relevant (one isn't a real difference). It's like saying: "His report shouldn't be trusted because he has red hair while the other witnesses had black hair." — khaled
Irrelevant. Point I was making was purely about how extent arguments are not objective. Do you agree about that at least? — khaled
No it doesn't. Because I'm not saying "Surprise parties are ok so life is ok". I'm not arguing for natalism. I'm arguing you have no objective basis by which to push your belief. Yours is exactly as valid as natalism at best. For this argument to work, I would need to point out that you are making an extent argument. Which you are. And you haven't provided any basis for why your analysis of "bad enough" is any more "correct" than a natalist's. — khaled
You can't just arbitrarily agree that in one case the lived and the reported experiences are aligned and in the other case they aren't. Why are they not aligned in the case of life? Duration? How is that relevant? — khaled
Yes but those are all type arguments. Murder is wrong. Period. And murder is: Killing innocents. There is no "Too much murder is wrong". Every single instance is wrong. That's why you can make universal appeals like these. — khaled
But in your case you want to use: "Imposing on others is wrong" to make a universal appeal relating to childbirth. That would be fine. Except you don't think imposing on others is always wrong ex: Surprise parties. So it's more like "Imposing on others too much is wrong". Now you have no basis to make a universal appeal. Unless you can show that your estimation of "too much" is more correct than that of a natalist somehow. — khaled
No, what I am saying that because a surprise party is one defined event, and not a course of day, a week, a month, a year, a decade, a lifetime, it can indeed align more closely with the report. — schopenhauer1
Indeed and that makes a difference. — schopenhauer1
I can be a Kantian non-nuanced person and say that all things which might cause harm are not okay. — schopenhauer1
I am willing to be more nuanced and say that an event with short duration with extremely minimal costs of imposition are acceptable — schopenhauer1
The amount of impositions is so minimal and non-pervasive that it would be intellectually dishonest to claim it is. So disanalagous again. — schopenhauer1
I'm not sure why longer duration with more perpetual, pervasive, and frequent impositions is not computing and is translated as arbitrary for you. — schopenhauer1
Length is not a factor when it comes to the degree to which the reports align with the lived experience.
— khaled
I think we are going to have to agree to disagree on this — schopenhauer1
Forcing a burden on someone unnecessarily, do you think that is bad? — schopenhauer1
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
You will say report, I will say lived experience and we are back at square one. So where is this going to go but in circles with how we are arguing right now? — schopenhauer1
Then this goes back to my meta-argument for ethics in the first place. — schopenhauer1
make my argument "THE ARGUMENT" because it is an argument. It is not a chair. It is not the laws of gravity, etc. — schopenhauer1
However, to the point of "objectivity", you may be referring more to "universality in belief" which you seem to refer back to over and over for why antinatalism is wrong. — schopenhauer1
Because surprise parties are general happy experiences. — schopenhauer1
That to me doesn't have much relevance when discussing every experience of life itself, as I have said ad nauseum now. — schopenhauer1
Okay sure, but I have given various examples of things that were not seen as wrong in the past and have become considered wrong today. I think I have explained to you my meta-ethical idea that ethics can evolve over time. — schopenhauer1
You seem to think that if it does not convince people AT THIS TIME, it must be not right. — schopenhauer1
Then the goal of the person who sees the extent as too much is to convince the other that it is indeed too much. — schopenhauer1
The instinct to say "murder is universally wrong" is not held by everyone either. — schopenhauer1
Ah, so the longer the period, supposedly the less accurate the predictions. Where is your evidence for this? You can't just claim it out of the blue.
What if the party lasted a week, suddenly not accurate anymore? — khaled
Not until you explain why you believe it does. Where is your evidence that the longer the period, the less accurate the predictions are? — khaled
Well, this would mean literally nothing is okay, and the fact that you're doing something right now shows you can't hold that position with your current beliefs. — khaled
This isn't any better. You have no reason to say that life is long enough and that its impositions are not minimal enough. You can't establish that objectively. One can easily consistently hold that life is not long enough and not a big enough imposition to be unacceptable in the general case.
You still have no objective basis to push your belief. — khaled
You understand how analogies work right? I can't provide you with an example of an imposition that is lifelong, and just as much of an imposition as life, because that would just be life. All analogies will be different in magnitude from the originals but have the same properties. That's what an analogy is. — khaled
Because you haven't shown how either affect predictions. You want to make a claim that longer durations make us see the experience through rose tinted glasses. You have provided no support for this. So it remains an arbitrary claim until you do. — khaled
I'm assuming this is what you mean we have to "agree to disagree on". I disagree. You've made a claim without evidence. That people generally embellish long experiences in a positive light and don't do so with shorter ones. You need to provide evidence for this. Then your position may have some objective legitimacy. — khaled
Depends on the extent of the burden compared to how likely it is the "burden" is enjoyed. Slavery? Bad. Surprise parties? Good.
This is your position as well. — khaled
You think that the lived experience is what matters, but how do we get at what this lived experience was like? Well, only thing we can do is ask the experiencer correct? Except in one case (life) you think their reports should be dismissed and that life is objectively neutral to bad, but in the other (surprise parties) you think their reports are accurate. This is an arbitrary belief that you have to provide evidence for.
What we disagree on currently is how trustworthy the reports are. I say they're trustworthy, you seem to arbitrarily decide they are not when it fits your argument. — khaled
(Note: again, I'm not arguing antinatalism is wrong. I'm arguing that you have no objective (true of everyone) way to show it's right) — khaled
Which is arbitrary. Why is it that in the case of life our reports are inaccurate while for surprise parties they're not? I agree they're dissimilar in many aspects, but you have to still show instead of arbitrarily claiming, that one of those aspects results in inaccurate reports in the one case and accurate ones in the other. — khaled
False. I'm not arguing it's not right. I'm arguing you have no basis for thinking it will eventually be right. And so no reason to push it. It's on the same level as: "Eating white chocolate is bad" because it's too sweet. In other words, that the natalist position is just as valid.
This is the 3rd or 4th time I've made it clear I'm not arguing for natalism. I'm arguing that your belief that antinatalism is superior in any objective (again, universality of belief not whatever else you thought it was) sense is unfounded. — khaled
There is no meaning to "It is indeed too much". You are claiming that there is some objective measure of the "right extent" of imposition. Is there an objective measure of the "right extent" of sweetness? — khaled
Because what is "too much" is personal. It's again like "Eating things that are too sweet is bad". Everyone agrees, yet they eat different foods,and none think that they're more "correct" than the others in doing so. But you seem to for some reason.
Both "murder is wrong" and "having children is wrong" are not universally held. But the difference is for the first, if the premises are true the conclusion is true, giving a way to objectivity if you hold that the premises are true of everyone. For the second, even if the premise is true of everyone the conclusion doesn't necessarily follow. Meaning that those who believe in the the second, have no reason to think it applies to everyone. They will disagree with people that think "Imposing on people too much is wrong" is false, but outside of that, they have no justification to claim that they're right as long as that first premise is shared. — khaled
However, the optimism bias would indeed be absurd if we only applied it to times when people are generally actually happy about something. It is about going through a series of events during a longer duration and cherry-picking the good ones — schopenhauer1
I believe this is like saying, "If I break someone's arm, someone MIGHT not mind it because I haven't surveyed everyone" — schopenhauer1
Because you are picking one positive experience and saying, "This is like life" instead of a steady stream of a variety of daily experiences. — schopenhauer1
Life has a variety of experiences. Yes. — schopenhauer1
I mean, I don't get your gripe now. Are you trying to say that the events of the surprise party can have many negatives that people aren't reporting? — schopenhauer1
Our difference is that often there are negative events (maybe not conditions of slavery) that people encounter but do overlook because there is an optimism bias. The lived experience is disrupted from the reported one. — schopenhauer1
However, I think that most experiences during a surprise party are already positive and thus would accurately be reporting that. — schopenhauer1
It is a psychological claim that this is the case that I am saying I think has validity and further proves a case where humans have a tendency to overlook, under report, etc. — schopenhauer1
If you want, let me block off the rest of my life to scour every article because khaled doesn't find my argument compelling on an internet forum. — schopenhauer1
If you don't find it compelling, then do some research and see. — schopenhauer1
IT either convinces or doesn't', period. It doesn't have universality, not prima facie at least. It is compelling or not compelling. — schopenhauer1
Murder is a set of things.. There's death, killing, accidental death, killing with intent, killing under some mitigating circumstance, 1st degree, 2nd degree — schopenhauer1
I can imagine a society who values non-imposition as a very important rule and thus antinatalism becomes a principle constructed over time in a long process over many years and becomes ingrained where degrees are defined etc. — schopenhauer1
1) Are burdens underreported? — schopenhauer1
2) Are burdens okay to give to someone if someone accepts the burden? — schopenhauer1
3) Are all burdens of this nature in #2? — schopenhauer1
4) How much of the burdens are not of the nature of #2 and are unwanted — schopenhauer1
I tried to make it a bit shorter this time. — khaled
The statement, "I want a car" and "I want a baby" are absolutely the same as far as I see. One does not have any more unconscious pull than another. The wanting of something is simply the wanting of something. — schopenhauer1
1) Are burdens underreported?
— schopenhauer1
Sometimes, but I don’t know the rules. You seem to know for a fact that they’re underreported for life and not for surprise parties though. Care to prove that?
2) Are burdens okay to give to someone if someone accepts the burden?
— schopenhauer1
I think so, but that’s irrelevant for now. I’ve been arguing as if I also think the experiencing self is what matters.
3) Are all burdens of this nature in #2?
— schopenhauer1
Well if they’re in a good state of mind yes.
4) How much of the burdens are not of the nature of #2 and are unwanted
— schopenhauer1
How many unaccepted burdens are unwanted? All of them? — khaled
I believe this is like saying, "If I break someone's arm, someone MIGHT not mind it because I haven't surveyed everyone"
— schopenhauer1
No it’s more than that. it’s “Although I think X is unethical, I have no basis for telling someone who disagrees it is”. people can agree that too much imposition is wrong without being AN. — khaled
I think this probably the key point here. You don't see the pull of having kids. OK. But most people do, for whatever reason. Certainly cultural indoctrination has a lot to do here, with cities being population farms and all that. But people were procreating long before civilization. There is an instinctual aspect to it. For what reason would a hunter-gatherer have offspring, their own material benefit? Hardly, because it's just another mouth to feed. Infanticide and presumably abortions were quite common back then.
Probably a more interesting question would be to ask why people have children, and whether there can be a substitute for doing so. I remain unconvinced that there is something that can fill that need for a child that so many people have. — darthbarracuda
There is an instinctual aspect to it. For what reason would a hunter-gatherer have offspring, their own material benefit? Hardly, because it's just another mouth to feed. Infanticide and presumably abortions were quite common back then.
Probably a more interesting question would be to ask why people have children, and whether there can be a substitute for doing so. I remain unconvinced that there is something that can fill that need for a child that so many people have. — darthbarracuda
Maybe it is instinctual, but doesn't that essentially mean people have children because they are incapable of reasoned thought in that regard? — Tzeentch
So not sure what Biology 101 would have to do with procreating ...
— schopenhauer1
:roll: wtf. — 180 Proof
To the discussion about the morality of having children, the needs of the parent are irrelevant, since one's own needs are never sufficient to justify an action that involves other individuals. To argue otherwise would lead to a predictable slippery slope.
That isn't to say that the question isn't interesting. — Tzeentch
since one's own needs are never sufficient to justify an action that involves other individuals. To argue otherwise would lead to a predictable slippery slope. — Tzeentch
Never having the option not to opt makes the option to opt a superfluos option to opt for for the option not to opt for an option to opt for no options unless you always wanna have the option to opt for options you wanna make options to opt about. — Prishon
Your position is inconsistent for you think that OB applies only to life and not surprise parties because of some unidentified psychological principle that you have no support for that you instead ask me to research and prove for you. Both are impositions. Either OB applies to both, or neither. Otherwise explain why it applies to one but not the other. — khaled
No it’s more than that. it’s “Although I think X is unethical, I have no basis for telling someone who disagrees it is”. people can agree that too much imposition is wrong without being AN. — khaled
when they recalled it many years later, it was like a 10.. That would be OB. — schopenhauer1
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