What do you mean by this? — Prishon
My main point here is that OB can obtain in a surprise party, but it wouldn't be a surprise to me if the actual experience matches the report because often surprise parties have elements people like in it and so may not be reporting wrong if they say, "I like it". — schopenhauer1
It here being a very discrete event in their life versus many hours experiencing things other than they like — schopenhauer1
Because life has more than events that we just like in it going on in the lived experience — schopenhauer1
If they believe too much imposition is wrong, then why not be AN? — schopenhauer1
I am claiming impositions are often underreported and that often people are mistaken as to how much imposition there is imposed on them. — schopenhauer1
Was it really that the serf's view was the only thing that changed the unjustness of serfdom — schopenhauer1
That doesn't quite work, because one's own evaluation of the harm done can be completely different from the evaluation of another, hence the slippery slope: — Tzeentch
If, however, one comes to the sensible conclusion that it is very difficult, if not impossible, to judge what is good for others, then one will realize one must always tread carefully when imposing things on others — Tzeentch
One could simply treat one's own needs as just as valuable or less valuable as those of others. So don't do something to others that is harmful unless the alternative is equal or way greater harm onto yourself. — khaled
But one often has a pretty reasonable estimate of how much harm they'll suffer vs how much harm they'll inflict by doing an action. — khaled
One could simply treat one's own needs as just as valuable or less valuable as those of others. So don't do something to others that is harmful unless the alternative is equal or way greater harm onto yourself. — khaled
Anyways I want to ask you this: If a thief is about to stab you what justification do you have to stop them? Or is it not right for you to stop them? — khaled
I would argue that in this situation one's needs are sufficient, because they extend only to oneself (self-preservation). — Tzeentch
Does imposing on someone the need to pick from a range of options negate the fact that the imposition leaves out never having the option to not play the game of options in the first place? — schopenhauer1
it is a reaction - protecting that which is rightfully theirs: their life and their body. — Tzeentch
The imposition that follows by the victim is of a different nature than the thief — Tzeentch
But maybe the right thing to do is to turn the other cheek? I'm willing to consider that option. — Tzeentch
But maybe the right thing to do is to turn the other cheek? I'm willing to consider that option. — Tzeentch
But you said needs like these are insufficient.
So are they sufficient now? — khaled
assault on something that unquestionably belongs to the individual is sufficient. — Tzeentch
Perhaps the need in conjuction with the thief's mistake of imposing is sufficient. — Tzeentch
Note, it is not the need that may justify an action, it is the thief's imposition that justifies it. — Tzeentch
That doesn't quite work, because one's own evaluation of what belongs to who can be completely different from the evaluation of another, hence the slippery slope — khaled
So you can't impose anything on anyone unless they impose first?
Say there is a drowning person and a sleeping ex-lifeguard on the beach. You can't swim to save them. Do you impose on the sleeping ex-lifeguard to wake them up? — khaled
guess, what counts as "instinct"? The thought, "I want a baby because X" doesn't seem like an instinct. It does seem like a preference though. Because the preference is tied to a biological phenomenon it may be people are mixing up the preference for an instinct. An instinct to me involves things like automatic responses to stimuli. — schopenhauer1
Just to clarify before this progresses too much further, what you're describing is not Optimism Bias (as in the psychological phenomena). Optimism bias is about expectations, not recollections.
As I've already explained (to the wall it seems), there is no such thing as experience which is not constructed, it simply does not exist. You are comparing two falsely distinguished entities. The experience at the time and the recollection of it later are both constructed in the same way by the same regions of the brain, one has no primacy over the other in any ontological sense. — Isaac
There's no objective thing 'excitement', or 'anxiety'. They're both socially constructed models of physiological signals. — Isaac
And my main point is that exact paragraph but replace “surprise party” with “life”. You disagree with this evaluation because you think life is “at best an inconvenience and at worst a terrible burden” while surprise parties are “full of elements people like”. Where is your evidence this is the case? — khaled
Ok stop with this. Surprise parties also often last many hours and for an introvert like me are MOSTLY comprised of things other than I like. This “single event vs many events” distinction is not real. — khaled
For surprise parties, you choose to trust the reports, so when people say they liked it you believe they actually liked it. For life you choose not to trust the reports, so it must be bad given that everyone says it’s good.
This is an arbitrary inconsistency. What evidence do you have that most people are lying about life but not about surprise parties? What evidence do you have that surprise parties are actually pleasant while life is an inconvenience or terrible burden? — khaled
Yes. But this doesn’t come into the debate yet. I could agree that there is fundamentally something wrong about serfdom and still make all the same arguments. — khaled
That idea actually favors my argument though. — schopenhauer1
There is no "one" version, yet the one reported is given as accurate. — schopenhauer1
Life truly has multivarious events of all shapes and sizes in just one day, let alone, a week, a month, a year, a lifetime. — schopenhauer1
I think though, even on this theoretical scale, it is plain enough to see the difference in the two that the disanalogy is apparent. — schopenhauer1
I think this is another "We're going to have to agree to disagree" as we are repeating here and I am not interested in a large justification regress — schopenhauer1
A life time of events versus one event (one which indeed is pleasurable to many people), is not the same as experiencing a large time interval of events that were neutral to unpleasant, aggregating it over many years and reporting "Life is good". — schopenhauer1
I will say this.. Perhaps it is not JUST duration. The example you picked was pretty skewed. If you had provided a more neutral or ambiguous one then perhaps you would get closer to the idea of reporting on life itself. — schopenhauer1
Yes. But this doesn’t come into the debate yet. I could agree that there is fundamentally something wrong about serfdom and still make all the same arguments.
— khaled
Not sure what you mean here. — schopenhauer1
Anyone who thinks that life is either bad or awful will obviously not want kids. But you want more than that. You claim you know that life is bad or awful for everyone, despite the vast majority assuring you they don't think it is. What is your justification behind this belief. — khaled
1.) The duration and the kinds of experiences matter here. Duration means there's a lot more experiences, which means memory can cherry-pick. The intensity and magnitude of the experiences in life are also that much more extreme, meaning the kind of pains being overlooked are that much more. Similarly, an event like, "Eating an ice cream cone" is a very limited event. The report can roughly match the experience being so short, and not being of a pervasive but always changing nature that characterizes life itself versus one very limited event within life.
2.) Similar to above, a single event is more of a subgenre of a subgenre of life itself. Life itself involves pervasive routines one has to fulfill to keep alive.. work, maintenance, etc. It is not one discrete event that one can analyze. Reporting on pervasive, yet constantly changing events that occur over a lifetime are just of a different kind than a discrete event that is not pervasive like a surprise party. — schopenhauer1
On a separate tangent, why should the people who don't think life is a burden make such an all pervasive and controlling decision for the people who think that life is indeed a burden? — schopenhauer1
Most people want this, therefore those who don't want this must deal with it. That is unjust when the converse would be "No person exists to even care they don't exist". — schopenhauer1
I will repeat it again: You think life is "at best an inconvenience and at most a terrible burden". How did you come to this conclusion? Please retrace your steps and tell me. — khaled
Fair enough. Finally some attempt at proving that OB applies to longer events more. Anyways, as stated above, it still doesn’t lead to “life is at best an inconvenience and at worst an incredible burden”. OB makes us remember things we used to hate more fondly. However this doesn’t mean that people's reports of their quality of life are significantly altered by OB. It could just be that they have few memories where they’ve really suffered and so their report will be accurate overall, even if they forget some of said suffering. — khaled
This is required for your position. Since you use an extent argument, you must show that life meets the threshold. And I’m willing to agree that something that is “at best an inconvenience and at worst a terrible burden” is indeed too much to impose. So, how do you know life meets those features? Because if you don’t then a required premise in your argument is unjustified and is just as valid as “Life is at worst a good experience and at best heaven”, now I don’t believe that, but it has just as much evidence to support it as your view does. — khaled
Going back to type arguments? Surprise parties are done simply because most people would want them and those who don’t have to deal with it, when the converse could be “The recipient didn’t know about a party they’re missing out on to even care”
Yet you find them acceptable despite them meeting all the features. So maybe it’s not so unjust? — khaled
Again, someone's day can be Negative, Negative, Negative ... Report = Good day or at least, "not bad". — schopenhauer1
Then it comes back to how many of those inconveniences we actually experience vs. an evaluative, summative, binary report of it. That is the crux of this current argument. I think we have covered our positions well enough. — schopenhauer1
It's just the report that is misaligned with the occurrence itself. That is the claim — schopenhauer1
So I guess, it's not only duration but time displacement as to when the report is being taken from the actual occurrence. — schopenhauer1
For you, does one person have to say, "You are clearly the winner here?". Because obviously that isn't going to be the case. I think a thing to learn is how to gracefully and respectfully end a debate that clearly isn't going to be one side switching their position. — schopenhauer1
You didn't seem to address my point. If no one exists, who is the injustice done to as far as "missing out" on the goods of life? — schopenhauer1
There is much to be gained without one person declaring some sort of victory or whatnot. — schopenhauer1
Sure. But you need to do more than simply cover your position or make claims. You need to show that it is the case. You’re the one trying to argue for AN, starting a new thread every week on it. So you need to show that “life is an inconvenience or terrible burden” is true of everyone since you seem to think that everyone shouldn’t be having kids. It’s crucial to your position, yet you can’t show it’s the case despite being asked to do so 3 times now. — khaled
I don’t understand why you’re going back to the asymmetry “argument” one I disagreed with even when I was AN. We addressed this so long ago. You seem to want to “reset the conversation” now that there is an argument you can’t address, hoping it’ll go in your favor this time. It’s tiring when I write responses that largely go ignored. You seem to have no trouble relentlessly debating people for days until you can’t respond anymore. Then it’s all “let’s agree to disagree” and willfully ignoring questions asked about your position 3 times in a row. — khaled
I did address the argument by showing you that there are analogous actions that you find acceptable. So either you’re being a hypocrite or the argument doesn’t make sense.
If the recipient doesn’t expect the party, who is the injustice done to as far as “missing out” on the goods of the party? Same deal. Yet you find it ok here. — khaled
I am saying, it is simply wrong to impose on another, despite if someone minds it or not post-facto. — schopenhauer1
You are saying that it only matters if someone minds that they are being imposed upon. — schopenhauer1
I am not sure I would classify it as an imposition if people like it — schopenhauer1
You are pissed at me for having a certain viewpoint. — schopenhauer1
They are sort of axiomatic differences that are hard to "prove" other than explaining a perspective and seeing if that is compelling enough to the other person. — schopenhauer1
You are not respecting that this particular line of debate is for me, not interesting anymore — schopenhauer1
Your point was either that people don't under report or that the report is just as accurate as the occurrence.
This just goes around and around now — schopenhauer1
Can't you accept that sometimes that's just the nature of arguments? There is no "winner" in these kind of arguments. — schopenhauer1
No person exists prior to existence, no? Another disanalogy. — schopenhauer1
who "is" indeed missing out. — schopenhauer1
No one has the injustice of "not living" applied to "them" — schopenhauer1
By this logic surprise parties are definitely wrong. You’re being inconsistent. — khaled
Can you at least keep track of your own position? — khaled
No I’m pissed that you refuse to address: “You think life is at best an inconvenience and at worst a terrible burden, how did you come to that conclusion” despite being asked to do so 4? 5? Times now. I’ve lost count. Instead of addressing you bring it back to things we’ve discussed forever ago. — khaled
Yes you can. I’m doing so by pointing out yours isn’t even self consistent. You don’t think imposition is always wrong no matter how the recipient views it. First off, you don’t even count it as an imposition if they like it. Secondly, it would make surprise parties wrong, which is inconsistent with what you think. Now that doesn’t make my view correct, but that was never what I was arguing — khaled
Sometimes there is, though that’s not what I’m after here. I’m just after you addressing what I say. And eventually we’ll reach a point where have to agree to disagree probably. But it’s annoying when you keep trying to bring this point about prematurely, instead of actually addressing critiques. — khaled
Another insignificant one. The only role non existing does in your argument is establish that no one is missing out. Well when a surprise party is cancelled, the recipient isn’t missing out either. — khaled
False. You can’t be missing out on a party when not knowing it was going to happen. Were you missing out on the 5 bucks I was totally about to give you a year ago but changed my mind and only told you about how? Were you suffering thinking “Damn, khaled hasn’t given me 5 bucks, this is painful despite the fact they I have no reason to believe he will give me 5 bucks”. Were you missing out on 5 bucks? — khaled
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