a bad life is not worth living. — darthbarracuda
But regardless, your objection fails to refute point 5. — darthbarracuda
the set containing the attributes of a good life — darthbarracuda
the set containing the attributes of a bad life — darthbarracuda
1. A good life is worth living; conversely, a bad life is not worth living. — darthbarracuda
2. One should only procreate if one can have reasonable knowledge that their offspring will have a good life. — darthbarracuda
A good life is worth living; conversely, a bad life is not worth living. — darthbarracuda
We can say some things about what a good life is (that it is worth living). — darthbarracuda
The ambiguity of what either one is, is part of the argument (points 2 & 3). — darthbarracuda
A good life is worth living; conversely, a bad life is not worth living. — darthbarracuda
It has not been established what the possibility of a good life is. The most that may be said is that there are lives, and that some lives are better than others. — darthbarracuda
6. Therefore, there is a possibility that ones' offspring will not and in fact cannot have a good life.
7. Therefore, one should not procreate. — darthbarracuda
From the fact (if it is a fact) that a good life (however we might conceive of that) is necessarily worth living, it does not follow that a bad life is not worth living. Even if a bad life is defined as being completely devoid of any pleasure whatsoever for the one living it, and even if we accepted the stipulation that a life completely devoid of the slightest pleasure for the one living it is not, on that account alone, worth living, such a life may bring pleasure to others, making it worthwhile for other reasons. — Janus
I know. Premise 1 is vague, and that vagueness is what the rest of your argument depends on. Thats my point, this is an ambiguity fallacy that you are using in your argument. — DingoJones
Yeah... I can't get past premise one. What's a good life? What's a bad life? Also I'm not trying to be a dick but what does 'worth living' mean? Do you mean by this that if you have a bad life you may as well die (suicide, I presume)? I don't think it is possible to determine what a life worth living actually means except in the extreme. Some might think it would be superb to live as Mick Jagger, for instance. I'd rather be dead. :gasp: — Tom Storm
So you want a percentage chance? Assume we can somehow do that. At what percentage change of having a good life does having kids become ok? 51%? 75%? 99%? 100%?
It’s not really uncommon in day to day life to be unsure of the chances something will hurt someone and to do it to them anyways. — khaled
@darthbarracuda1. See the problems that have been pointed out already. Good and bad are far too subjective to serve as a reasonable premise for a generalized statement. — Hermeticus
2. Disagree. Of course it's in the best interest of a parent to give the best possible basis for their offsprings life - but ultimately having "a good life" lays in the responsibility of the child, just like I am responsible for having a good life for myself. — Hermeticus
3. The good-life/bad-life problem applies here as well. Furthermore, the possibility of good life is not something determined by fate before birth. Circumstances dramatically affect us but ultimately it's our actions that lead to a good or bad life. — Hermeticus
1)I think what he is saying is that a parent would want his child to have a good life. You don't need to define a good or a bad life, all you need to accept is that there is a good life and there is a bad life, you only need to acknowledge their existence. As for what is a good life? The answer to that question is in a further point. — I love Chom-choms
2) Now he argues that one should only procreate if they can guarantee that their child will life a good life with certainty. — I love Chom-choms
7) One should not procreate because he argued, above, that the only time one should procreate is when the parent is sure that his/her child will live a good life. Now he has shown that it is impossible to know whether your child will have a good live and even further that, "ones' offspring will not and in fact cannot have a good life." So now, we lose all our incentive to procreate and thus it is wrong to have children. — I love Chom-choms
As for Tom Storm's idea about "worth living".. It would seem that since DB is dealing with the idea of procreation he is really intending to say, "worth starting".. A bad life (one that is subjectively so let's say), was not worth starting for that person. So your critique is just a confusion on this or an intentional ignorance of sorts to derail the major point. — schopenhauer1
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