Very little rises to the level where it's at all likely that the receiver of the gift of life will disapprove of your actions and not be fiercely attached to the life you have given them. — Srap Tasmaner
I think in both cases denying those lives saves life.If you're about to save someone's life but you know they'll live on in a permanent vegetative state, you'll have a think. If you and your procreating partner both carry some rare gene that causes a terrible disease, you'll have a think. — Srap Tasmaner
It seems to me should not is both more pertinent than should and exists independently of should. — ToothyMaw
I think it reduces suffering. — ToothyMaw
this is not exactly an argument for natalism or against anti-natalism. — T Clark
Yet we still seem to be deviating or at least dismissing (which if you choose to admit and broadcast will result in utter failure of any alleged important goal) the fact that some people like how it is, the good and the bad, the give and take, the uncertainty. — Outlander
I thought I'd throw in something about why they don't bother to think about it, why it's not only a matter of instinct but a perfectly reasonable default view. — Srap Tasmaner
And they are unlikely willingly to give up what you have given them. — Srap Tasmaner
My guess: in the Gaussian main, we h. sapiens have been reliably 'bio-cognitively programmed' (i.e. driven) by natural selection pressures to live on despite abject exigencies. "To be or not to be" seems very much – mostly –a first world (e.g. Danish prince's) problem.What are we to make of that? — Srap Tasmaner
It seems to me should not is both more pertinent than should and exists independently of should.
— ToothyMaw
I'm not following this. Can you take another swing at it? — Srap Tasmaner
So does this: you come to me with a toothache and I shoot you in the head. — Srap Tasmaner
we need to assess the overall hedonic value of life — TheMadFool
if it is so likely that people will appreciate existing, and natalism is the default, then the most important factor is whether or not there is some sort of condition that will prevent them from appreciating existing after being given life. — ToothyMaw
Did I say that minimizing suffering is so important we should shoot people in the head for having toothaches? — ToothyMaw
By and large we apparently don't. I think there are really unusual boundary cases, sure, just as real people do face circumstances that can overcome their commitment to self-preservation. But the evidence says people will put up with a lot. — Srap Tasmaner
Sure, and usually well-understood in its contexts. But misapplied leads to wrong thinking. Life is not in anyone's gift. Ending, yes; giving, no.It's an idiom. — Srap Tasmaner
The whole notion of "giving" life evaporates — tim wood
No other act of gift giving has such a high success rate, that is, results so often in such a strong attachment to the gift received. It is the standard by which all other gifts are measured. In which case, you need reasons not to do it for the question of whether you should even to arise. If you're about to save someone's life but you know they'll live on in a permanent vegetative state, you'll have a think. If you and your procreating partner both carry some rare gene that causes a terrible disease, you'll have a think. Very little rises to the level where it's at all likely that the receiver of the gift of life will disapprove of your actions and not be fiercely attached to the life you have given them. — Srap Tasmaner
Colorful language is good, sez I. Except when, for any number of reasons, it isn't. In the case of procreation, and with reference to @khaled's remark, what particular person? And how? And when?If you want to be pedantic, something like "taking steps to further the goal of a particular person being alive at a future time." — Srap Tasmaner
He makes a distinction between starting a life and continuing a life. — schopenhauer1
There are different things to consider with both. — schopenhauer1
In the case of procreation, and with reference to khaled's remark, what particular person? And how? And when? — tim wood
if it is so likely that people will appreciate existing, and natalism is the default, then the most important factor is whether or not there is some sort of condition that will prevent them from appreciating existing after being given life.
— ToothyMaw
I really thought I had said almost exactly that. (But then the OP also mentioned instinct and people are still pointing out to me that it's instinct.) — Srap Tasmaner
... to make room for descendants. After all, genomic self-replicators self-replicate or perish: without mortality, I think, natality would not be sufficiently urgent or adaptive in nature (for vertebrates).This is the paradox: we need to fear death to live but we have to die to...??? — TheMadFool
Life, as some killjoy pointed out, more or less vacillates between 'boredom and pain' (which we use culture, entertainment and/or various modes of intoxication to distract ourselves from) so at anytime prematurely checking-out of The No Exit Hotel always has its charms. Immortality? Boredom becomes unconscious (apathetic?) orgasm, or the most sublime form of ceaseless yoga. I'd give it go. :death: :flower:Something rather painful awaits an immortal or is life simply boring after a point?
... to make room for descendents. After all, genomic self-replicators self-replicate or perish: without mortality, I think, natality would not be sufficiently urgent or adaptive in nature (for vertebrates). — 180 Proof
to make room for descendents. After all, genomic self-replicators self-replicate or perish: without mortality, I think, natality would not be sufficiently urgent or adaptive in nature (for vertebrates). — 180 Proof
Does your pleasure actually give their life value? — ToothyMaw
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