Ok, so people peddle in hope-mongering. Buddhism, like all religions offer this. I can agree with that. No one likes the idea of no hope.
Why start the game for someone else to play to begin with? If nothing existed, what is wrong with nothing? Is it just that people conflate that with some sort of darkness or something and this makes them sad and anxioius? — schopenhauer1
I just don't think post-facto justifications like "it was worthwhile" justify actually starting those set of harms for someone else. — schopenhauer1
Ok. But does Z get to cause X to alleviate Y if Y>X? That's what I'm asking (for the third time).
— khaled
First off, you discount the pain of what happens when one does NOT like aspects of the game, whether or not someone reports "The game was worthwhile". What these setbacks/negatives/pains/harms/sufferings comprise of is what it is, and it is not good. Is starting a series of these plethora of negatives upon someone else good? I think no. It is not right to do to someone whether or not they report that it was worth their while. — schopenhauer1
Ok, but when in a position to not start someone else's set of harms, I just don't think post-facto justifications like "it was worthwhile" justify actually starting those set of harms for someone else. Haven't we acknowledged from previous threads, that this is one of the main dividing lines where we both will not budge? — schopenhauer1
Again, moot if we are discussing whether starting someone else's set of harms is justified in the first place. And of course this will just make you retreat to the one aspect to all aspects one-to-set disanalogy of the surprise party right? — schopenhauer1
Again, you are not able to answer why considerations of pain are justified by worthwhile reports. — schopenhauer1
"This starts another persons condition for a set of negative experiences" is insufficient, and so to get you to show your ridiculous position by requiring you to use the whole list.
— khaled
A set of negative experiences that comprises life is not a surprise party, so no, I am not letting you make that rhetorical summersault and pretend it is valid.. Sorry. — schopenhauer1
And now you'll protest "But Life is unlike surprise parties". Agreed. This wasn't to show that life is fine because it's like surprise parties, no no. It was to show that "This starts another persons condition for a set of negative experiences" is insufficient — khaled
I think that enacting positive experiences for someone else is not a requirement, and especially so if they don't even exist. — schopenhauer1
Preventing unnecessary pain is just morally relevant, and creating happiness is not — schopenhauer1
You are just going to keep changing the circumstances, because the kind of utopia without suffering is hard to even conceptualize — schopenhauer1
so from the (easier) statistical point of view, we can say there are possibly enough people that experience this to not enact this for someone else. — schopenhauer1
Again, one of our dividing lines. I don't think it has to be hellish suffering to not start for someone else. — schopenhauer1
The natural world has created us, but we do not seem in the same way "at home" in it in the very fact that since the start of civilizations (and probably since we've had the ability to self-evaluate and use language), we can judge the very process of living itself (or at least aspects in it) and we can judge any action as negative. We don't just experience the negative, but evaluate it, judge it, know it. We can try to pretend we can outwit ourselves, but it is really part of our psyche.. even the "overcoming" of "judging" is itself something that we have to do as an effort, not as an instinct.. So anyways, this is not tangential to the point that there is a "human condition" that is apart from perhaps the more primary/common "animal condition". — schopenhauer1
You could say I must have children because they'll be glad I did; I could say you must not because they won't be. Is one of us right? — Srap Tasmaner
If I'm buying you a gift, I subordinate my tastes to yours: the question is not whether I would like this, or whether I think you *should* like this, but whether I think you will. With potential children, we have plenty of reason to expect they will think life worthwhile. — Srap Tasmaner
Reversing that: if we're right thinking, against the odds, that our children wouldn't think life worth it, then we've spared them that experience; if we're wrong, and they would've thought life worth it, we needn't feel guilty because by not existing they don't experience missing out. — Srap Tasmaner
But not to consider you at all, in fact to refuse categorically to consider how you will feel about my actions, is not to grant you a status equal to my own as a fellow moral agent deserving such consideration, is, in short, not to treat you as a person. — Srap Tasmaner
By NOT preventing the future person's suffering, one is overlooking the dignity of the person being born. — schopenhauer1
Why do humans need to constantly justify their actions? — schopenhauer1
We don't just do things in a mode of "unthinking" but need reasons, justifications, evaluations, weighing things. This is the feature of being an animal that has evolved (with?) linguistic adaptations. We can't "just be" in the world like other animals. — schopenhauer1
You don't respect someone's dignity by deciding for them whether their life, and whatever they find of value in it, is worth the suffering they endure for it. — Srap Tasmaner
Do people who can read regret having the ability? There may be one, now and then; I can imagine someone having a spiritual objection to symbolism of all sorts, to language as such. But overwhelmingly people who can read are glad they can, and people who can't read desperately want to. And overwhelmingly people who can read were taught to read because someone else decided for them, when they were young, but that decision has this specific form: you will think later that it was worth the trouble of learning. I don't teach a kid to read because I think it will be worth it; it's not a case of inflicting this suffering on them "for their own good", as I judge it, but because I believe they will think, later, when they're able, that it's worthwhile. It's still their feelings that matter. If I don't teach them to read, on the chance they'll wish I hadn't, I cut them off from countless opportunities for experience they might value deeply, I constrain the possibilities of their life cruelly. — Srap Tasmaner
We don't. This whole line of reasoning is patently false. No one justifies everything they do. No one thinks they need to justify everything they do. In fact, there's something a lot of people do unthinkingly that you want to convince them they should stop doing unthinkingly and try to justify. You have this so backwards, it's bizarre. — Srap Tasmaner
Yeah, we can, and we do, all the time. We do some stuff other animals don't, but we're still animals the whole time and we still reproduce just like animals, without justifying this behavior. — Srap Tasmaner
By NOT preventing the future person's suffering, one is overlooking the dignity of the person being born.
— schopenhauer1
You don't respect someone's dignity by deciding for them whether their life, and whatever they find of value in it, is worth the suffering they endure for it. — Srap Tasmaner
Exactly. The concern for on the diginity of those who will never be makes for a nonexistent concern for on the diginity. It's like caring about the dignitiy of a character in a novel. — baker
In this case you are preventing what could happen. — schopenhauer1
And one thing that could happen is that that future person might live a more dignified life than you, and certainly a more dignified life than you imagine they could have. And this is a possibility that you're not only willing to cast away, no, you think it's a must to do so. — baker
Excuse me, but if no person exists to miss out on the goods of life, why is that immoral if no one exists to be deprived? How is missed goods immoral, especially if there is no actual person deprived thus? However by carrying out birth, SOMEONE will suffer, there the moral issue lies. Indeed, procreating forces the hand for someone not procreating literally forced no ones hand. — schopenhauer1
Something I have been ruminating on a lot recently are the hoops and ladders that people will go through to justify things. — _db
The fact that it is so difficult to give a simple and decent argument against antinatalism is prima facie evidence that antinatalism is correct. Like come on, we've had countless threads on this topic, that if it were false, you'd think by now that somebody would have finally vanquished the idea. Yet here we are.
People cobble together these bizarre rationalizations for things that are not rational. The responses we keep hearing against antinatalism seem to me to be fundamentally nothing more than post hoc justifications for emotional attachments to things that would go away if everyone stopped having kids. — _db
So, sure maybe putting you in crutches makes you feel enlightened down the line, doesn't mean I should put you in crutches. — schopenhauer1
If so, AN appears to violate that premise. The end (a life of essentially unknown potential for pleasure/suffering) is used to justify the means (not procreating). — Pinprick
Excuse me, but if no person exists to miss out on the goods of life, why is that immoral if no one exists to be deprived? How is missed goods immoral, especially if there is no actual person deprived thus? However by carrying out birth, SOMEONE will suffer, there the moral issue lies. Indeed, procreating forces the hand for someone not procreating literally forced no ones hand. — schopenhauer1
How does it not? Your justification for AN rests on a potential future event; an end. It regards taking action now (the means) to prevent a certain end justifiable. IOW’s the end is so horrible that it justifies taking action now to prevent it. — Pinprick
But, if you insist, then whomever you’re trying to convince not to have children is being used to further your agenda. Your success in doing so creates the potential for harm. — Pinprick
What makes the negatives especially so bad? All the contingent and systemic harms:
Contingent harms are things likely to happen but are not entailed in a given life including:
1) Individual people's wills and group's will.. Constant jockeying for power plays on when, what, where, hows, social status, social recognition, approval, respect
2) Impersonal wills... Institutions whose management and bottom-line dictate when, what, where.. ranging from oppressive dictatorships to the grind of organizational bureaucracies in liberal democracies.
3) Cultural necessities.. clean-up, maintain, tidy, consume, hygiene
4) Existential boundaries...boredom/ennui, loneliness, generalized anxiety, guilt
5) Survival boundaries..hunger, health, warmth
6) Being exposed to stressful/annoying/harmful environments and people
7) Accidents, natural disasters, nature's indifference (e.g. bear attacks, hurricanes, storms, earthquakes, etc.).
8) Diseases, illness, disabilities, including mental health issues (neurosis/psychosis/phobias/psychosomaticism/anxiety disorders/personality disorders/mood disorders)..
9) Bad/regretful decisions
10) Unfortunate circumstances
11) After-the-fact justifications that everything is either a learning experience or a tragic-comedy.
12) The good things are never as good as they seem
13) How fleeting happy things are once you experience them
14) How easy it is for novelty to wear off
15) The constant need for more experiences, including austerity experiences that are supposed to minimize excess wants (meditation, barebones living, "slumming it").
16) How easy it is to have negative human interaction, even after positive human interaction
17) Craving and striving for more entertainment and "flow" experiences
18) Instrumentality- the absurd feeling that can be experienced from apprehension of the constant need to put forth energy to pursue goals and actions in waking life. This feeling can make us question the whole human enterprise itself of maintaining mundane repetitive upkeep, maintaining institutions, and pursuing any action that eats up free time simply for the sake of being alive and having no other choice.
19) Any hostile, bitter, stressful, spiteful, resentful, disappointing experiences with interperonal relationships with close friends/family, acquaintances, and strangers
20) The classic (overused) examples of war and famine
21) The grass is always greener syndrome that makes one feel restless and never satisfied
22) The need for some to find solace in subduing natural emotions in philosophies that mitigate emotional responses (i.e. Stoicism) and generally having to retreat to some program of habit-breaking (therapy, positive psychology exercises, visualizations, meditations, retreats, self-help, etc. etc.)
23) Insomnia, anything related to causing insomnia
24) Inconsiderate people
25) The carrot and stick of hope.. anticipation that may lead to disappointment..unsubstantiated Pollyanna predictions that we are tricked into by optimistic bias despite experiences otherwise
26) Addiction
etc. etc. etc. ...
1) Systemic suffering includes:
Having to conform to/play a game (like our economic one) that one cannot escape, that one could never have created, and have dire consequences for leaving (death, starvation).
2)Having constant dissatisfactions that can never be full met (the lack game). — schopenhauer1
What do you make of this Khaled? — Albero
So your problem is, when you cite a standard it either:
1- Contradicts your other beliefs by not being sufficiently specific in scope and resulting in things you think are right coming out wrong
2- Is unlike life and so doesn't actually say anything about childbirth.
Of course, you think it's like life, but you don't want to say this, because you know it sounds ridiculous to everyone else. So instead you prefer to have (1) be the case rather than reveal that really, the only reason you're AN, is because you find life: "a lifetime worth of X negative things otherwise dire consequences happen". — khaled
How are they being used? — schopenhauer1
Did I force them? — schopenhauer1
Also it’s about not allowing an injustice to incur, from that perspective, that someone is sad an injustice is being prevented, doesn’t magically justify the injustice. — schopenhauer1
Should I respect the sadness of preventing a bully from enjoying their bullying? — schopenhauer1
If someone says they are sad for not eating meat, does that justify the injustice in the eyes of the vegan? — schopenhauer1
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