Agreed, but you and Agent Smith started it. — T Clark
It seems clear that death is inevitable for anyone living here. And it seems equally clear that death is a considerable harm. Our reason tells us to do virtually anything to avoid it. If avoiding it means sawing your arm off, reason recommends doing that. — Bartricks
In general, I do think that thoughtlessly creating beings without resolving some of our fundamental issues wouldn't be a good idea — DA671
As for antinatalism, I still think it's the most reasonable policy — Agent Smith
you want the annihilation of the human race in the most horrible way possible: — Agent Smith
I take it you are attempting to challenge 1 by arguing that as we can give an evolutionary story about how we might have come to 'believe'that we have reason to avoid dying, we do not in fact have reason to avoid dying. — Bartricks
So your argument is actually - we have no reason to believe or do anything. As well as being obviously indefensible and itself unbelievable, it applies to any argument for anything. So, it is silly. You haven't engaged with my argument so much as rejected the whole project of arguing for anything. If that's what you are reduced to doing, then my argument is very strong. — Bartricks
I addressed the possibility that death is harmful because of what it deprives us of and provided an apparent decisive refutation of it. — Bartricks
Death is clearly something we have reason to avoid even when our lives are slightly miserable. — Bartricks
Death under those circumstances would not deprive you of anything worth having — Bartricks
Thus its disvalue is not reflective of the positive value of life — Bartricks
Similarly, when in unending agony, we have reason to die - yet death is still the lesser of two evils under such circumstances — Bartricks
So it is plainly implausible that the disvalue of death is a function of the value of life — Bartricks
Even when life here ceases to report a benefit profit, it remains rational to avoid death up until the harms of continued living become immense. — Bartricks
I used an analogy of a loss making company. If the company - life plc - is recording a slight loss, year on year, you'd think it'd make sense to wind it up immediately. But your accountant tells you that that's not a good idea at all and that it is best to keep it running at a loss and only to wind it up if the losses become huge. What gives? What would be the rational inference to make? Surely that winding the company up will itself incur huge costs, - losses far greater than the losses you incur by keeping it running. — Bartricks
That's what our reason says about us - the implication is that death itself is immensely harmful, so much so that it never makes sense to wind your life up until or unless continuing it will incur huge costs. — Bartricks
Do you mean that our lives are slightly miserable in the moment, or do you mean in general? — pfirefry
If I'm feeling slightly miserable, I won't accept death as an answer, because it would deprive me of lots of things worth having in the future. — pfirefry
It's a fun thing to say that life can report benefit profits. It's hard to measure the profits of life objectively. But let's say that we did this. We have a period with losses. How would this look like? Does it mean that after a year of my life I ended up more miserable than I was a year ago? Why should I care? Life goes up and down. Just the fact that sometimes it going down doesn't mean that we should end it instantly. — pfirefry
That's what our reason says about us - the implication is that death itself is immensely harmful, so much so that it never makes sense to wind your life up until or unless continuing it will incur huge costs.
— Bartricks
I agree. But I wouldn't make an inference that we should stop procreating. I'm assuming that the main point of antinatalism is not that death is harmful, but that we shouldn't procreate. Death is harmful in the context of a living being. It's not as harmful in the context of procreation. It is more harmful to not procreate than to procreate and to cause death by it. Our reason tells us that life worth living despite death. Otherwise, we would end our lives immediately. — pfirefry
They are not bored. They are dealing with depression and post-trauma reactions, or an overwhelming situational problem - a crisis which temporarily has a detrimental hold on them. — Tom Storm
My role in these cases is to prevent unnecessary death. It is not tied to any presuppositions other than life is preferable to death. — Tom Storm
Argument 1:
1. If we have reason to avoid death under virtually all circumstances, including circumstances in which our lives are already sub optimal in terms of their happiness to misery balance (up to a certain limit), the best explanation of this is that death harms us and harms us by permanently altering our condition for the worse.
2. We have reason to avoid death under virtually all circumstances etc.
3. Therefore, death harms us by permanently altering our condition for the worse
Argument 2:
1. If our deaths permanently alter our condition for the worse, then all of our lives are bad overall and cause their subjects far more harm than benefit.
2. Our deaths permanently alter our condition for the worse (from the argument above)
3. Thus all of our lives are bad overall and cause their subjects far more harm than benefit
Argument 3:
1. If our lives are bad overall and cause their subjects far more harm than benefit, then it is immoral to create such lives.
2. Our lives are bad overall and cause their subjects far more harm than benefit
3. Therefore, it is immoral to create such lives. — Bartricks
I used fear to refer to our aversion to death. — DA671
I don't think that our lives are bad overall, so I don't believe that procreation is always immoral. I don't deny that they could be. — DA671
So, my arguments - which you have not challenged - show that we're all going to hell — Bartricks
That's one standpoint. It's not so hard to challenge. We're all going to heaven. We're all going to the place of peace and calm. We reunite with the nature. No matter how good your life is right now, it is going to end up spectacularly. — pfirefry
My point is that the above wouldn't really change anything. Regardless of how people feel about their inevitable death, they are just currently immersed in their lives. They are not quitters. Not looking for an easy way out. That's what humans do. — pfirefry
If someone things that it's not so terrible to face the immanence of death, they will be inclined to procreate. That's what the majority does. — pfirefry
Considering that most people do seem to find immense value in their lives even in the face of harm, I don't think that it's justifiable to believe that all lives are mostly bad. — DA671
Your posts have been rather convoluted. Elucidating distinctions is not a reflection of a misunderstanding of language, though the failure to understand that might be an interesting thing to consider. — DA671
If "reason" was referring to something being actually good/bad for us, I already said that I don't think that a valueless state (nonexistence) could have value/disvalue. — DA671
If possible, I would appreciate it if you could make it clear what you mean by "reason". Does "reason" mean that we have some arguments for believing that death is bad irrespective of what anybody thinks? So, it would be bad even if everybody wanted to die? Or does it mean that we appear to have certain concerns about death? Again, the latter has multiple explanations including fear and loss. It doesn't have much to do with the actual "badness" of death. — DA671
This - smug, self-righteous, self-serving, unsupported - is what makes me want to kick you and Bartricks down the street. Let's leave it at that. — T Clark
I have already replied to your unjustified claims, my friend. Progress without openness is not possible. — DA671
We do not avoid our death under all circumstances. — DA671
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