It could still be comparatively worse. And even if it is an imposition in some cases, it can also be a genuine blessing. I shall not forsake consistency when I don't have a reason to do so. — DA671
Phew, finally one can realise that not working in the garden isn't better/preferable for a person either, since one can logically see that they are neither being deprived nor being relieved/fulfilled from an absence of harm. And yes, nobody is being "forced" into that garden of yours if one would think about this issue thoroughly, but that's a separate matter. — DA671
Since it's not the case that an alternative greater good could exist from an absence of that harm, it can be ethical to bestow that good as long as it leads to a mostly valuable life for a person. The same would apply to a life that could have some real goods but ultimately turn out to be bad. — DA671
If preventing the harm was necessary even though we don't have evidence for souls in nonexistence desiring it, the creation of the blessing is certainly necessary. The harms matter, but so do the positives. Creating the greater good can be justified. — DA671
If it can be good to not create harms for "someone" even though nobody is relieved from their absence (a parallel to the nobody is deprived of joy claim), it's also problematic to not create any joy on the basis of one's pessimistic desires. — DA671
There is no benefit in one case and there is benefit in another. If the lack of damage is good even though it does not provide relief/satisfaction to an actual person, the absence of happiness can also be bad even if it's absence doesn't cause conscious "collateral damage". — DA671
It's certainly important. However, it's also important that genuine benefits are taking place. That is the moral part. The parents should do that. That is moral. — DA671
Why can't circumstances change depending on the situation? This is a ridiculous characterization of how my argument is stated. You have a chance to not create harm onto a future person. I am saying this non-action is the most ethical course. Don't create the harm. — schopenhauer1
Why do you, the parent, have to be the harbinger for other people's experiences? You are almost making the point I am trying to make to DA671 — schopenhauer1
Being the harbinger of joy can be inestimably valuable — DA671
But this future possibility regarding the well being of others (however they may be conceived) is something that applies to all actions we take. — Constance
I'm going to stop you right here, because it actually doesn't. There are some things due to the special nature of procreation vs. already existing people that make the decision different. — schopenhauer1
That's just how it works, old man; the egg is necessary to the chicken, and the chicken is necessary to the egg. Hence the unanswerable question. It is not necessary to me to have children but it is necessary to my children that I had them; and their suffering is necessary to their lives as your suffering is necessary to yours. — unenlightened
These are bald facts; but there is no life without suffering, so there is no unnecessary suffering {apart from all the unnecessary suffering that we ought to avoid, by not putting ground glass in the bread and not shooting folks in the knee-cap etc.} — unenlightened
This is a case where you (the parent) can not create ANY harm for another person.. — schopenhauer1
Preventing suffering at the cost of all joy can never be moral in the ultimate sense. — DA671
The damage is bad, but the benefits are good. My position is that it can be ethical to create the person due to the presence of goods, and you emphasise the harms. Ultimately, we have different intuitions as far as this topic is concerned. — DA671
Who? — unenlightened
You, the parent, aren't creating (unnecessarily) someone else who is harmed. — schopenhauer1
Weasel to messiah—quite a metamorphosis. The point is that even if it's somewhat good (due to lack of harms), it cannot be entirely good (since all benefits would also be absent). — DA671
Unhad goods do lead to harm for existing people (such as loss of health leading to pain). — DA671
As for those who don't exist, if unhad goods don't matter due to the fact that nobody is experiencing a deprivation in the void, the absence of harms is not preferable either, since there aren't any souls in nihility who are fulfilled/relieved from an absence of suffering. — DA671
Benefits had is good for a person and we should strive to help and support each other as much as possible. As ever, have an excellent day/night! — DA671
I think we agree as to the facts. It's the morality that we differ on. you equate harm with evil, and I utterly reject it. — unenlightened
It was a clarification regarding the value of good, not a reference to nonexistent beings, so imaginary traps can be safely discarded. If unhad goods isn't bad, then neither is the absence of harms good. — DA671
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