They simply want to have kids and don't think it's wrong. — Roke
For you virtue-fetishizers on here.. self-actualization seems to me very aligned with several versions of the virtuous person, so you don't have to replace it- it can be roughly equivalent. — schopenhauer1
the realization or fulfillment of one's talents and potentialities, especially considered as a drive or need present in everyone. — schopenhauer1
Animals (including us) reproduce because sexual pleasure results in sperm and eggs finding each other. Intention isn't required (but is often enough there, for us, anyway). — Bitter Crank
Would people more-or-less agree that this is most non-religious people's answer to purpose? — schopenhauer1
If you think that this sounds about right, do you have your own critiques of the idea of purpose being self-actualzation (or further, that it is good to bring more people in the world so they can become self-actualized)? If you think self-actualization is the summum bonum, why do you think so? — schopenhauer1
Is "self-actualization" like circumcision or baptism--once done, it can't--or need not--be repeated? — Bitter Crank
So being pregnant, giving birth, breast-feeding - at least half the population might count that as a natural completion of the self in terms of actualising — apokrisis
2014, 47.6 percent of women between age 15 and 44 had never had children, up from 46.5 percent in 2012, the highest child's rate in 40 years.
...for women between 25 and 29 — 49.6 percent of women in that age group don’t have kids. Unsurprisingly, after age 30 those numbers drop and more women become mothers. The survey found that 28.9 percent of women ages 30-34 are childfree.
The census data is backed up by data from the National Center for Health Statistics. According to a recent report, in 2013 there were just 62.9 births for every 1,000 women between the ages of 15 and 44 in the U.S. — an all-time low.
As Sezin Koehler wrote for The Huffington Post in September: “I don’t need to push a child out of my vagina to be a real woman.” — Emma Gray, The Huffington Post
I know that birth rates rise and fall with respect to other social factors. — Bitter Crank
Abraham Maslow took these ideas which were already circulating in the milieu and incorporated them into a scientific-sounding type of framework, his well-known 'hierarchy of needs': — Wayfarer
Although I am generally skeptical of theories of transcendence or becoming, it seems to me that the two concepts have become infused in a way that actualization in its modern definition has become a dialectic of the two, celebrating both egocentricity and the liberation from it. — Erik Faerber
....celebrating both egocentricity and the liberation from it. — Erik Faerber
If a rock (the very model of modern unconscious matter) is falling towards the earth and you will presently occupy the same space as the rock, does that mean that the rock intends, or could intend, to crush you (assuming some imminently conscious agent from TPF didn't urge the rock off a ledge)? — Bitter Crank
A bull does not intend to get a cow pregnant. It only has to get aroused by the cow's female pheromones. Perhaps, maybe, possibly, it could then intend to mount the cow. — Bitter Crank
Or the teenage boy on the couch probably does not intend to get the teenage girl on the same couch pregnant. He might intend to have intercourse, but he certainly intends (needs, wants) to ejaculate, somehow, somewhere. The girl probably doesn't intend to get pregnant, either, but if push comes to shove... she might get knocked up, intent or not. — Bitter Crank
Would people more-or-less agree that this is most non-religious people's answer to purpose? — schopenhauer1
That's a good question.. There is a list Maslow gave which sounded like a modern version of the virtuous man: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-actualization . That seems like just one version of this though."'What is "self-actualization'" and how would you know you had it? — Bitter Crank
When should one expect to achieve "self-actualization": Any day, now? Before one is 25? 25-50 years? Over 50? — Bitter Crank
Is "self-actualization" like circumcision or baptism--once done, it can't--or need not--be repeated? — Bitter Crank
Is one supposed to be "self-actualized" all day every day? Or is it a fleeting event? Is "self-actualization" like a 'peak experience' -- the glow lasts a long time? — Bitter Crank
Probably almost everybody.Can one die happy and have never achieved "self-actualization"? What kind of people fail to achieve "self-actualization"? — Bitter Crank
I picture them being quite smug people, but I guess if they were self-actualized, they would all be peaceful and equanimous.Can the world stand 7 billion "self-actualized people"? — Bitter Crank
Probably more Type AI suspect that it takes a concerted effort to become fully actualize; maybe Type A personalities are more likely to persist than Type B people. — Bitter Crank
Yes, supposedly they are living their life to the fullest as defined by Maslow or other models of what personality or goals these people have.Are "self-actualized people" different than people who are not "self-actualized"? — Bitter Crank
I picture them being quite smug people — schopenhauer1
Now, I haven't given my critique, I am answering your questions as if self-actualization is a reason to have children. I will just start off with the idea that why give a new person (inevitable) burdens to overcome, especially if achievement of the supposed ultimate goal (of some elusive self-actualization) is not achievable for many? — schopenhauer1
OK, I'm persuaded. — Bitter Crank
Now, I haven't given my critique, I am answering your questions as if self-actualization is a reason to have children. I will just start off with the idea that why give a new person (inevitable) burdens to overcome, especially if achievement of the supposed ultimate goal (of some elusive self-actualization) is not achievable for many? — schopenhauer1
You're looking for someone to make the case that we should create more people purely for their own good, that good being the fuzzy notion of self-actualization. I think the problem is that this is not a position many (any?) people hold. — Roke
Roke, were there any other alternative reasons you were considering earlier that you think people have children for? — Erik Faerber
I side with Kant on this, that to 'have' children for some reason is immoral, because it is treating them as a means. One is left with having children by accident, having no children, or having love for the unborn unknown stranger. — unenlightened
...they argue that our "love for the unborn unknown stranger" cannot be a reason either for having a child. — Erik Faerber
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.