Life is wrong to start irrespective of circumstances. Procreation itself violates the dignity of the person born into a game of comply (must learn to play the game at least well enough) or die. It also puts them into a state of guaranteed suffering. None of this is moral to create for someone else. So..
Why do people have children?
— Agent Smith
Many bad reasons one of which is the messianic impulse to be the arbiter for creating someone else a game of overcoming obstacles. No one needs to be born for X reason.
There is no need for anyone to have to experience anything. There is nothing wrong with the state of affairs of”no person”. — schopenhauer1
But is life really about hedonism/maximizing one's pleasure? That seems like an insane way to live. "A life worth living" is a very difficult concept. I was very suicidal when my net worth was at its peak. — Moses
Do things have value because they make us happy or do things make us happy because they have value? — Agent Smith
How? An example or two? — Agent Smith
I value health; this is a natural need, and a value. I value philosophy--I do not have to. — Jackson
Most interesting! — Ms. Marple
Yet antinatalists LITERALLY don't do anything to ANYONE. Pushing a view versus pushing a whole life onto someone else. Let's see which one profoundly affects someone ELSE more. — schopenhauer1
Good point! I've asked this question before, I'll ask it again:
Do things have value because they make us happy or do things make us happy because they have value? — Agent Smith
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.