The fact a person deserves something will, standardly, give rise to an obligation to provide it. — Bartricks
For someone to deserve something means (in the context it's used here) there is a duty of moral agents to provide them it. — Isaac
you'd asserted that to deserve something is equivalent to someone being obliged to give you it; — Bartricks
For someone to deserve something means (in the context it's used here) there is a duty of moral agents to provide them it. — Isaac
my argument was that it is immoral - other things being equal - to create a desert of something that cannot be provided — Bartricks
I see that now what you're doing is questioning the probative value of intuitions. — Bartricks
So thanks - my argument is so good all you can do in response to it is question whether we know anything at all. Do you realize how incompetent that is as an argumentative strategy? — Bartricks
Of course it is. I'm knowingly risking harm to others. Accelerating a ton of metal at 70mph is inherently a risk to those around me. The analogy required only putting people in a position where they might come to harm, but not deliberately intending that they do. — Isaac
Yet as you well should know, life will absolutely be guaranteed to contain some harm, and significant amounts of it.Presumably, you don't drive your car knowing that every time, harm will ensue. — "schopenhauer1
So how likely does it have to be, and why? Is 100% a different moral imperative to 99.99999%? — Isaac
If I were a tribesman and I enlist help building the houses for the whole community, it's pretty much guaranteed that someone will come to harm as a result of this activity (it's dangerous work). If I even so much as sharpen a weapon, it's almost guaranteed that someone will one day cut themselves as a result of that sharpening. Examples abound. — Isaac
Creating the mess so people have to work together or die doesn't prove anything other than the very point that procreation causes others to have to deal with things..We live in social groups and see the welfare of the group as greater than that of any individual - or at least the non-sociopathic among us do anyway. — Isaac
Your claim absolutely relies on others sharing your moral intuition. But you've failed to provide any argument supporting this. — Isaac
If everyone disagreeing with you is 'trolling' then this is not the place for you. — Isaac
When we point to the behaviour of others as a source, you say their behaviour can't be trusted as a guide to their moral intuitions.
When we point to culture as a source, you say cultures change and moral intuitions evolve.
So the question remains - on what grounds do you claim that others share the moral intuition you have, such as to claim it's 'misapplied'? — Isaac
What are you on about? The 'west' is not a worldview, it's just the practice of using reason to find out what's true, as opposed to making shit up or believing something because one's ancestors believed it. — Bartricks
And it's not geographical. And arguments don't go from being sound to unsound from region to region. I mean, you can't seriously think that if you get on a plane arguments that were sound when you took off will be unsound depending on where you land?
Now, which premise in my deductively valid argument do you dispute?
I'm questioning your equating your personal intuitions with universal ones. Not the use of intuitions tout court. To claim something is immoral, you need to show that others too have the intuition you have (or that they ought to have it). You've done neither.
There is a very significant difference between recognising that all we have to go on are things 'seeming to us to be the case' and assuming, as you do here, that simply by virtue of something's seeming to you to be the case it is, in fact, the case. — Isaac
The argument presented in the OP assumes moral intuition, hence ad populum arguments are all there is. Otherwise we just have the ridiculously messianic claim that whatever@Bartricks feels is moral, is, in fact, moral.
(which is, incidentally, where this thread will end up as Bartricks's threads always do - with the delusional claim that whatever he happens to feel is the case is, in fact, the case) — Isaac
But choose between such equally in/effective narratives on the grounds of what? Which one pleases one's ego more?
— baker
Yeah, possibly. I prefer more aesthetic grounds, but I don't know that there's much to choose between decision-making methods. Ones I like are - coherence (with other narratives), aesthetic value (usually inspired by childhood stories, to be honest), a preference for simplicity, a favouring of what I think are more 'natural' approaches... But those are just ways that seem to suit me, I couldn't raise an argument in favour of any of them, except I suppose coherence does make one's life easier to navigate, but then again many people seem to live with extremely clashing beliefs and come to no harm by it so... — Isaac
Did science not eradicate the harm of smallpox to use a simple example. — universeness
No, it's precisely because I know I can't be that kind of parent that I don't feel qualified to have children
— baker
If you feel you fall short in these aspects yourself does that mean everyone does?
If not then do you think it's justified that antinatalists would prevent the birth of people such as Albert Einstein as well as people like Ted Bundy?
Do you associate the antinatalist viewpoint with any measure of human cowardice?
My question was, does innocence/guilt exist outside of the human species or our like? — universeness
I do challenge your argument. I asked you if the purpose of the universe is linked to the existence of humans. If antinatalism were realised it would damage that purpose, would it not? — universeness
Extinction is permanent so if you don't know, perhaps it is unwise to advocate for antinatalism, if it would not achieve your goal as humans would just be eventually replaced by another conscious/sentient species who face the same dilemmas as we do. — universeness
You make an intriguing distinction here. Are you saying that if human beings can be created by harvesting sperm and eggs and producing humans completely outside of the human body then your antinatalism, would be ok with that? — universeness
Western culture is "just the practice of using reason to find out what's true"?? — baker
The implicit one, "People are born innocent". — baker
The fact a person deserves something will, standardly, give rise to an obligation to provide it.
— Bartricks
Right. So when I said...
For someone to deserve something means (in the context it's used here) there is a duty of moral agents to provide them it.
— Isaac
...the correct response was just "yes". — Isaac
Nope. I said...
For someone to deserve something means (in the context it's used here) there is a duty of moral agents to provide them it.
— Isaac
'Means', not 'equivalent to'. If you're going to try and quibble over semantics then you at least need to use the bloody words I used. Quibbling semantics by using words I didn't even use seems a little one-sided — Isaac
Well then you're lacking any evidence at all that this is indeed a moral intuition since the examples you've given all relate to obligation (such as to avoid harm to others). You've not provided any other example where we consider the creation of deserts, in this way, without the ability to provide them to be immoral. — Isaac
But other people do the same kind of thing. Epistemologically, it's not even clear it's possible to do something else. — baker
They don't mean the same thing. If two statements have the same meaning - that is, have the same propositional content - then you can use them interchangeably. — Bartricks
mean 1 (mēn)
v. meant (mĕnt), mean·ing, means
v.tr.
1.
a. To be used to convey; denote: "'The question is,' said Alice, 'whether you can make words mean so many different things'" (Lewis Carroll).
b. To act as a symbol of; signify or represent: In this poem, the budding flower means youth.
2. To intend to convey or indicate: "No one means all he says, and yet very few say all they mean, for words are slippery and thought is viscous" (Henry Adams).
3. To have as a purpose or an intention; intend: I meant to go running this morning, but I overslept.
4. To design, intend, or destine for a certain purpose or end: a building that was meant for storage; a student who was meant to be a scientist.
5. To have as a consequence; bring about: Friction means heat.
6. To have the importance or value of: The opinions of the critics meant nothing to him. She meant so much to me.
Of course, this means that under those circumstances most of us have lives of no purpose whatsoever, or lives whose purpose is, to say the least, utterly mundane. — Bartricks
we should not posit them. Which then means that we have a self-refuting case. — Bartricks
I think it is plausible that the moral obligation to be a good friend means that the evidence in this case does not provide me - me - with any normative reason to believe in my friend's guilt. — Bartricks
It looks stormy outside and so a lot of people are carrying umbrellas. That does not mean that 'it looks stormy' means ' a lot of people are carrying umbrellas', even though the fact it looks stormy is often what's responsible for people carrying umbrellas. — Bartricks
My claim was that it is immoral - other things being equal - to create injustices. And if one has created someone who deserves something they're not going to receive, then one has created an injustice. Which of those claims do you dispute? — Bartricks
Do that by trying to come up with a counter-example to the premise in question. — Bartricks
TO challenge that claim you would need to come up with a case where a person clearly does not deserve to come to harm yet comes to harm and it is no injustice — Bartricks
And create a million others — baker
Well, you are engaging in a great deal of generalisation in such typing. I am capable of such myself but I think it's important to recognise when you are using such a big cumbersome brush to try to paint details.They'll simply dismiss a young person with existential concerns as mentally ill, rather than question their own scope of existential insight. — baker
But they're not actually preventing anyone. Antinatalists are a small, powerless bunch. It's the normal people who believe that procreation is "just fine" and who abort a half of all pregnancies that are actually preventing others, literally. — baker
I don't understand the question. Innocence or guilt is always someone's. And it always belongs to a person, a mind. — Bartricks
Er, no. Of course not. Why would you think I was? It's wrong to lie, isn't it? Default wrong, anyway. Does that mean I have an obligation to stop you lying? Should I kill everyone in order to stop lying occurring? No, that's dumb. If it's wrong to lie, that means I ought not to lie (and you ought not to lie). It does not follow that I ought to prevent you lying or you me. — Bartricks
And create a million others
— baker
Scientists have certainly been involved in biological and chemical warfare but it would be rather dumb to create a virus that can kill as many of your own people as it will the enemy, unless you have a cure. I think what you are suggesting belongs more to unlikely conspiracy theories than reality. Also, people should be a little more accurate in their use of quantities. There is an old 'jokey' response; "for the millionth time! Stop exaggerating!." — universeness
Did science not eradicate the harm of smallpox to use a simple example.
— universeness
And create a million others. — baker
They'll simply dismiss a young person with existential concerns as mentally ill, rather than question their own scope of existential insight.
— baker
Well, you are engaging in a great deal of generalisation in such typing. I am capable of such myself but I think it's important to recognise when you are using such a big cumbersome brush to try to paint details.
Of course, given that many people have relatively low aspirations in life, the argument from the prospective parent's lack of existential qualification is unintelligible to them. They'll simply dismiss a young person with existential concerns as mentally ill, rather than question their own scope of existential insight. — baker
I believe however that women must be masters of their own body. The state cannot FORCE a women to maintain a pregnancy.
think you should not bring children into this overpopulated world unless you can tick a large list of requirements first.
Western culture is "just the practice of using reason to find out what's true"??
— baker
It's up to you to tell me what on earth you mean by 'western culture' or why it's relevant to anything I have argued. — Bartricks
But philosophy is the practice of using reason to find out what's true, yes?
And then there's just making stuff up or believing something because there's a tradition of believing it. That's not philosophy. It is what it is.
Now, I assume that when someone starts talking about 'other traditions of thought' or 'other cultural traditions' what they mean is "but what about those who do not use reason to figure out what's true and instead just make stuff up or insist that certain views are true because that's just what people believe in this or that neck of the woods". Well, my answer is those folk are not doing philosophy. It's like giving me your recipe for banana cake. It's not relevant to anything I have argued.
The implicit one, "People are born innocent".
— baker
That wasn't an implicit premise. It was explicit.
Do you dispute it? On what basis?
But other people do the same kind of thing. Epistemologically, it's not even clear it's possible to do something else.
— baker
It's fairly straightforward... — Isaac
Procreation. I have about 10 billion examples.
As I said earlier. If your moral system concludes that almost every human being ever is morally wrong and that the entire human race cannot morally continue to exist, it is far more likely that your moral system is wrong than it is the entire human race for the last 400,000 years is wrong. It takes a monumental, messianic ego to assume you're right in the face of every other human being ever. Hence why your case is so fascinating. — Isaac
It takes a monumental, messianic ego to assume you're right in the face of every other human being ever.
Keep to the text — baker
"The harm" is the center of your phrase, and to this one I replied. — baker
For example, all the polution we're facing nowadays is the result of science. — baker
Again, keep to the text: — baker
Do you consider such people a large majority of the global population?The dismissal of those with existential concerns is done by those who have relatively low aspirations in life. — baker
Women cannot even be the masters of the noun for them!
The state should FORCE people to use the noun "woman" correctly, correctly distinguishing between the singular and the plural form.
It adds insult to injury not to use the noun "woman" correctly in a discussion of a topic that is of great importance to women. — baker
I think my list is longer than yours. — baker
We unproblematically have children. Most people consider it perfectly moral, yet most people consider creating an injustice immoral, and most people think children deserve happiness, therefore most people do not consider it creating an injustice to create someone who deserves something they're not going to receive. It clearly is not a shared moral intuition. — Isaac
This answer is quite clear. It implies that you agree that innocence/guilt is a concept created from the human condition. — universeness
Your accusation that I am lying is offensive. — universeness
Er, no. That simply does not follow and it is not my view. — Bartricks
Do you think not allowing new persons to be created harms the Universe?Do you think a newly created person deserves to come to harm? — Bartricks
Thus, an argument for antinatalism is not an argument for stopping others procreating. — Bartricks
Do you think a newly created person deserves to come to harm? — Bartricks
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