Agent Smith         
         No but I’m serious. Look at the question again. Also this utilitarian calculus… “Who” benefits from greater blah blah? — schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
         If the odds are in favor of a pleasurable existence, the person who decides to play the game of life wins :party: . If the opposite, the player loses :cry: !
We need to know the values of p, h, w% and l% to come to a definitive conclusion monsieur.
Please note, my math's a bit rusty and so cum grano salis please. Sorry if this was a waste of your valuable time. Not intended. Beginner here! — Agent Smith
Existential Hope         
         
Down The Rabbit Hole         
         Apologies for the late reply. I agree that there is a difference between the moderate supporters of AN and those in the video, but I have also seen people gradually slide towards the darker side after a while. Sadly, there isn't much awareness about it.
I disagree with universal AN, but, as I have explained ad nauseam, I do believe that it can have value in making people realise the necessities to take suffering and procreation more soberly. I hope that you have a good day/night! — DA671
The clips were actually uploaded by an antinatalist who is firmly against those extremists. — DA671
schopenhauer1         
         
Existential Hope         
         
universeness         
         universeness play the ball and not the man. — Down The Rabbit Hole
universeness         
         I see this more as his last hope. If he cant maintain at least that then he's a gonner!Like any rational person with epistemic humility, he has set his limits, which is admirable. — DA671
Existential Hope         
         
universeness         
         As a natalist, I cannot resist suggesting that something is better than nothing! — DA671
Existential Hope         
         
universeness         
         
Down The Rabbit Hole         
         Morality 'is' subjective — Bartricks
That's why it is possible that morality doesn't exist. — Bartricks
If you're going to reject my argument by embracing some form of individual or collective subjectivism about morality, you're welcome as then you'd also be committed to concluding that the Nazis did no wrong. — Bartricks
Down The Rabbit Hole         
         I should explain why morality is subjective.
To say that something is objective is to say something about its mode of existence. More specifically, it is to say that it exists outside a mind's mental states. So, the 'objective physical world' denotes a place that exists outside anyone's mind.
By contrast, if something is subjective, then it exists inside a mind or minds- that is, it exists as mental states; states of a subject.
Morality is subjective because morality is made of prescriptions and values. But only minds can issue prescriptions or value anything. Thus morality exists as the prescriptions and values of a mind. And thus it is subjective. — Bartricks
Existential Hope         
         
universeness         
         Sometimes, the pertinent question is whether or not a wheel can be made bigger and better by adding more components. — DA671
universeness         
         Certainly. Some would say that the void would be absolutely valueless, whilst others would say that it would be impersonally bad due to what could have been. — DA671
Existential Hope         
         
universeness         
         it's just better that a world with sentient beings who can experience happiness exists rather than one without them. — DA671
Existential Hope         
         
Agent Smith         
         So, "Who" loses if they are not born? Paying attention to "Who", the actual referent? — schopenhauer1
universeness         
         
Bartricks         
         
Existential Hope         
         
Bartricks         
         
Bartricks         
         
universeness         
         To each their own, sir! I just hope that the common good is kept in the minds of all — DA671
Existential Hope         
         
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.