My position on this is clear. We must, for the sake of simplicity, assume that we exist prior to our birth on earth as humans (to nullify the asymmetry that gums up the works) Nonexistence pre-birth unnecessarily complicates the calculations, sensu amplo. — Agent Smith
E = W% × H + L% × -P — Agent Smith
By its very nature, presuming for another that "these range of choices are good" is wrong. I call this moralistic misguided thinking "aggressive paternalism". It presumes one knows what is meaningful, best, or good for another, when in fact they may be ignorant themselves (if these are somehow "objectively" true), or simply, wrong (if they are relatively true and that person being affected just doesn't agree). — schopenhauer1
The parent is the one doing the equation.. That's the problem.. It can NEVER be the person it is affecting. Why should such significant and profound calculations be done on someone else's behalf when it wasn't necessary to do so? — schopenhauer1
Paternalism refers to restricting the freedom and responsibilities of others for their own good. It is more suitable for anti-natalists, that want to restrict all of the freedoms and responsibilities the unborn would have, for their own good. Pro-natalists are throwing caution to the wind, opening up the freedom and responsibilities, and any harm that comes with it. — Down The Rabbit Hole
The fact that we actually don't exist before we're born complicates the problem for the simple reason that there's no one who gains/loses — Agent Smith
Clearly, it's comparing apples to oranges then, oui? We couldn't argue that not being born is beneficial — Agent Smith
If so how are we going to make the case for antinatalism - it's good for...no one! — Agent Smith
One counterargument against antinatalism revolves around this point, oui? A nonexistent person doesn't have moral worth e.g. no one would be arrested for murdering Frodo because Frodo is fiction. — Agent Smith
Even assuming this approach would be feasible in the first place*, this skips the fact that no person has the wisdom, knowledge and capacity necessary to put their vision of their happy child into reality. The life of a person is simply too complicated, and the influence of the parents, while significant, too limited to take control of all the outcomes. — Tzeentch
It's not just a choice on behalf of another, it is a gamble with that person's life. — Tzeentch
I'm here to suffer, I love it, — Manuel
Though your right to say it, to act upon it and presume this is or should be the case is the exact damage I speak of coming from a place of aggressive paternalism.everybody else does too. — Manuel
If not, things would be very boring, very quickly. — Manuel
Schopenhauer pointed out, not an exact quote, that even if we did manage to create a utopia for a while, we would soon be bored and begin acting improperly. — Manuel
Yet he lived his life, unlike, say Mainländer. He was a real anti-natalist. — Manuel
I don't get to put someone in harms way because I'm bored nor put them in harms way because I think that they should like it (even if they don't). YOU should not be making those assumptions for others. — schopenhauer1
Well, I don't want to be engaged in True Scotsman fallacy. But at any rate, he did not advocate promortalism, and nor is this argument about that. — schopenhauer1
How does someone impose on a future person without having to travel through time? — NOS4A2
t is the price of life that we all must pay, — unenlightened
no one ever gets a choice because it is not a marketplace, and no choice is possible prior to existence.I did not choose to bring into existence an ungrateful miserablist, but I don't get a choice about who I procreate either. — unenlightened
So my wishes are nothing personal; I want suffering and dying to continue in general and indefinitely, because the joy and beauty of life is not separate from suffering and death. The antinatalists will get their wish in time and my wishes will be frustrated, which is only fair. Such is life eh? — unenlightened
I just don’t understand how one can impose on someone in the future. Which past people or situation imposes on you? — NOS4A2
I'm not so sure though. Because antinatalists are not doing anything to "any one", there are no restrictions taking place (nor freedoms for that matter). As everything with the asymmetry, the damage (collateral, intended or otherwise) goes one way. That is to say, only the person born would be restricted.. And I do mean to use it in a sense of restricting, because at the end of the day, the "choices" in life are actually rather limited based on contingent circumstances and de facto realities of cultural and physical space and time. Reality presents only so many things, and it is those things that are assumed the person born must deal with/endure etc. — schopenhauer1
Ok. So, for example, which past persons and which situations imposes on you? — NOS4A2
The asymmetry would say lack of freedom is not a bad thing. But freedom is being prevented?
Responsibility is often a bad thing, and the asymmetry would say that this lack of responsibility is good. But responsibility is being prevented?
This prevention is more paternalistic than letting the experiment play out. — Down The Rabbit Hole
'Possible persons' are imaginary – nonexistent – and, therefore, only subsist (A. Meinong), like every other mere possibility, (D. Lewis) without a moral status .We who are about suffer,
refute you! :death: :flower:
Why are you so off the rails hostile? Kill yourself is callous. I don’t even jokingly say that.kill themselves asap. — 180 Proof
'Possible persons' are imaginary – nonexistent – and, therefore, only subsist (A. Meinong), like every other mere possibility, (D. Lewis) without a moral status . — 180 Proof
Antinatalists, IMO, need to either (A) refute that proposition — 180 Proof
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