Life is a pleasure in the groin...Life is a pain in the ass...
But to deny it, people are wont to pass
On they go, children in toe
'Til the pain gets enlarged en masse — schopenhauer1
I wonder if Camus ever wrote about procreation. Is giving birth a form of rebellion against life's absurdity? — Marchesk
I think the endless possibilities are what makes it worth the going, but I agree that if this was it, if it couldn't get any better than this, then it wouldn't be worth all of the pain and suffering. But there is a very real possibility that in the not too distant future the situation could improve drastically and in the longer term it might even get good enough to justify the long bloody slog of life through the eons. — Sivad
Life is a pleasure in the groin...
It's what keeps our species going,
If we all thought life was only a pain in the ass,
we'd all kill ourselves en masse — Harry Hindu
Are humans just fodder for some future utopia though? — schopenhauer1
Life is a pleasure in the groin...
It's what keeps our species going,
If we all thought life was only a pain in the ass,
we'd all kill ourselves en masse — Harry Hindu
Yeah, given all the natural and man-made existential threats our species is confronted with, and in light of the fermi paradox, the long term survival of intelligent life might really be a matter of threading the needle. The thing we have to be aware of though when considering propositions like anti-natalism, is that life, along with all the pain and suffering that it entails, is most likely a constant feature of this universe. Life is very hard to eradicate, even after the most destructive global cataclysms it always comes roaring back. And even if this planet was permanently sterilized of all life, life would still exist elsewhere in space and time. So since the issue of suffering can't be resolved through voluntary extinction, it becomes an ethical imperative for some species or entity to thread that needle and reach something like Tippler's Omega Point and overwrite the current cruel and indifferent natural order and establish a much more benign cosmos in its place.Not saying I believe it, because who knows. Maybe all life goes extinct before then. — Marchesk
So since the issue of suffering can't be resolved through voluntary extinction, it becomes an ethical imperative for some species or entity to thread that needle and reach something like Tippler's Omega Point — Sivad
Then ask the new life - the children,Many people confuse the issue you see
About the difference in what it is to be
Life worth continuing not worth parting
Different than life not worth starting
Thus dear lad its not 'bout the end
Its about new life, and whether to send — schopenhauer1
Life is but a game. Sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. — Harry Hindu
Life is a game, boy. Life is a game that one plays according to the rules.”
“Yes, sir. I know it is. I know it.”
Game, my ass. Some game. If you get on the side where all the hot-shots are, then it’s a game, all right—I’ll admit that. But if you get on the other side, where there aren’t any hot-shots, then what’s a game about it? Nothing. No game. — Catcher in the Rye
If all resources were divided equally among all citizens of the world, everyone would only receive about $16,000 annually, and even then most of that is tied up in commodities and property. In other words, we can make life a pain in the ass for everyone, or we can make life better for some. Which would be the greater good? — Harry Hindu
There's definitely enough for everyone to live comfortably, we have the technology and the resources to provide a high standard of living for every person on the planet, it's our current system of dollars and cents that creates the massive disparity. We could have a post-scarcity world now if we really wanted it, but most people prefer the zero-sum game of winners and losers because they believe it offers them the chance to become rich. — Sivad
Capitalism has enormous allocation problems of its own. In addition to being prone to a range of market failures, it produces mountains of waste and useless crap, it leads to massive inequality and poverty, and it ignores many problems that don't offer a strong profit motive(pharma r+d for orphan diseases is a good example). But it's not necessary to abandon the market mechanism, there are many types of market socialism which do rely on it.Also, without money, how do the markets know what resources to allocate? How many widgets from factory X should be produced to be delivered to stores Y & Z? Is the government going to determine production? — Marchesk
A lot of incentive comes from being able to start your own business, or rise to the top of a company, etc. And a lot of people do want to own more than the Smiths, or live in a nicer location, etc. Status is important to human beings. — Marchesk
Google, "what is the GDP of the world".What's the source for this? — Sivad
Of course it does. Dollars is how we measure wealth.It doesn't really make sense to value the total resources of the planet in terms of dollars. — Sivad
No, there isn't. You seem to think that the world population can keep growing at the same pace and we can just make more dollars, but that just makes dollars worth less, which makes everything else cost more. We could have a post-scarcity world if we killed off half the world's population say, in a nuclear war. At that point we could afford to pay raise the minimum wage to $15/hr. Right now, we can only afford $8/hr. What offers people the chance to become rich is the freedom to do with your money as you please without the elites in govt. controlling your choices of what you can spend and can't spend and on what.There's definitely enough for everyone to live comfortably, we have the technology and the resources to provide a high standard of living for every person on the planet, it's our current system of dollars and cents that creates the massive disparity. We could have a post-scarcity world now if we really wanted it, but most people prefer the zero-sum game of winners and losers because they believe it offers them the chance to become rich. — Sivad
You seem to think that the world population can keep growing at the same pace and we can just make more dollars — Harry Hindu
Even if that were true the obvious solution would be to cut compensation for shareholders and executives rather than working people for less than a living wage. That would be happening if people had an effective labor movement. That's how it was not so long ago, the size of the current wealth gap is unprecedented in modern history. We can afford it, we just opt to allow the obscenely rich to keep the lion's share of the surplus.Right now, we can only afford $8/hr. — Harry Hindu
Dollars are worthless when there aren't enough resources to sustain the population. Even if everyone had a million dollars, it would do them no good when there isn't enough food and living space for everyone. The ink and the paper to print money has to come from somewhere and that isn't infinite. The problem is that socialists seem to think that resources are infinite. How "idealistic".I think that because it's true. The money supply has to expand with the economy or deflation sets in. — Sivad
Even then, there isn't enough money that we can take away from the obscenely rich to pull everyone out of poverty. Who do you choose to keep in poverty? Like I said, we either make everyone poor, or keep things like they are with some tweaks.Even if that were true the obvious solution would be to cut compensation for shareholders and executives rather than working people for less than a living wage. That would be happening if people had an effective labor movement. That's how it was not so long ago, the size of the current wealth gap is unprecedented in modern history. We can afford it, we just opt to allow the obscenely rich to keep the lion's share of the surplus. — Sivad
There's a difference between money and wealth. Wealth is the real tangible resource, money is just an abstraction. Putting a dollar value on the world's wealth is sort of asinine, the dollar is the vehicle of an inefficient, wasteful system of artificial scarcity driven by pathological greed. The dollar is the symbol of a tyrannical inequity, it's not an objective measure of the Earth's abundance.Even then, there isn't enough money that we can take away from the obscenely rich to pull everyone out of poverty. — Harry Hindu
There's not enough money to make everyone rich but the wealth of the world is vast, there's more than enough for everyone to be comfortable and secure. Nobody has to be kept in poverty, mass poverty is the result of pathological avarice run amok.Who do you choose to keep in poverty? Like I said, we either make everyone poor, or keep things like they are with some tweaks. — Harry Hindu
The problem is that socialists seem to think that resources are infinite. How "idealistic". — Harry Hindu
Even then, there isn't enough money that we can take away from the obscenely rich to pull everyone out of poverty. Who do you choose to keep in poverty? Like I said, we either make everyone poor, or keep things like they are with some tweaks. — Harry Hindu
The problem is that socialists seem to think that resources are infinite. — Harry Hindu
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