I guess lava baby was properly cared for because you don’t believe anything is done to it. — schopenhauer1
Nothing was done to the baby born into a lava pit in your sophistically twisted conception. — schopenhauer1
I have no idea what you're blathering about. The baby born into a lava pit was burnt alive in lava. I'd say that's something done to it. The parent, knowing full well it was in the birth canal, dropped into a pit of lava. — Isaac
This has nothing whatsoever to do with my argument which is about the object on which a person's will is imposed. — Isaac
The closest I can imagine to your example would be if one were of the view that human beings did not have any will, or moral rights until they left the birth canal. If that were the case then yes, I would argue that the parent's will to birth a baby over a lava pit was imposed, not on a person, but on a {whatever we might call the baby in the birth canal}. — Isaac
The result of such a decision would be a considerable amount of pain with no benefit, it would be a pretty evil thing to do. — Isaac
I would argue that the parent's will to birth a baby over a lava pit was imposed, not on a person, but on a {whatever we might call the baby in the birth canal}. — Isaac
So. Is it a good thing to make a gamete a person? This can be addressed, but it can't be addressed using arguments about imposing on people or forcing people. Neither of those two things have happened. — Isaac
The annoying thing about your argument is that in most cases I think the answer to that question is "no". There's a really important argument against having children. It's being buried because you want to blame someone else for your lack of effort. — Isaac
I would like to move forward on whether it is indeed good for the parent to create someone (they are imposing their will such that a person is born where one would not be because they decided to do this). — schopenhauer1
Hence the importance of the argument that one is not imposing one's will on someone, one is merely imposing one's will (on a mindless object) in such a way as it will eventually become a someone. — Isaac
If one is reasonably sure (after having done their due diligence) that the situation they're planning to bring about will be a better one for the world in general (their community specifically) then it's a perfectly good thing to do (in ethical terms). — Isaac
If one imagines their community '+ child' and imagines their community without and can reasonably say the community is better off with the child (that community now including the imagined child, of course), then their behaviour is ethical. It is good that they try to bring about that situation.
... That's it. — Isaac
There's no question of whether it's right to 'impose one's will without consent' - one imposed one's will on a mindless object, so there's no ethical component there. — Isaac
There's no question of special consideration for the so called 'one who is affected by that imposition' - the whole community are affected by it. The resulting child is not magically affected more than the elderly couple who now won't starve in their dotage. — Isaac
There's no question of someone being now 'burdened with existence'. Every entity is burdened with existence. At most you could say that a consequence of procreation is the awareness of that burden (which the gamete wouldn't have had if one hadn't forcibly changed it's level of consciousness) - but since the overwhelming majority of people simply don't mind, this burden seems small in the weighing. — Isaac
If you think it’s best to force me (cause it to come about such that :roll:) I work for a company the rest of my life unless I kill myself, no amount of research or outcome would justify that. — schopenhauer1
Anyone can justify doing anything that affects another’s life significantly in the name of community. A slippery slope! — schopenhauer1
no amount of research predicts the unknown harms that result. Things change literally day to day, moment to moment. You’re not a god that “knows” exactly how much harm will take place. — schopenhauer1
More importantly, who are you to judge of what is acceptable for someone else to endure? — schopenhauer1
Why should they even have to endure it? — schopenhauer1
this is a terrible attempt at causative ethics. — schopenhauer1
You wouldn’t kidnap someone to take care of the elderly, or would you? — schopenhauer1
You don’t get to do significant things to people because other people say they don’t mind it. — schopenhauer1
Ethically, being the judge that significant harm is acceptable to create for someone because you think you have “reasons” is problematic. — schopenhauer1
I don't. — Isaac
How so? — Isaac
I see. So the lava baby's mother should perhaps just carry on. After all, who can tell what will happen in the future? It's such a mystery. Maybe the lava will do the baby good. — Isaac
Nothing causative about it. It's assigning the object of an imposition, not the consequence of one. — Isaac
I would if I had to, yes. why on earth would you let hundreds of people starve just to preserve one person's autonomy? — Isaac
You do. — Isaac
Not in the least bit problematic. As I said before, if you want a set of rules which essentially say we must never ever impose anything on individuals for the benefit of the community, then you don't have an ethical rule, you just have a neo-liberal political agenda. Put down the Rand and back away. — Isaac
It's hard to generalize when speaking of so many people. I do not doubt that many of them suffer. But they don't solely suffer, there are other things in life too, like joy and love and laughter. — Manuel
The point is that most people (not all) prefer to go on living, till' it's time to go - as everyone eventually will. — Manuel
Incidentally, the post you replied to is 8 months old. I have no interest in discussing anti-natalism, maybe others will. I find it quite tedious and boring. — Manuel
If you want to discuss Mainländer's metaphysics and epistemology, then we can do that, as that's quite fascinating. — Manuel
There are no new arguments to be given for or against AN. It boils down to you thinking life sucks and me thinking it does not. — Manuel
The point is that most people (not all) prefer to go on living, till' it's time to go - as everyone eventually will. — Manuel
I think your views of suffering are quite distorted to the extent that it actually clouds other everything else life can provide. — Manuel
Finally, also an issue that surely has come up - that people who have AN views tend to be depressed in some manner. This is claimed to be irrelevant to the central AN argument.
But if AN didn't have this kind of depression, I seriously doubt it would've ever arisen. — Manuel
There is no word that goes beyond "overkill" that I know of - but I don't see what success you've had.
Something has gone wrong here. — Manuel
Red herring and ad hom, you’re right, it is. — schopenhauer1
No Manuel has it right here. — Isaac
Indeed when the moral argument is countered you invariably dismiss that counter with something along the lines of "you've had your say, I want to hear from others", a 'casting around' for agreement, and disparaging all others as 'trolls'. — Isaac
The rest of the world think the difference is significant and as such taking a decision for them (because they can't) is a perfectly moral thing to do and faces no such contradiction with their moral behaviour toward persons who already exist. — Isaac
Since there are no other examples in life, you can't appeal to consistency, and since there are no objective moral laws, you can't appeal to authority. — Isaac
Were you to be interested in the arguments one might expect that to be and end to it. But these threads just seem to come back again and again. Fishing for people who agree with you is not the same thing as showing an interest in the arguments. It's an emotional, not an academic activity. — Isaac
I don't think there's anything wrong with seeking catharsis (I don't think it's healthy, but then I'm not your therapist, so that's no concern of mine), but it is unpleasant to dismiss as 'trolls' anyone taking, at face value, an appeal to mutuality dressed up as a moral investigation. — Isaac
Because if people did not feel this way, the argument given would not arise. — Manuel
I have read several of your posts on the topic, you don't need to keep putting "imposition" and "forced" in bold - I get that point very well. But it's simply not convincing. — Manuel
I doubt that real life can be reduced to such axiomatic schemes. The point, which has been stressed ad nauseum, is that most people do not view life in terms of pain alone. You can say these people are deluding themselves or something along those lines. Yet the fact remains that most people don't buy this argument, no matter how much you stress the forced aspect. — Manuel
I have sympathy for your view - I do think that there is too much pain and destruction and misery and depression, partly (only partly) for these reasons I don't have children. The difference being that I also recognize that there are good things in life, things which make it worth living, even if there is pain - all these things are imposed on us by life. — Manuel
And yes, there is pain and suffering too, but it shall pass, as shall we. — Manuel
So I don't buy your argument. What else is there to say? Are you going to impose on me more arguments? — Manuel
Providing some popular concept of morality as the justification for action, isn't cutting it either. So where does that leave your argument other than the fact that "most people" think X, when it is wrong? — schopenhauer1
This is such a bizarre counter. You're saying here that virtually the entire human race thinking something is right still doesn't make it right, but in the same breath you're trying to suggest the mere fact that you think something is wrong might actually make it wrong. — Isaac
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