Where consent isn't possible, it's unreasonable, to say the least, to insist that it must be given. — Ciceronianus the White
. The bottomline is that those in power eventually have to impose what they think is right to those who cannot decide for themselves — OglopTo
Consent may be a component of a majority of ethical problems but maybe it is not the proper word to use in the issue of procreation? Because as @Ciceronianus the White might be implying, it may not be an issue of consent if the other party has no way of giving one.I don't see how we can have ethics without consent. — Andrew4Handel
Where consent isn't possible, it's unreasonable, to say the least, to insist that it must be given. — Ciceronianus the White
People can't exercise their right to freedom of assembly before they're born, either. This doesn't create a massive ethical problem, it creates nonsense. — Sapientia
You just have to acknowledge the reality of suffering and that up to a million people feel the need to commit suicide every year. — Andrew4Handel
Framed from the issue of consent, maybe yes. But framed from the issue of fulfilling one's selfish desires at the expense of suffering of other people, hmm, maybe not. — OglopTo
Why is it unreasonable? — Andrew4Handel
I can harm someone more by creating them than by committing your average criminal offence that people get lynch mobby about. — Andrew4Handel
There is no person who we would prevent from suffering harm, — Ciceronianus the White
I'm not sure what you mean by this particular phrase but certainly, when a person is born, it will most certainly consume resources other people in more pressing situations could have used, will need other people to attend to their needs directly or indirectly, get hurt, get sick, get old, and die. — OglopTo
I don't really get the logic that not procreating does not equate to preventing at least one 'something' to exist once born and suffer. — OglopTo
Would you say the same in the case of sleeping person or person in a coma? — Andrew4Handel
I don't really get the logic that not procreating does not equate to preventing at least one 'something' to exist once born and suffer. — OglopTo
People can't exercise their right to freedom of assembly before they're born, either. This doesn't create a massive ethical problem, it creates nonsense. — Sapientia
If suicide is an option, then life is continued by consent once suicide is declined, which is by far the most prevalent choice. Ethically speaking, wouldn't it be the right thing to do to offer life, considering most often those offered it desperately protect it? — Hanover
Consider what you're saying. How can you harm someone? There is no "someone." — Ciceronianus the White
A matter of wording or framing the problem, I guess, — OglopTo
An unconscious person cannot consent to sex but that does not make rape alright. — Andrew4Handel
That matters because they were a person with opinions about what they'd like done to them prior to being asleep or in a coma.
With a baby born who immediately goes into a coma, there are no consent issues re medical treatment. The baby wasn't a person with opinions about such things. And in fact, we even treat minors who might have opinions about such things as not being the ultimate arbiter for them. We don't legally or socially treat minors as fully autonomous persons. Hence why parents can force kids to do all sorts of things without issue. — Terrapin Station
There is no person to grant or not grant consent prior to conception, and in fact, there is no person to grant or not grant consent at conception either. It takes development of a fetus for there then be a person there, and arguably it takes development of the baby once it's born for there to be a person there. — Terrapin Station
That matters because they were a person with opinions about what they'd like done to them prior to being asleep or in a coma. — Terrapin Station
It's reasonable to expect that there are no positive consequences for the person raped. Saving the life of a person in coma would be far more accurate. — BlueBanana
If suicide is an option, then life is continued by consent once suicide is declined, which is by far the most prevalent choice. Ethically speaking, wouldn't it be the right thing to do to offer life, considering most often those offered it desperately protect it? — Hanover
I have never said to someone "don't rape me when I am asleep" someone does not need to voice an opinion explicitly for you to imagine how they might feel.(accurately) — Andrew4Handel
Whether the person exists prior or after is irrelevant. — BlueBanana
There is no consent and the are potentially detrimental consequences for the person who is to exist. — BlueBanana
Ok so if a person is born in coma it's okay to cause them pain and then wake them up. — BlueBanana
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