P1 : Human experience is bad, negative, undesirable.
P2 : We should act to reduce that which is bad, negative, undesirable.
Therefore we should strive toward the cessation of human experience, preferably nonviolently, by discouraging reproduction.
As I see it, the problem is almost always P1 (though P2 could be challenged.) — plaque flag
Hey plaque you're back! Good to see you. — schopenhauer1
Yes, that is it basically. — schopenhauer1
Excellent. As you probably remember, I think antinatalism is fascinating. To me 'antithetical' philosophy is counterculture. Antinatalism is almost perfectly antithetical / countercultural. (Recently Elon Musk supported a tweet suggesting that nonparents should have no vote. )
I got this use of 'antithetical' from Nietzsche, and I find it useful to think of Nietzsche (in this context) as a rebellious philosophical son of Schopenhauer. — plaque flag
Also, on point 1 there, others will argue that creating people that can experience happiness/good things is somehow "moral" despite creating the suffering/negatives/burdens/enthalpy-fighting-entropy that goes with it. — schopenhauer1
I can't speak for 180 Proof, but perhaps you are overlooking a different perspective : The moral issue is secondary to the practical issue. We are primates 'programmed' to replicate. It looks impossible to stop the machine. — plaque flag
I heard about the Musk thing. Really weird anti-democratic stance. — schopenhauer1
But we are primates who can deliberate, so are we really the same in that respect to other primates? Are we not more like Zapffe's mechanisms of ignoring, anchoring, denying, etc or Sartre's idea of bad faith? In other words, are we not also an existential animal? — schopenhauer1
. In other words, his idea of an Eternal Return is used to say that we are doomed to simply always exist, so attempts at something like not bringing people into existence would be futile because of the eternally repeating nature of the system, or something of this nature. — schopenhauer1
Yes. To me the religion of babymaking is at the core of 'thetical' culture. The individual dissolves into the replication goo: hive mentality. — plaque flag
I think we are indeed the existential animal.
I think we are more determined than free...while at the same time holding the notion of the responsible agent at the center of our culture. (Sartre squeeze this lemon for all it's worth : his 'nothingness' is like free will maybe. ). I am (as he puts it well) condemned to be free held responsible. — plaque flag
To me this is almost stolen from Schopenhauer's discussion of the futility of suicide. My death doesn't change much, because I have seen through the illusion of personality. 'I' will just be reborn. Real change has to happen at the level of the species.
I like to think of Nietzsche as a more recent Hamlet. For me he's a highly instructive and relatable dissonant tangle of voices/perspectives. — plaque flag
As far as human-survival, we develop strong cultural beliefs that are enculturated, but surely that can be de-programmed by other ideas. The individual does have some agency. We are working against common tropes, but these tropes are simply learned and not intractable. — schopenhauer1
Sartre was against bad faith thinking, the idea that we are destined to play a role. — schopenhauer1
Rather, cultural beliefs calibrate the individual to the "hive mind" so-to-say, that speaking against the core beliefs creates anger and anxiety, so we stick within its bounds. It's group-think. You can't complain too much in society, or you will be hated and spit upon. You are worse than a criminal because you reject all of it, and not just this part or that part of it. — schopenhauer1
One of my concerns in this context is Moloch (game theoretical). It's the prisoner's dilemma, the tragedy of the commons, that sort of thing. Concretely, I'm a nonparent taciturn thoughtcriminal --not very contagious, even if there was much susceptibility out there. I can't teach my children to not have children, but self-consciously virtuous breeders can very much send out missionaries, generation after generation potentially. I recently saw a vid suggesting that Israel is shifting politically for reasons involving the correlation of ideology and number of offspring. — plaque flag
Parents missionize de facto. — schopenhauer1
How come anti-natalists never include, and even avoid, opposing events in their screeds? — NOS4A2
1) Happiness-giving is not an obligation, especially when no one is deprived of happiness to begin with.
2) Happiness-giving when accompanied by numerous intractable harms is not even purely happiness-giving. It is not a gift in the traditional sense that it comes with many burdens. Thus this "gift" is negated as such.
And finally, the rebuttal that "people don't exist to be relieved of not suffering", is simply a non-issue, as what matters is the state of affairs of not suffering. The hidden assumption is the asymmetry that the not-happiness should matter, but going back to 1 and 2. — schopenhauer1
When I read Schopenhauer, I identified with that futile individual struggling against dissolution in speciesgoo. In other words, the spirited thing to do is to cheat nature with birth control, homosexuality, masturbation, life-extending treatments, etc. 'The life of the child is the death of the parent.' At the same time, this attitude has always only a finite intensity, because we are programmed to find great joy and depth in nurturing. — plaque flag
But maybe this is all off-topic, because you're asking after ethical implications, of which I'd say there are none. — Moliere
What is it about this "nod" to being that people seem to be programmed for? — schopenhauer1
In a sense I can interpret what I face entropically, but it's just one way of looking at what I face. — Moliere
I agree with the sentiment but contend the particular point. Are humans "hard-wired" to have children or are we a more complex (albeit still animal) that have an existential nature to it? — schopenhauer1
I would say that procreation can certainly have value, just as life-extension and exploring the esoteric aspects of life do. — Existential Hope
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