I agree with you. I mean that from a 'greedy' personal perspective it may be good to experience parenthood. Especially these days, with our technology, and especially if you are rich. Joyce is one of my heroes, and the family man experience is useful to a writer in its near universality. But the nonfamily men buy books too, I guess -- maybe more books on average.
'The life of the child is the death of the parent' gestures towards the life cycle to me. Schop liked to talk about insects dying after mating, their purpose served. He really had his eye on the centrality of sex and death. The mating instinct and the nurturing instinct tie us to life, along with narcissist/status projects, some of which are probably delusory escapes from annihilation. — plaque flag
Just for context, I don't count myself as an antinatalist. I'm also not a pro-natalist. I'm nothin' -- I'm a stone-hearted analyst in this context, fascinated by the social logic involved. — plaque flag
I certainly don't regret being alive. — Janus
Don't assume other should fight the entropy. If only everyone had MY point of view. How narcissistic. I like X, therefore others should like live out a lifetime of X. — schopenhauer1
Maybe it's down to brain chemistry; those low in seratonin have a negative, depressive view on life, and those with abundant seratonin feel life is good. — Janus
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
The positive motive is something like : ...the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life...
The nurturing instinct can be included in the lust of the flesh, though this'll be offensive to some. — plaque flag
We don't need to be programmed with a conscious ideology, right ? Though at another level the church might come in and keep birth rates high for an empire that needs workers and soldiers. — plaque flag
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. — plaque flag
It doesn't have to be human. — Sumyung Gui
Perhaps it's even more perverse than that. Having just enough happy experiences makes it seem justifiable to do for another. Happy workers, happily working, in their happy projects. — schopenhauer1
Going back to enthalpy, why create more work for people because you have happy moments? That is the biggest con of an argument. We have the power to not throw people into the enthalpic process. — schopenhauer1
To me the trickiest part is the evaluation of life. Life is good or life is bad -- this is like music.
I like the idea of a gentle and effective suicide pill. Perhaps the state could provide a nice incineration shoot, equivalent to the painless version of jumping into a volcano. I believe that most people would not use this option while they were lucky ( healthy, in good relationships, safe-ish), so that life is often judged (tacitly) to be a positive good. Personally I'm still invested in this game, though I do dread the ravages of further aging in the long run. I the idea of choosing the right moment for one's death -- embracing the beauty of it. I'm down with Kevorkian. — plaque flag
I'm not sure we do have the power. A minority may have a certain self-image and the motivation to abstain, but I don't believe in free will. What's possible is, to some degree, proven by what actually happens. It's easier to talk about utopia or a cessation of birth than to bring such a situation about. It's as if individuals are always only fragments of human nature. Even individuals speak only for or as mere fragments of themselves. 'Finite' personality (which excludes and opposes other finite personalities) is a kind of mask or front. — plaque flag
Why do you think people lack sufficient free will enough? — schopenhauer1
It seems something to do with evangelistic outrage. — schopenhauer1
E.M. Cioran I think represents a gallow's humor sort of approach to AN. — schopenhauer1
Schopenhauer was serious, but his aphorisms had some humor. — schopenhauer1
I'd say it is serious in that people are seriously affected by birth and suffering. So the stakes are high, no? — schopenhauer1
Yes. There's also a psychonanalytic theme here. The 'surface' of a personality is a mask or a performance. The finite personality depends on what it excludes for its value. If the Cause succeeds, I lose my heroic role, the very meaning structure of my life. — plaque flag
He wants company on the endless dangerous road, like Whitman, rather than followers who, as followers, have already lost him. In short, I'm talking about Nietzsche (or Freud or Shakespeare or ...) as possibility rather than substance. We re-enact their heroic intentions, make it new, etc. — plaque flag
Yes. What is the nature of humor ? Is it a sly confession of ambivalence ? Of the pleasure we take in disaster ? — plaque flag
The politician is a public performer who develops a persona as a brand. They win power, fame, and money from playing their role. It's in their interest, as persona product, to keep things comfortably finite and one-sided. Don't expect the politician to look into their own motives or discuss how nice it is to be famous and admired. To be sure, they'll have a sentimental yarn about their love for the oppressed, etc., which may indeed be part of the truth. — plaque flag
I was explaining how the the first written myth, the Epic of Gilgamesh, spoke of gods who were pissed at all the noise the humans made so flooded the Earth. Why do people want to create the din of noise? We can't be quiet? — schopenhauer1
But can there be more of a communal commiseration aspect to it rather? Like, "I see this, does anyone else see this? Isn't this crazy?!". — schopenhauer1
The answer to your question might be simple. Such a trait, a preference for Silence, would remove itself from the gene pool. It can only linger on the margins as a kind of parasite or stowaway, possibly serving the Noise party in the long run. — plaque flag
They rather therapy to be individualistic, about their ego and how they move about in the world, not the human condition tout court. — schopenhauer1
"I am a serious and respectable public intellectual commenting on The Serious Issues of the Day. " — plaque flag
In that case, balance is the shady subversive word used. Thus one is quieting to become better at the parts that are not quiet. It is not to diminish one's need for need. It is another self-improvement strategy to live in the world of noise. It's not gnosis, its simply routine like the health-shake, exercise routine, etc. — schopenhauer1
Still not what I'm talking about though. Social issues and existential issues are not the same, and perhaps even a bit opposed. — schopenhauer1
Oh yeah for sure, good points on the public performer. It's more an industry they have created for themselves, not trying to create real dialogue. — schopenhauer1
Perhaps I embrace the fatalism in Schopenhauer more than you do. When I was studying Darwin, Dawkins, and Dennett, I had Schopenhauer in mind. These evolutionary thinkers vindicate and naturalize his insights, making them stronger and less sentimental. I took from them an even harsher brew (those offensive 'moist robots,' slavishly serving the machine-cold code with mathematical necessity.) — plaque flag
As I see it, antinatalism is extremely unlikely to succeed, become popular. Is that how you see it ? — plaque flag
I'll be impressed if humans stop eating pork because it's Ethical to do so. Asking them to stop breeding is on another level entirely. — plaque flag
But I think Zapffe counteracts the determinism in a way. He psychologizes it rather than mechanizes it. In other words, it is learned, cultural, a defense mechanism perhaps, but one that can be unlearned by knowing about it in the first place. "Oh, mea culpa, I am just throwing up a defense mechanism by ignoring, denying, and anchoring". — schopenhauer1
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