It is a positive philosophy that says no to suffering and false hope. — Andrew4Handel
Just like many a tyrant has claimed on the past. Ironically they pursue obliteration and/or various forms and extensions of human suffering rather than tempering them. An aim with an absolute solution is always fanatical and often antithetical to its proposed purpose. — I like sushi
In that case if there is "harm" in giving birth to children. The harm is not human. But from other animals that "imposed our humanness on us". Should we then go out and blame all human hardship on australopithicus? — Benj96
benefit would actually be greater than the harms and would not put the person in a worse state than they were before does the action become justifiable. — Existential Hope
It is evident that non-existence helps (or hinders) nobody. — Existential Hope
But if preventing suffering is good in an impersonal sense, then providing happiness is also important. — Existential Hope
This is still wrong. If I give my friend a car and they might get into an accident is a different calculation than if I give my friend a car but they will get various pains and woes of life. — schopenhauer1
The action isn’t about an existing person, it’s about a future person that could exist. In lingistics this is the future conditional tense. — schopenhauer1
Happiness giving is not ethical but supererogatory. If I don’t give someone happiness in my daily life but don’t cause suffering I have done nothing wrong. If I cause suffering, at least potentially I have. — schopenhauer1
Unless all the concomitant pleasant aspects of existence are sitting in the car alongside the woes, it would undoubtedly be immoral. And it's not as if the benefits alone are adequate. What also matters is whether these positives would put the person in a preferable state to the one they would have found themselves in without them. — Existential Hope
Which is why it has no value. If it can be bad, then the condition is that it can also be good. — Existential Hope
A society where people were constantly being bombarded for gifting happiness would be sawing off the branch it was sitting on. For most existing people, not directly harming them is surely enough for them to live lives that they find worth living. However, when one is creating people (a state which nobody prefers), the positives matter as much as the negatives. — Existential Hope
It’s not ethical to judge for someone else the amount of harms is appropriate for the “treat” of goods. In fact, that’s perverse. You are playing god of misery and pleasure on behalf of someone. Remember this “gift” is given, it’s not requested. And they can’t “tweak” it beforehand to their liking or predict what it is. — schopenhauer1
This literally is the scenario on both cases . Future conditional in both cases. You’re non-identify argument is weak and special pleading. I’d drop it. — schopenhauer1
Not understanding so no comment. — schopenhauer1
It is not ethical to judge for someone else that a good they could be deeply grateful for should not be bestowed because one has been tempted by the religion of pessimism. Gifting something that cannot be requested is not unethical. — Existential Hope
a real person — Existential Hope
nobody is being left in a more desirable or less desirable state as a result of what we have done. — Existential Hope
And if the prevention of harms can be good without a person being there, the prevention of happiness is also bad, — Existential Hope
Fair enough (and apologies for possible equivocation). All I meant was that the nature of giving happiness differs to existing beings who already have varying levels of well-being differs from those who are yet to exist. — Existential Hope
I'm sorry it doesn't work that way. I can't assume someone wants me to do a "happy" thing for them. But I can safely assume, and in fact am morally obligated not to purposefully harm someone when I don't have to. Certainly, not because I think the pain intendent with whatever happiness I bestow will be "worth it" in my own estimation. You can't keep doing this reverse role and think it comes out the same. It doesn't. — schopenhauer1
When that person is born, it will be real. That is how the future works. Do you believe in a state called "the future"? Sounds like you don't. I wonder why :roll:. — schopenhauer1
Future conditionals exist. If you do X, then Y will happen. You are preventing Y from happening. You don't need someone for the statement "Y will happen" to be true, because there will be a person who exists. Get over this argument. It's not a good look. It really shows special pleading and lack of common language usage. — schopenhauer1
No because as stated earlier, happiness-giving is not an ethical act but a supererogatory one. Not causing avoidable suffering is ethical though. Even more so, willingly wanting to cause suffering because it brings about good is more than negligent, and certainly misguided. — schopenhauer1
I don't think so on any substantive level. The person presumably to be born will have varying amounts of happiness just as your friend. The scenario is the same for each so it's not even considering individual levels, just broad experiences like "appreciating friends, art, achievements, etc.". — schopenhauer1
one can also decide to do the right thing for someone else when they cannot attain the positive themselves — Existential Hope
not opportunities and gifts. — Existential Hope
And then, when they do possess the capacity to be harmed and benefitted, we will hopefully behave in an ethical way. I have little time for imaginary goodness or inconsistent ideas. — Existential Hope
If X does not happen, then Y will have absolutely no significance for anybody who is absent. — Existential Hope
It is not a good look to arbitrarily argue that the absence of harms can be good sans true benefits, but the lack of happiness is not a worse state of affairs simply because nobody can ask for it. — Existential Hope
If you do not cause me pain, you have allowed me to live a happy life, which is good (though, admittedly, it isn't the same as actively doing something for others). — Existential Hope
Willingly wanting to prevent all of it because one is unable to look beyond their obstructed perspective is even more wrong-headed. — Existential Hope
Getting someone a traditional gift, and handing someone a box of gifts with tremendous burdens are two very different things, and to equivocate the two is rhetorical obfuscation. — schopenhauer1
Only totalitarian regimes would force people into opportunities and post-facto justify it. It is totalitarian thinking to think that one forces another's hand in the name of "opportunities" and then say, "Well, let's get the suicide machines out" as a consolation prize. Cringey. — schopenhauer1
That capacity exists as a real state of affairs. Again, that is what we mean by "future conditionals". It's not inconsistent to understand how future conditionals work. You are denying a whole range of states of affairs don't exist. — schopenhauer1
That's the point. Don't bring about X so Y doesn't happen. Cause and effect. Future conditional. If this, then that could happen. Don't do this. — schopenhauer1
You are confusing how epistemology works. Future conditionals are only understood by someone who exists to know "If then statements". It is from the POV of someone who can comprehend "If then statements" that we know this to be true. — schopenhauer1
Oddly, this is just bolstering the AN point. This is how it works when someone is born (they just live their life without your negative interference). However, from the future conditional perspective, you are not going to start negatives for another. It is not letting known harms occur (that could have). — schopenhauer1
But we are not talking about unmitigated good are we. Perhaps if a paradise only universe existed and guaranteed you might have some argument. So hey, at least I'm giving you that point! But alas, we know this world is not that. But I'd even argue, EVEN in that scenario, though it is perfectly permissible to go ahead and start that life, not starting it isn't unethical. As you admit, not starting something does nothing for no one. Nothingness doesn't "hurt" anyone. — schopenhauer1
So, is there really no reason for an antinatalist to live — rossii
It is not worth the bother of killing yourself, since you always kill yourself too late. — Cioran
What we really want is to never have suffered in the first place. Annihilation after the fact doesn’t negate this. — schopenhauer1
Not quite. Too clean cut and dry, people commit suicide for all sorts of reasons not because they "never really wanted to have suffered." The one subject Camus is actually worth reading for. — Vaskane
We have to exist with suffering in order to want to be free from suffering. This paradox makes the will to never have existed an essentially meaningless yearning. Since it is with even less meaning in its fundamental emptiness than a meaningless existence that actually exist. — Christoffer
Suicide is much more than just/if even at all "an impossible wish of undoing suffering." IMO. Carry on with your views though. — Vaskane
That strengthens Ciorans point in suicide. We are put in an impossible situation. The nostalgia for “unbirth” can never be attained. It doesn’t negate choosing not to impose the very dilemma on another. — schopenhauer1
I just happen to see that as a bit of a reductionist way of viewing suicide. — Vaskane
We have this vague feeling of meaning when with others. — Christoffer
So we can't be free from imposing these things on others because we need to interact with the ideas about our suffering to process it through our social bonds. — Christoffer
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