Unfortunately, life itself is such a coercive situation, since it is impossible to consent to being born, and all 'decisions' made while alive are within the context of that coercive establishment. So even if we give the compatibilist everything he wants, he is still wrong about free will insofar as he further makes the positive claim that people actually can be, or are, free. — The Great Whatever
I think you are extending definitions too much. At the very least, there is a massive difference in degree between being coerced into slavery, mining diamonds your whole life (in Sierra Leone perhaps) and being forced into life itself. For in the latter, someone else has authority over your life, while in the latter you are the one that has the authority over at least the decision to continue your life. — darthbarracuda
Also, I would contend that if you dislike society so much, nobody is stopping you from becoming a hermit or killing yourself. This shows that in the romantic existential sense, we are indeed forced into a situation that we did not ask for, but in the day-to-day basis I would think that to find one's life to be enslavement itself would either warrant a trip to the psychologist or a quick death. Otherwise you're grabbing at straws and being disingenuous. — darthbarracuda
Nobody is stopping you from doing anything, but you best be prepared for the consequences of your actions. That's all compatibilism is. It's unfree will, with emphasis on the will. — darthbarracuda
A compatibilist holds that free will is compatible with determinism, the belief that everything is pre-determined. He's not disagreeing with the notion that every single event in his life (including being born) is beyond his control and subject to pre-existing causes. The compatibilist defines a free will (and there are alternate ways the theory is presented) as one that is acting on one's own motivations, wants, or desires as opposed to one that feels coerced. It points to the facially obvious difference between eating a bowl of ice-cream because one enjoys ice-cream as opposed to eating a bowl of ice-cream in order to avoid being shot in the head. — Hanover
That being said, it's not as if the compatibilist argument has no problems or that it is an ultimately acceptable solution to the free will question. I don't think, though, that the problem with it is that it doesn't accept the consequences of determinism. It tries to distinguish between different types of deterministic forces in distinguishing which it will designate as a free choice or a not free choice. It holds that whether a choice is determined or not has nothing to do with it being free because every choice is ultimately determined. — Hanover
You do not have authority over decisions made under coercion or duress, and being born is coercive.
There is no question of 'degree' here; and in fact, the coercive institution of birth is a prerequisite to that of slavery. — The Great Whatever
There is nothing romantic about it. It is a very real thing, as are its effects (the suffering that ensues under coercion). — The Great Whatever
'Nobody is stopping you from keeping your wallet, but you best be prepared for the consequences of your actions' (getting shot by your mugger).
Yet the perosn who gives up his wallet is in no way freely doing so. Same for anything done in life. — The Great Whatever
Being brought into the world by means of coercion does not mean that you are a slave once born. — darthbarracuda
But there's also no doubt that I don't consider myself a slave because I have a will that can be satisfied at any time. I am not physically restrained. I am free to do what I want to do. And so this romanticized idea of everyone being captive in their bodies and unable to become free is rubbish. — darthbarracuda
Anyway, one might be able to defend a notion of degrees of freedom. Total freedom is, arguably, only possible after death, as to exist is to be constrained and differentiated in some way, and perhaps non-existence is just total lack of constraint. So no existing person can be free. But one person can be more free than another. While no one is free from the need to eat, for example, some people are free from the need to eat nothing but millet every day. Consider also that relative to a particular decision, some people are free while others are not. Someone who doesn't give a shit about politics, for example, is therefore free with regard to what party to vote for, whereas the person who gives a shit is constrained to vote for the party that is conducive to his shit giving. — bert1
A slave lives only within coercively determined confines. — The Great Whatever
You are not free to do what you want to do. If you actually think that, it's possible you are suffering from a psychotic delusion. — The Great Whatever
The only thing restricting you is an impersonal biological factor, not an actual agent — darthbarracuda
All this was wished on you by an actual person. — The Great Whatever
NO. You are insane if you think that every parent knowingly and willingly wished pain and burdensome worries upon their child. — darthbarracuda
Everyone was once a child themselves and was placed into this world by their parents, who were also children themselves at one point. We can see this as somewhat tragic/ironic, but we can't say that parents are evil, wicked, mwahaha let me bring more children into the world to torture!!! Grow up. — darthbarracuda
To have a child is, in the words of Rivka Weinberg, a risk imposition. Life is not inherently a gift. We have to continue to move, eat, shit, sleep, etc. just to stay alive. If you wanted more, too damn fucking bad. Either be more resilient and rebel like Camus advocated or get on with the logical conclusion of your apparent disgust with the way things are. — darthbarracuda
But they did. They knew full well that life entailed these things and wished life on me. — The Great Whatever
I never said they were evil or wicked. They did something terrible, but I don't think they, any more than anyone else, are responsible for their choices, since they likewise were coerced into living. Responsibility isn't a useful ethical notion; what is important is stopping the act. — The Great Whatever
I am getting on with the logical conclusion, which is that people should not give birth. — The Great Whatever
So it's now about you instead of every child? This thread is quite personal it seems. — darthbarracuda
Regardless, there are worse things your parents could have done to you than to merely give birth to you. From the looks of it, it seems like you basically hate life since you're willing to go to the extreme of saying your parents are culprits that are guilty of a heinous crime. — darthbarracuda
When you drive your car (assuming you have one that is), you usually don't spend the time worrying about all the consequences of driving your car. You could hit a child and paralyze them. — darthbarracuda
So if this actually happens to a person on accident, are they responsible for paralysis or even the death of the child? No, we call it manslaughter. There was no motive. — darthbarracuda
So then why are you complaining about your parents "wishing" life upon you as if they did so in a highly reprehensible fashion of neglect? — darthbarracuda
No, it is typical in philosophical discourse to use pronouns like "I" and "you" to serve as examples for general cases to make general points. — The Great Whatever
Yes, but all bad things a parent can do to a child are predicated on them giving birth to them. — The Great Whatever
Actually, I do worry about this: once I crashed into a tree on a sidewalk, and the car was out of my control, so had things gone differently, there is a very real chance I could have killed someone. I think automobiles are very dangerous and should not be treated lightly. — The Great Whatever
That depends: they could have been driving irresponsibly, and been doing so even knowing that this would increase their chances of killing someone. In the case of giving birth, we all know that being alive entails large amounts of suffering (it is not avoidable), yet people give birth anyway knowing full well how the world is. — The Great Whatever
Because giving birth to children is a terrible thing to do, and it would be better if people came to understand this so that they would stop doing it. — The Great Whatever
This is coming from the person who has repeatedly made it clear that he rejects the notion of a "traditional" philosophical method... — darthbarracuda
Of course, but have they happened to you? That's why birth is a risk imposition, you are risking someone else's life. And that's not just the things parents can do their children... — darthbarracuda
Agreed. I almost got into an accident the other day. A vehicle is a weapon. — darthbarracuda
What you fail to realize is that people have this weird idea that their lives are typically better than what you suppose they are. Strange, huh? Not everyone is acutely aware of their existential dilemma, and if they are, most seem to distract themselves. It's not like birth is the most rational action. Nobody in their right mind has a child if they know how much they will suffer and care about this fact. — darthbarracuda
So instead of characterizing parents as culprits, perhaps you ought to characterize them as being misled by their hormones and emotions. — darthbarracuda
What's done is done. If you don't like it, there are ways out. Get on with your life. — darthbarracuda
I have rejected no such thing, I believe in the traditional Socratic method, and that has nothing to do with these posts anyway. — The Great Whatever
Large amounts of suffering are guaranteed in every life, though for some people more than others. — The Great Whatever
Then you should probably retract the car analogy. — The Great Whatever
I am aware that people not thinking about or understanding how bad their actions are plays a role in why they commit them. This is why the abolition of ignorance is important. — The Great Whatever
So are all culprits, though. — The Great Whatever
There are actually no ways to get out; suicide is a temporary solution to a permanent problem. Offering apologetics for atrocities will not stop them -- you must face up to them. — The Great Whatever
I have rejected no such thing, I believe in the traditional Socratic method, and that has nothing to do with these posts anyway. — The Great Whatever
Large amounts of suffering are guaranteed in every life, though for some people more than others. — The Great Whatever
Then you should probably retract the car analogy. — The Great Whatever
I am aware that people not thinking about or understanding how bad their actions are plays a role in why they commit them. This is why the abolition of ignorance is important. — The Great Whatever
So are all culprits, though. — The Great Whatever
There are actually no ways to get out; suicide is a temporary solution to a permanent problem. Offering apologetics for atrocities will not stop them -- you must face up to them. — The Great Whatever
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