So at what point does anti-natalism become just another social interest group telling me what I should think?
As an evangelist, do you believe you have “the truth” on your side? Yours is the view I simply must follow, and not some more generally held view in society? — apokrisis
Anyone birthed. — schopenhauer1
What does that mean? You were birthed. Does that force you to be a natalist? — apokrisis
What does that mean? You were birthed. Does that force you to be a natalist? — apokrisis
He's wrong in his recent reply too, because that particular attitude is not capturing Natalism. — AmadeusD
They want to see someone else live out X and they make it happen. They force the hand. — schopenhauer1
I already said you can use what term you’d like. — schopenhauer1
Ok. But you're talking about an established population ethics concept. It would be more reasonable for me to say "pick a different term". THe one you've chosen is taken. — AmadeusD
Using 'Natalism' as an ethical argument toward any small group, or individual is completely inapt and inhumane (largely). — AmadeusD
I mean that at the end of the day antinatalists don’t force a way of life unto others. Natalists (or whatever term you’d like to use for it), de facto lead to forced outcomes for others. — schopenhauer1
Natalism is a population ethic concern and has to do with population growth. — AmadeusD
So you positively want to stop me having babies and I don't feel particularly strongly about whether you do or not. I only feel strongly about you being suitably thoughtful about this important choice. I'm perfectly fine if you decide the proposition is a lose-lose in your circumstances.
And yet for some reason your feelings about my procreation are what must be the case here? You have decided that all births are only a losing story? And that is what must be forced on me? And now on my own children too? You will be chasing after my descendants til the end of time with your philosophy? — apokrisis
They are not because "natalism" is not an ideology or doctrine or dogma –"unlike antinatalism. Natality is a biological function that animals can prevent or terminate. Having been born does not in any way entail procreating. Thus, "antinatalism". (i.e. natality : antinatalism :: mortality : denialism¹)You would have a point if natalism and antinatalism were symmetrical- but they’re not. — schopenhauer1
They are not because "natalism" is not an ideology or doctrine or dogma –"unlike antinatalism. Natality is a biological function that animals can prevent or terminate. Having been born does not in any way entail procreating. Thus, "antinatalism". (i.e. natality : antinatalism :: mortality : denialism¹) — 180 Proof
Agree.creates a caricature "natalist" — apokrisis
caricatured anti-natalism — apokrisis
Not sure that any society was ever blindly natalist, or even anti-natalist, in the way schop requires. — apokrisis
unlike antinatalism. — 180 Proof
Antinatalism's main gripes revolve around causing others unnecessary suffering and the fact that something as important a decision can never be consented. — schopenhauer1
Procreationists/natalists want to see a FORCED outcome for other people. — schopenhauer1
I claim that procreation is a political move. It is VOTING on ANOTHER'S BEHALF that one must carry out X. — schopenhauer1
So quite literally, antinatalists cause no FORCE, simply propose arguments while pro-procreation people quite literally FORCE situations upon others. — schopenhauer1
You have to catastrophise the average life to make life itself seem always an intolerable burden and thus never justified in its starting. — apokrisis
Your position is that of most people, even one's aware of hte burden of living so there are no surprises here. — AmadeusD
Given you find yourself alive, is it then better to have a positive or a negative mindset about that fact? — apokrisis
is your situation going to be made better or worse if you believe your fate is in your own hands, or if you instead believe the hope has already gone? — apokrisis
i can save the time: It does not have more than an aesthetic resemblance to the issues AN wants to deal with — AmadeusD
Having one's fate in one's own hands seems to overwhelm (literally) the majority of people to psychosis. — AmadeusD
You'll need to let me know what this has to do with AN first — AmadeusD
If you polled a 1000 people – a proper cross-section of society – how many would say it would have been just better never to have been born than to have lived at all?
I would expect an antinatalist to at least be able to offer this data to show there was any kind of genuine consent issue. — apokrisis
So because of this round up error, humanity should end itself forthwith as some kind of supreme ethical act? — apokrisis
If I am not certain that my son or my daughter will be happy, it seems to me that I am accepting a possible tragedy (his or her regret for having been born) as an acceptable price for some good, which is external for them. If I am 'justifying' his or her life (which he or she might not see as a 'good' for him or her) as a mean to a possible 'higher good', it seems that I accept to treat him or her as a mean to an end (let's say also that his or her actions benefit for many people, but they do not percieve any good from that). — boundless
But the decision is not taken by 'humanity' but by individual human beings in their singularity. — boundless
It is not the “gift of life” that is our unconsented burden. It is the attitudes we were surrounded by that could be the reason for a life of burden and suffering. That which we could not help internalising as it was how we were treated, the circumstances of our early rearing. But that which we can grow out if we have a clearer idea about how the human mind is shaped. — apokrisis
If I am 'justifying' his or her life (which he or she might not see as a 'good' for him or her) as a mean to a possible 'higher good', it seems that I accept to treat him or her as a mean to an end (let's say also that his or her actions benefit for many people, but they do not percieve any good from that).
I am wrong? — boundless
Again, do you accept that people are allowed make their own informed risk-reward choices or not? Are they allowed to express the potentials of their own bodies or do their preferences require your consent as the fertility police. The fertility police who will anyway only ever say no. — apokrisis
But antinatalism is claiming this transcendent principle that no chances should be taken at all. I don’t get to choose what is right for me in my circumstances. The antinatalist has assumed the ethical high ground that trumps any choice I might make. Which seems a little fascist. — apokrisis
This is the shift in mindset behind the positive psychology movement. A new style of therapy for helping people realise they have internalised certain scripts and, if they want, they can rewrite them to better suit their own lives. — apokrisis
For deontologists, it would be wrong to use people. — schopenhauer1
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