AN would be the aesthetic pose in my book. I prefer to move on to the pragmatic meat of the issue of whether to have children. And how to approach life in general. — apokrisis
Hyperbole. — apokrisis
You were arguing as if the “higher consciousness” of humans were something neurobiological rather than sociocultural. This makes a difference. — apokrisis
able to suffer — apokrisis
Therapy can’t address the source of the distress — apokrisis
But if instead you understand human consciousness as a socially constructed habit of thought — apokrisis
then you can see how the inner narrative is something that can quite authentically be rewritten. — apokrisis
This is the shift in mindset behind the positive psychology movement. — apokrisis
helping people realise they have internalised certain scripts and, if they want, they can rewrite them to better suit their own lives. — apokrisis
It is not the “gift of life” that is our unconsented burden. — apokrisis
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
You're talking about living people dealing with their already-extant lives. Not. Relevant. — AmadeusD
It does not engage with AN concerns. — AmadeusD
Who could care about AN concerns? They are ridiculous given that there is plenty enough of pragmatic importance to be getting on with in our already extant lives. — apokrisis
So, you mean to say, you've been arguing with (i think) three people about antinatalism across two threads, and you don't care about, or understand the concerns of antinatalists? — AmadeusD
It might be relatively wrong but then also relatively right. You of course will do your usual mad thing of talking in exceptionless absolutes. — apokrisis
Remember I have already agreed that one ought to make responsible choices. One can tell if one is really in a position to do a good job of it. — apokrisis
Also, another reason why I am not an antinatalist is that I am open to the possibility of an afterlife. I am not sure how the possibility of the afterlife would influence the dilemma of antinatalism (I guess that it also depends on how the afterlife is, if there is one). — boundless
My error was only in re-entering a long stale discussion. — apokrisis
As someone on the autism spectrum, the question arises for me of whether in an afterlife I would be autistic.
If not, then it doesn't seem like it would be me in the afterlife.
If so, and for eternity, I expect I'd think the afterlife kind of sucks. — wonderer1
Once you get into a mindset oflookingrecognizing for problems — apokrisis
recognizing for problems — apokrisis
Is a more apt description. — AmadeusD
It could have been better written. — apokrisis
Well who gives a fuck when you put it like that. — apokrisis
Once you get into a mindset of looking for problems, you are never going to find an end to problems. — apokrisis
:up: :up:Who could care about AN concerns? They are ridiculous given that there is plenty enough of pragmatic importance to be getting on with in our already extant lives.
A fashion statement and not a philosophical conundrum. — apokrisis
For fun, let's test the pragmatic limits to your antinatalism. — apokrisis
Well that becomes the point where we can start winding back towards the practical notion of risks being balanced against rewards. We can get back to my commonsense position is that if we are going to treat reproduction ethically, then what matters in the prospective parents is not that the baby signed off on the whole experiment in advance but that the parents were wholeheartedly in a position to strive to make it a positive outcome. That they weren't just going to spray and walk away.
One can have a productive ethical debate where there are two complementary imperatives in play – like risks and rewards – and so the way we ought to behave is in the way that aims to arrive at its optimised win-win balance. You know. Thinking like an adult.
But if you set up your ethics on the side of a slippery slope fallacy, then why would you expect that to be useful or persuasive? — apokrisis
None of your scenario matters to the normative claim of the deontological basis being presented. — schopenhauer1
No, this isn't a slippery slope fallacy because the debate is at the normative level. Murder isn't somewhat wrong, it's wrong. — schopenhauer1
But what is murder? What acts fall into that category without involving shades of grey?
Perhaps you have a conviction in black and white thinking to a degree I cannot even fathom? I sort of suspect that deep down you must be kidding. That a little reasonableness will soon penetrate the pose. I'm still kind of giving credit to the possibility that you aren't completely in the grip of your own rhetoric. — apokrisis
What you are trying to do is deny that there is a core principle, but that is exactly what I am pushing back on. — schopenhauer1
So my approach is rooted in natural philosophy. That is its metaphysical basis. — apokrisis
Yours seems to be some kind of Platonic notion of perfection. A one-note "good". A leap to an extreme that ends all debate. — apokrisis
The slippery slope fallacy, as I say. All answers must arrive in the one place, whereas for me they have many possible balancing points between two complementary notions of "the good". — apokrisis
Pain is good as pain tells you what to avoid. Life is good because after that you will have plenty of oblivion in which to rest. — apokrisis
Nature has set us up genetically to think in this natural way. To understand life as a spectrum of possibilities that we must then navigate in a reasonable fashion. — apokrisis
The primary dichotomy of human social organisation is the balancing of competition and cooperation. Individual striving and collective identity. Both of these imperatives are good to the degree they are in a fruitful balance. — apokrisis
:100: :fire:My core principle is that there is always a dialectical balance in anything that could matter. A trade-off. And trade-offs ought to be optimised in a win-win fashion. That is the answer that is worth seeking. My approach leads me to pragmatism. We do the best we can by reasoning. We should always expect a complementary balance to exist in nature. Complementary balances is after all how nature can even exist. — apokrisis
You'll need to let me know what this has to do with AN first (i can save the time: It does not have more than an aesthetic resemblance to the issues AN wants to deal with). — AmadeusD
yes, that's right, but antinatalists don't confuse the issue:
No humans. Not not playgrounds. Let the people who exist use hte playground, for reasons your point out that would make the "no playgrounds" conclusion stupid as heck. — AmadeusD
I am conceptually in line with AN entirely (including the above prescriptive thinking and hte delineation between living and potential persons — AmadeusD
It's not relevant to me whether someone claims they have a good life individually - the argument is about lives to come. Those who are currently living aren't relevant, — AmadeusD
There are clearly not. There are potential victims. — AmadeusD
(this one I've picked, because it clearly shows me saying something stupid, but still attests to your error.If these people were not having children, and increasing the sheer number of sufferers on the planet, I don't think this argument would any weight as one's delusion becomes one's reality internally. — AmadeusD
ANists hysterically confuse 'preventing possible lives' with 'preventing (and reducing) harm to / suffering of actual lives'. — 180 Proof
If you have an argument against that argument — apokrisis
But once you declare no line can be drawn, no balance of interests can exist, then that becomes reason eating itself. — apokrisis
So does your AN charter need to add the clause of no sex at all as that is putting you at risk for breaking the faith? Do you need to go out and get sterilised because you could always get drunk one night or duped into performing a service for some cunning natalist? — apokrisis
The risks might be diminishing, but even a vasectomy fails 1 in 10,000 times. At some point do you not eventually get a pass on this? — apokrisis
Does even the AN extremist accept that imperatives have their pragmatic limits? — apokrisis
We can get back to my commonsense position that what matters in regard to approaching reproduction ethically is not whether the prospective parents can have the baby sign off on the whole exercise in advance, but that the parents are wholeheartedly engaged in making it a turn of as a positive choice. — apokrisis
One can have a productive ethical debate where there are two complementary imperatives in play – like risks and rewards — apokrisis
But if you set up your ethics on the side of a slippery slope fallacy, then why would you expect that to be useful or persuasive? — apokrisis
But that is just your failure to understand my position. — apokrisis
My core principle is that there is always a dialectical balance in anything that could matter. A trade-off. And trade-offs ought to be optimised in a win-win fashion. That is the answer that is worth seeking. My approach leads me to pragmatism. We do the best we can by reasoning. We should always expect a complementary balance to exist in nature. Complementary balances is after all how nature can even exist. — apokrisis
This might be a fatal mistake in your reasoning — schopenhauer1
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