if they do end up having a baby and that baby is deformed, then is that still a reason not to have it? Life is better than no life. — Hyper
It's willful engagement in behavior that is likely to produce an unsafe condition of elevated likelihood for birth defects. "Life is better than no life" would not be a way to justify drinking alcohol during pregnancy or competing in a boxing competition while pregnant. Why would it be any different in this scenario? — Outlander
because the only case in which this life exists is if the act is done. — Hyper
Also, if they do end up having a baby and that baby is deformed, then is that still a reason not to have it? — Hyper
Good reason for the act not to be done. The sexual satisfaction of two people who have agency and a choice of other partners who might satisfy them weighed against a lifetime of suffering for one innocent victim with no choices at all is a net loss. A big one!because the only case in which this life exists is if the act is done. — Hyper
It's willful engagement in behavior that is likely to produce an unsafe condition of elevated likelihood for birth defects. — Outlander
↪Leontiskos. What a strawman. Bearing any children would be better than bearing no children, or would you be in support of eugenics for the disabled? — Hyper
A better reason for claiming that incest should not be considered as permissible is that the conditions for consent to it don't make that much sense, the hypothetical scenario in the OP is not representative of the scenarios where incest occurs. It's a bit like saying that murder is permissible since there are conditions in which killing is permissible. — fdrake
You have to be really careful using principles like that, because as written they provide support for eugenics. — fdrake
The prohibition on incest is a form of eugenics. — Leontiskos
Alright, which forms are eugenics are good and which are bad? — fdrake
Of course it doesn't. They're not producing conditions that are likely to make an innocent suffer.Moreover, your reason doesn't touch people shagging who're both sterilised. — fdrake
I wouldn't go so far as evil. They are committing a selfish, irresponsible act with willful disregard for the risk they're imposing for a non-consenting third person - and the community. The analogous fatalaty charge would be 'reckless endangerment'.IE, people who have heritable conditions having a child together is just definitionally "wilful engagement in behaviour that is likely to produce an unsafe condition of elevated likelihood for birth defects". If having a child is wrong on that basis, you've got a conclusive argument for people with genetic diseases having kids committing an evil act — fdrake
However, there are cases of adult siblings pairing up. Unless one partner has some significant undue influence over the other, that's consensual. The run-of-the mill child-molesting parent is not under consideration here.A better reason for claiming that incest should not be considered as permissible is that the conditions for consent to it don't make that much sense, the hypothetical scenario in the OP is not representative of the scenarios where incest occurs. — fdrake
If they were 60, nobody would notice or care. They're more likely to be in their teens or early 20's, and not necessarily with a history of separation. Still no moral problem, so long as they take effective measures against procreation.If hypothetically you had two sterile 60 year olds who were separated at birth, fell in love, married and shagged...what's wrong there? — fdrake
I would apply the principle that it is never immoral to abstain from copulation in view of the extreme hardship that would result on the part of the person conceived. Rare diseases and the deformities that can result from incest certainly fall under this umbrella. — Leontiskos
"Never being immoral" isn't the same thing as "being required not to". — fdrake
I'm afraid I don't understand. Are you saying eugenics is never immoral? — fdrake
And why does that make incest impermissible when there's no chance of procreation? — fdrake
At the very least I would say that is impermissible on account of societal example and norms, but I'm not looking to have that conversation. It would at least require a more nuanced thread. — Leontiskos
That's what I said, yes. — Vera Mont
So we have a duty to bring about uniquely bad lives? — Leontiskos
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