Oh, S, and you were doing so well. — T Clark
I'd agree that the parents avoid that risk. Not the child though, because there isn't any child that has avoided the risk. — Echarmion
First off, you haven’t shown it to be faulty yet. — khaled
Secondly, if antinatalist reasoning is actually followed there would be no fetus to kill or not kill. — khaled
Me too. However that is completely irrelevant. Whether or not you are glad to have been born doesn’t determine whether giving birth is right or wrong. You and me are lucky enough that the risk paid off, that doesn’t mean it was ok to take the risk in the first place. In the same way that if person A stabbed person B and person B turned out to be a masochist and enjoyed it, that doesn’t make stabbing in general okay. — khaled
The fact is, in real life the least risky option is always preferred when consent is not available. Name a situation where this isn’t the case. — khaled
Please come up with one not birth related where there someone is said to be justified to do something that risks severely harming someone else when consent is not available and where a less risky alternative is available. Because giving a birth related example and using your own personal experience doesn’t work as I’ve shown. — khaled
As I’ve pointed out before, this line can be used to justify literally any atrocity. The fact that someone can commit suicide to get out of a situation they hate doesn’t justify putting them in that situation the first place or risking putting them there. — khaled
Did I mention not calling anyone a dick? You helped me out with that one by giving me many opportunities to practice turning the other cheek. — T Clark
Again, empirically, "folks believe all sorts of wacky crap". — Terrapin Station
The point is one alternative means no one experiences harm and no one is deprived of good (because there is no actual person who exists). — schopenhauer1
The other alternative is someone is born and guaranteed will experience some harm. — schopenhauer1
Non-existence- no one is born/no one is deprived = win/win. — schopenhauer1
The idea that someone could have had more good experiences or whatnot if born matters not, in this procreational scenario. The risk khaled is talking about is mitigated and no actual person is alive losing out on anything. — schopenhauer1
Nonexistence is not a "less risky" alternative for the child though. Non-existance is not more or less pleasant than existence. That's a category error. — Echarmion
Whereas I'd say that claiming that any arbitrary person couldn't believe any arbitrary thing is not at all justifiable (and suggests little experience with a wide variety of people, because folks believe all sorts of wacky crap). — Terrapin Station
You didn't ask me, but of course I'd have no objection to that. — Terrapin Station
What's this referring to. What problem? — khaled
Alright then. What do you suppose we do in cases such as these where consent isn't available? I say, go with the least risky option, aka the one least likely to harm. If I claimed that having children is not wrong on the basis of consent but on the basis of consequences what would be the refutation to that?
1- Having children risks disasterous consequences for the child
2- Actions that risk disasterous consequences for others are wrong when a less risky alternative is possible in cases where consent is unavailable
3- Having children is wrong because a less risky alternative is possible (not having children) — khaled
If someone says, "I believe I'm on the moon with Chevy Chase," and you go, "Really? You believe that?" And they say, "Yes, I do," etc. then how would "common sense" tell you what they believe? How do you figure that works? — Terrapin Station
That wouldn't work even, because mental content is only observable to the bearer, because it's what it's like to BE the brain in question.
We can know what someone believes through common sense? Hahahahaha
Talk about not justifying something — Terrapin Station
It seems like that should be obvious. To know that someone is saying something different than they believe, we have to be able to compare what they said with what they believe. — Terrapin Station
The bearing it has here is that lying is a matter of someone saying something that's contrary to what they actually believe. — Terrapin Station
When do we get to the part where we're observing their beliefs? — Terrapin Station
Not from the showing of a single swastika, no. But regular, supportive, coverage of (say) racist stuff does cause a surge in support for organisations like the KKK, who are more prominent today since Trump came to power, and gave them his support. — Pattern-chaser
I’ve stated explicitly that I don’t believe it should be censored. Take that to whatever logical conclusion you wish and imagine I’m arguing for it, but I cannot make it any more explicit. — NOS4A2
As long as it’s nervous system hasn’t been developed, yes. — khaled
Ad absurdium arguments only make sense if we agree killing said fetus is absurd. — khaled
How about: waking people up. The only way you can ask for consent is by doing the act in question. Does that mean you can go around waking up anyone who happens to be asleep? — khaled
Is there any other poster that tim doesn't figure is a liar or a troll, though? — Terrapin Station
Fetuses become humans. I was talking about fetuses in the last reply my bad for not making that clear. — khaled
You know what I meant cut the crap. One of them becomes a sentient being and the other doesn’t. Do you think there should be any change in how we treat them based on that fact? — khaled
I would if it can be shown bananas experience pain to an extent close to us. — khaled
You think there is no difference between a banana and a fetus? — khaled
You think that there shouldn't be any change in how we treat them based on the fact that one will grow to be a human? — khaled
Why does this stop it from being applicable? If it is impossible to give consent, consent is not given. If consent is not given it can't be assumed. It doesn't matter if it was possible to ask for consent or not. — khaled
Let's start with this one then:
1- Imposing something that risks significant harm on someone without their consent is wrong
2- Childbirth is imposing something that risks significant harm on someone without their consent
3- Childbirth is wrong — khaled
Oh and S, if you're on the moon with Chevy Chase, then who the fuck is this I'm on Mars with? — Isaac
Unlike the sun, you can never observe the way the person's beliefs match up with what they say. — Terrapin Station
Perhaps there's just no good justification for claims of rights at all. Maybe it's just something we pulled out of our collective asses. So far, I haven't seen any convincing arguments for entitlements. Even if we assume the existence of God, assertions of "God-given" rights make me wonder where people get the idea that such things as God-given rights are self-evident. — petrichor
For me, these are goals. I often fail to live up to my own standards. I'll keep trying. — T Clark
I don't know, I guess you'd have to ask the guy who cites it. I couldn't say if he's knowledgable enough to list all those types of work, that's hard-sci, but maybe het gets close. — csalisbury
No it's a kind of joke. It's not 'will' but 'force,', as S did, is just exchanging one word for another. — csalisbury
Good. Don't fetishize anything. Rovelli didn't and that's why, if he were a poster, and other posters were discussing, say, the Mahabharata, he wouldn't jump into say -- 'yet I won't find that in any physics book.' Instead he integrated it wonderfully. — csalisbury
I don't know. The way you ask that question makes me think you'd shut down Augustine and Heidegger as well. Yet Carlo Rovelli, no scientific lightweight, cites both favorably. It seems that well-trained physicists are able to see different tacks as approaching similar phenomena. In short, real scientists don't fetishize science. — csalisbury
The general basics of physics don't purport to give an explanation of their cause though, so why would you bring them up as though they do? — csalisbury