P3: If a view multiplies ontic categories without necessity, then it should not be accepted (Occam’s Razor). [p → q] — Bob Ross
Your brain, in interacting with the external world during childhood, developed a method of generating and intepreting brain states, that in consciousness is experienced as representative of things and events in the external world. — wonderer1
Also we're a social species, we invest quite a lot in making sure your model matches my model to a good degree of similarity. — Isaac
But we want to minimise surprise, so a good match between the probability function of the model and the distribution of the hidden state is something we evolve toward, purely by energy efficiency. — Isaac
I like this. This is a far more satisfactory answer than "It's just silly lets not think about it." It takes the problem seriously and suggests a genuine solution. And this analysis seems right to me. It seems like @Cuthbert has correctly articulated a niggling feeling of 'there's something wrong with the thought experiment, but I'm not quite sure what'. — bert1
To study physiology with a clear conscience, one must insist on the fact that the sense-organs are not phenomena in the sense of the idealistic philosophy; as such they certainly could not be causes! Sensualism, therefore, at least as regulative hypothesis, if not as heuristic principle. What? And others say even that the external world is the work of our organs? But then our body, as a part of this external world, would be the work of our organs! But then our organs themselves would be the work of our organs! It seems to me that this is a complete REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM, if the conception CAUSA SUI is something fundamentally absurd. Consequently, the external world is NOT the work of our organs — ? — Nietzsche
“Once upon a time, I dreamt I was a butterfly, fluttering hither and thither, to all intents and purposes a butterfly. I was conscious only of my happiness as a butterfly, unaware that I was myself. Soon I awaked, and there I was, veritably myself again. Now I do not know whether I was then a man dreaming I was a butterfly, or whether I am now a butterfly, dreaming I am a man.” — Zhuangzi
From birth we can look forward to being host
To woe, and then to giving up the ghost.
Happy are they who quickly burn to toast,
And blessed are they who ne’er came to the roast. — PoeticUniverse
The problem here is not with 'life', it's with your storytelling abilities. — Isaac
There is the alternative to embodiment, but one doesn't think any normal person would want/choose it, unless there is something wrong with them. — skyblack
Surprisingly, this is my position as well, only stated differently. If we think it’s more likely that they will find life worthwhile, it’s fine. Most cases are unclear, but data surrounding overall levels of happiness, suicide rates, etc. leads us to believe that it is almost always more likely that the person will consider their life valuable, or worth living. Therefore it is almost always permissible. — Pinprick
Right, well partially right, but you also know that they will experience pleasure, so you have to consider that as well. But technically being born doesn’t cause harm/pleasure, it’s just the necessary conditions for harm/pleasure to take place. — Pinprick
if you want to eliminate procreation this isn’t a zero-sum game because you’re trading off the potential suffering of the not yet born anti-natalist for the real suffering you would cause in many living people. — Joshs
Remember, the political issue here isn’t about preventing the birth of everyone who might suffer, it’s about preventiing the birth of those whose suffering would cause them to regret having been born and to support anti-natalism, and that I imagine is a small fraction of the population. — Joshs
This is your opinion. — Joshs
Why are you a better proxy for those not yet born than these other voices? — Joshs
Most would be saying they don’t mind the pain and your decision ‘deprived’ them of life. — Joshs
there are a lot of great things to enjoy in life. Most people seem to agree — Isaac
I've changed the details here, but I had a client once who could not read books because he'd convinced himself that tiny invisible people were living on its pages and he would harm them by closing the book.
He would say "but how do you know there aren't, why take the risk? It's not worth it". It seems a similar delusion is happening here, imagining the souls of yet-to-be children looking down on the world thinking "please don't put me there, I prefer it here". — Isaac
As I've stated before, the very act of bringing someone into existence is a political act. — schopenhauer1
It's just dealing with one damn thing after another. — schopenhauer1
Nah man. Even if there were genetic propensities, they don't explain variation like that. Reasons are cultural. — fdrake
One thing I don’t get about antinatalism is how the same arguments for it aren’t also arguments for suicide, or even arguments for mass euthanasia. If life is suffering and nothing can fundamentally be done to improve that, and nothing else is worth putting up with it, then best to end all life as quickly and painlessly as possible, no? If not that conclusion, then something in the arguments leading to it must be wrong. — Pfhorrest
So if society perpetuates its dictates based on enculturating tricks, one of the more cunning ones is to make sure that the pessimist "knows" it is THEIR fault the foundations of existence have a negative value. See, by turning it on the experiencer as just their lack of participation in the good parts of existence, then existence itself can never get the bad rap. It's a clever meme that it's YOUR fault and thus the system is sound, the system is good, it is just your "malfunctioning" view. — schopenhauer1
Perhaps humanity will willingly work together to end the pointless repetition and suffering for future generations. — schopenhauer1
So what if some people don't want to die, but don't want the dealing with either? Yes, there are coping strategies, but having to do any of it, improvement regimes or otherwise, are not wanted to be entered in. Of course one is shit out of luck. That is the conundrum for someone who doesn't want any of it.
I was looking for some interesting conversation on the conundrum rather than disdain for the idea itself which I'm well aware people on the forum have a biased against. — schopenhauer1
One reaction I have this time, is that on some level it seems to me it is not taking responsibility for being a part of this universe. Yes, it is bewildering and strange, but I do not simply find myself in it, I am a part of it. I am like it. I don't just experience the mystery, I am the mystery. — Coben
But I don't think any life is free of unavoidable conditions. What if just surviving in general is bad, in ANY manner- Robinson Crusoe, advanced post-industrial economies, any of them? — schopenhauer1
You never asked, is paradise unattainable. And no it isn't. Precisely the problem. — schopenhauer1
But is it really so simple? Did I just burst from a parinibbanic state, taking form as this body only for this conscious experience to dissolve back into nothingness, eternally? — inyenzi
What's the alternative? Is this a nod to the idea of reincarnation? — Schopenhauer1
We are in an initial state of dissatisfaction or deprivation that must be dealt with, repeatedly until unconsciousness/death. This whole system is deemed as "good" by many, but not reflective about its deprivational nature that is there to begin with. If life presents itself as challenges to "deal with" (get and keep a job to survive, let's say, or making more comfortable environs for yourself), then what is it about this that is "good"? — schopenhauer1
As long as you're a caring parent and are willing and able to provide as much as you can for your child, I see no reasonnot to have kids. — Purple Pond
Before someone is born, what on earth would possess someone to non-consensually cause all risk of harm to another person? What does someone need to go through in the first place in order for this to be justified? Nothing..just selfish want of that future person to be born to go through XYZ agenda (which may or may not happen the way you intended it to anyways). — schopenhauer1
But two important points have to be made - unlike what Noah suggests, the fact of rebirth is fundamental to all forms of Buddhism. You can interpret it to say that it means the constant birth and death of our feelings and emotions, moment to moment - and that's true. But Buddhism really plays out on a much larger canvas than that. It is a sore point for 'secular Buddhism', in particular, which is generally averse to the idea that re-birth is something that really happens. — Wayfarer
Actually, I'll just leave it at that. Let's see how the antinatalist resolves how much suffering is tolerable, or does the whole thing come off as some fundamentalism if no suffering or harm is demanded. — Wallows
But... I have realized that antinatalism is, in essence, an extreme form of psychological projection onto an unborn and unknown entity.
What do I mean by this? Well, we all have visions of the future, or perhaps the antinatalist has an overabundance of concern for the future (anxiety, dread, angst). Those of us who have been mired in their misery, unjustifiably so in many cases, have taken their experiences and have created a fictional entity that is an unborn child. — Wallows