It seems like everyone is obsessed with the highly ego-centric model of happiness that is "being happy". People go to Barns and Nobles, order books from Amazon, and tire themselves over their perceived lack-of happiness in their lives. Even positive psychology is mired with the concept of happiness as an ultimate goal. A quick search on this forum will show that there's a strong bias to achieve or even maintain happiness. Yet, there is no aspect of being that is totally and wholly independent of one's situation/circumstances/state of affairs, and this is what Western thought gets wrong in my opinion. — Wallows
I've asked you a ton of times what's harmful about it. What consequences will hurt someone? Specify what you're talking about (not exhaustively--just via some examples).. And I'm saying childbirth is harmful — khaled
No, I should elaborate. I do know what depression feels like, and this doesn't really feel like depression. More like some kind of blissful acceptance or contentment. But, I've become so accustomed to the lure of "being happy" that this new feeling is somewhat foreign to me. Does that make sense? — Wallows
Stay away from sex, autoerotica, and self-actualization;
Stay away from fatty food, from carbs, from proteins, from opioioioioids, from salt, from natural and artificial sweeteners, colouring and spices; from dairy prodcts, (they are full of dihydrogen monoxide, you know), from insecticides, from genicides, from pesticides; stay away from sleeping, from sitting, from standing, walking and running; stay away from people (they are a deadly bunch), and stay away from animals and plants, rocks, sand, grass, etc. — god must be atheist
A person has a right to live under the set of rules that they find fair. — JosephS
Individuals born to a model of governance that they did not accede to are unethically imposed upon . . . — JosephS
And then you get those silly Gettier problems. — T Clark
In any case what bearing does it have on or against the anti-natalist argument that being born will necessarily provide the causes or conditions that will occasion suffering? — Janus
I think I get what you’re saying, but the way I see it, any state of being is finite in time. The doing refers to an event that loses its status as an entity once it’s measured. Energy measured is a difference in relational 3D information states over time, just as a photon measured becomes a moving particle. Even a life measured becomes a series of relational 3D information states over time. So yes, a doing or being that can’t be measured in relation to time doesn’t cohere. — Possibility
You are lost in your own red herrings, that you have no argument against the actual antinatalist claims. — schopenhauer1
Are you talking about frames of reference as used by Einstein in Special Relativity? — Noah Te Stroete
Because the fact that we can imagine or conceive frames of reference as existing independently of percipients does not entail that they actually do. — Janus
What you still seem to fail to grasp is that physics is a model created by a percipient. — Janus
Is there reference absent percipients, according to you? — Janus
No, again I haven't denied that the concept is taken to refer to something extramental. — Janus
which I do understand is not necessarily conceived as a human observer — Janus
I thought he said the phrase referred to the concept which is mental and refers to something extra-mental, — Noah Te Stroete
Sure: the phrase 'frame of reference' refers to the concept frame of reference. — Janus
A frame of reference just is a concept — Janus
Classic Terrapin. — Noah Te Stroete
So you think there is physics without percipients? Not what physics describes mind, but physics itself? — Janus
What it is saying is that in the case of the procreational decision, no collateral damage of harm is done to someone else. Yes, at that point, all that matters is that harm is not foisted on someone else. — schopenhauer1
This brigs us to the bad argument of suffering of the parent for not having a child, the same thing that Terrapin Station uses. — schopenhauer1
For example: most people would say that modifications that risk harm are bad not that modifications that are "unusual" as you have defined them are bad. — khaled
There is no way to convince someone who believes social norms are the basis for what makes actions against non consenting entities (that will become consenting) of antinatalism. — khaled
There is nothing I can do to convince you — khaled
You have shown that for some bizzare reason you think that whatever the social norms dictate is what is ethically correct concerning non consenting entities even when they will grow to be ones. — khaled
For me "unusual" isn't bad but "harmful" is. — khaled
And don't say "because it's unusual" I am asking why unusual is bad — khaled
I am trying to argue that it is bad according to the subjective values you set here a — khaled
Ok let's take this slowly then. Why exactly is genetically modifying a baby to have 8 broken limbs on birth bad? And don't say "because it's unusual" I am asking why unusual is bad — khaled
Ohhhhhh. So your argument against antinatalism i — khaled
Also please actually respond to my points not literally a single line. — khaled
