Any choice, always and in every situation? — Possibility
Boy, that's a whole lot of criticism without much substance. Pot meet kettle. — Pantagruel
if I consider the faculty of understanding which I possess, I find that it is of very small extent, — Pantagruel
dude you literally ignored the rest of my comment and focused on the first paragraph. F — khaled
Is it ok to plant a bomb BEFORE a baby is born and setting it to explode after? There is no person to give consent at the time the specific action of planting the bomb is taking place. — khaled
If there is no such thing as free will, then everything is moot, most importantly, any discussion about it, which could not be taking place. — Pantagruel
Without the concept of free will there can be no responsibility for anything,
and consequently no meaning.
Free will and consciousness are synonymous.
Consciousness is the manifestation of free will.
One of the most fundamental interpretations of life is self-direction,
Claiming that free will does not exist would be a self contradictory action,
Postulating something is an event of free will.
If God willed "something" other than being, God would will no-thing. — Dfpolis
But I do not see a compelling argument in anti-natalism that would convince people of this position. Surely, few (ZERO?) humans would ever be able to get past their own subjective, "well 'I' am glad that 'I' was born" or vice versa. — ZhouBoTong
The way I see it, the existence of free will essentially boils down to three assertions, — Possibility
Our world is a war-ridden world. War, is a state of lawlessness — a disregard to the law. — SethRy
No nonono. I was talking about the exruciating pain of humainty as it flies towards extinction be it due to heat death or more likely internal strife. — khaled
Is removing someone's ability to walk painlessly, bad? I think we'd both say yes because that's a long lasting physical effect. — khaled
can experience pain and suffering and I do not know why you don't think the same way. — khaled
Somethings are internally contradictory or refuted by further evidence. — Andrew4Handel
You might want to take a look at that sign in the middle; it's an equals sign. It means that energy and mass are equal, mediated by a number. There's an interesting video referenced above. I think you might like it. — tim wood
tbh idk what I was thinking when I wrote that. — khaled
Is taking away a capacity for x painlessly bad? So paralyzing someone painlessly without their consent? — khaled
They force them to have the capacity for suffering which I think is just as big a crime as causing the suffering yourself. I don't know why you can't see this — khaled
Because in this case you're not just delaying it you're relaying the pain to someone else. — khaled
Also just out of curiosity. Can you think of any example where an action that produces COMPARABLE amounts of pain and suffering is FORCED onto someone who has absolutely no demand for either and where that is considered permissable? — khaled
Yes because having children is only delaying the inevitable. There will be a "final generation" of humans who will have to suffer from not having enough people. Having children is simply taking that burnden and putting it on somoene else. People definitely benefit from other people, but eventually there will be a time where lack of people WILL become an issue. Having children is giving that suffering for the next generation to shoulder until the last one finally collapses. There is no point in it. — khaled
Just because I'd benefit or society would benefit form having a kid doesn't justify me risking forcing one to suffer for 80 years. — khaled
No one benefits from you having children except you. — khaled
No. Because the light desingers and manufacturers did not intentionally cause this harm. While giving birth to someone is very intentional and done with full knowledge it would cause them harm. — khaled
Ok so if a child is run over by a car and loses all functionality in his leg. There are two causes for his loss of functionality. First of all, the car hit him (non consentually). Second, he was there. But why was he there in the first place? Because he was born (non consentually). So you can say part of the reason he was harmed was that he was born non consentually can we agree?
Or do you not consider enabling harm a factor at all? — khaled
So if the bomb goes off non consentually who is at fault? The person that planted it right? — khaled
When a person walks into a situation that brings them ANY harm — khaled
What if it was. What if someone set a bomb to exlode BEFORE a certain baby was born and set it to explode AFTER he was born. — khaled
QM describes quarks as fast-moving points of energy - — Possibility
I disagree with your characterization of consent. If you do not rape someone then you are refraining from an action because you respect someones consent. Refraining from actions not doing actions is the main way that consent is respected. — Andrew4Handel
I gave my own experiences of being forced to go to church and school also I was forced to eat what my mother chose for me — Andrew4Handel
The same with khaled, all their arguments can be subsumed in the one I just gave. It can be characterized in a way that still takes your objection into consideration, and as stated earlier, makes a powerful argument with that objection at the core of its logic. — schopenhauer1
The consent issue only arises in humans because of our unique cognitive capacities. I don't know what other animals would think about procreating if they could reflect and reason like us. — Andrew4Handel
I think he means that other people have different considerations and evaluations of life. — schopenhauer1
Having a child is not letting someone in. — Andrew4Handel
I think other peoples reasons can be considered false. I don't think reason is subjective. This is why I differentiate between belief and knowledge. — Andrew4Handel
Matter is comprised of interaction: particles in dynamic relationship with each other. As tim wood‘s video showed, what we see as matter, mass, is mostly the energy of these relationships, and only a very small percentage is the particles themselves.
So, the way I see it, interaction is at the heart of all matter, more so than the elementary particles. What we know as matter, therefore, is the extension of this interaction.
Does that make more sense or less? — Possibility
Having a child is acting to impose experiences on someone else. — Andrew4Handel
any thing happening to them — Andrew4Handel
