One way to approach it is as a generalization of virtue. Do you go off to join the revolution or stay home to be with your dying mother ? Perhaps either choice has merit. Maybe I respect your resolution. Maybe I respect your vision of the theoretical or abstract undecidability here. But in fact you still have to make a choice, and it's arguably more noble to be resolute. Once you've made the 'absurd' decision, do it with all thy might. — green flag
Your existentialist might have a Hamlet-like frustration with his theoretical bent and decide to take himself for a practical man. — green flag
Why not? Don't people voluntarily agree on ways to coexist all the time?
States just aren't a useful way of reaching such voluntarily agreements, because they're inherently predicated on coercion. This is also why I believe attempts to instrumentalize the state for ethical ends is a flawed endeavor. — Tzeentch
What about the people who do not have children, though? Perhaps I should have specified better, but this is the group that in my view is subjected to collective punishment, because they haven't done anything wrong and yet are forced to pay. — Tzeentch
The way you're framing it, it also sounds an awful lot like collective punishment, in which people are punished for crimes (or moral slights) they did not commit. — Tzeentch
The satisfaction of need is life sustaining, that of desire is also life sustaining; in the sense of bringing the organism pleasure which is opposite of pain. So, things of value are life sustaining things. — boagie
It'd be like a doctor experimenting on his patients. — Tzeentch
Modern medicine is probably one of the better things states provide — Tzeentch
Further, if we accept this healthy body/healthy mind minimum, the actions of the state that pertain to those things are not limited to medicine. — Tzeentch
What it boils down to is that states don't have the will nor capacity to genuinely pursue the healthy bodies and minds of their citizens, which is why I don't believe we should look for states to do such things.
And to circle back to the ethical nature of the OP, if the state can't do a damn good job, there's no way it can justify the costs it imposes on people. — Tzeentch
Can one truly afford to answer such questions after the fact and still consider oneself ethical? — Tzeentch
Because I struggle to think of ways states contribute to people's healthy bodies and healthy minds.
The best case could perhaps be made for modern medicine, but honestly I think the state as a whole does about as much to cause problems as it does to solve them. — Tzeentch
Is that true, though?
As a basic humanistic starting point, I like to believe every person deserves a healthy mind and a healthy body. — Tzeentch
Are states really able to offer these things? — Tzeentch
So no, it isn’t true that “Once an individual is born, they are immediately part of a society that may not fully align with their values and principles, and they may have to make compromises and trade-offs to survive and succeed in that society”. The very first assertion…at this point I could care less what follows. — NOS4A2
I cannot just accept the first assertion and move on. I need to know if the principles and values were acquired later in life, through life, long after the fact of being born. — NOS4A2
And even so, does it matter if the subject in question has certain values at all? If we accept the principles mentioned, it seems that the newborn can still be "violated" regardless of the future values it may accept as an adult. The retroactive application of values unnecessarily convolutes the argument. — finarfin
So, I am asking how do you think about making sense in the maze of philosophical pluralism? Also, to what extent is reason a quest for reason, a search for personal meaning or connected to power balances or imbalances in social structures? — Jack Cummins
It is, rather, about trying to get to an agreed starting point or marking the differences in starting points. — Fooloso4
Perhaps I misunderstand you. I hear you objecting to all cultural moralities as, on balance, bad. — Mark S
Societies decide when “people will be forced to do X” when they advocate and enforce moral norms. For example, people will be coerced into not stealing and murdering. Will some people not like that? Sure. Will anyone else care? No. — Mark S
But the mindscape does have some unintuitive implications. For instance, Shakespeare didn’t create the play Macbeth. Rather, he discovered it in the mindscape where it had been from all eternity. And Albert Einstein didn’t invent the Theory of Relativity. Rather, he found it lying in the mindscape where it, too, had been from all eternity.
And this post has been lying in the mindscape for all eternity, just waiting for someone to read it. — Art48
Perhaps helping others and otherwise being kind could cause issues relative to autonomy or lack thereof, but wouldn’t that be rare? Why focus on possible rare bad effects instead of the normal, plentiful benefits? — Mark S
Slavery wasn't always the case, nor racism. Whole communities of people did not practice either and considered them an abomination. Arguments against them appealed to common beliefs. — Isaac
Arguments against them appealed to common beliefs. — Isaac
Literally no one believes that yet-to-be-born imaginary people should have the same rights to autonomy as actual living people. So your argument doesn't appeal to any common belief, it just claims that the beliefs of all of humanity since the dawn of time, in that respect, are wrong. And are wrong solely because you think so. Nothing more. — Isaac
Learning the secrets of stars, whales and cicadas involves a tremendous amount of tedious work -- work considered tedious by the people who love doing it. The exciting moments are thinly scattered.
Now wait a minute... one of the benefits of civilization has been the rich discoveries of science, boring details and brilliant discoveries alike. What "magic of knowledge" did civilization shut down for so long??? — BC
No, that's exactly the science I didn't mean. I mean learning the secrets of stars and clouds and oceans; learning the language of whales and cicadas; rediscovering the magic of knowledge that civilization had shut down for so long. One of the recurring myths of pre-agricultural peoples is the ability to communicate with and change places with animals, an ability we lost through some transgression against Nature. The Eden story is a reiteration of that theme. We are only just beginning to shed the constraints of the conqueror's application of natural curiosity. — Vera Mont
It's only circular if you assume you are correct, i.e., that AN is the same as abolitionists fighting against slavery.
The problem is in your assumption. To think you belong in the same boat is quite astonishing. — Manuel
At least abolitionists were helping living people- you reserve you moral righteousness for those who do not even exist!
I'll let you have the last word here - you obviously enjoy pontificating to those who don't even like children, about how much life sucks. — Manuel
Again, I'm not confused about might not making right, I'm confused about why you think "I think so" is a persuasive argument where "10 million people think so" is not. — Isaac
It is laughable that you compare your moral whining to real, actual, legitimate human rights.
You give pessimism a bad name. — Manuel
Well unless I speak of the living, I cannot speak at all. For as you know, people do not exist have no moral rights - they don't exist! — Manuel
That means that you, me and everybody else are likely to be wrong on many - if not most - things. Don't be that confident. — Manuel
Keep existing Nihilists I say…at least they’re not as miserable as the antinatalists — invicta
But we still can have Science - not the science of mere technology to which commercialism has reduced it, but Science as a quest for knowledge and mastery, just as wizardry was a quest for knowledge and control.
We still can have Philosophy - not polemics, not nit-picking pedantry, but the striving to understand our relationship to the world.
We still have ideals... some of us, who have not lost them in the tide of ideologies. — Vera Mont
This is such a bizarre counter. You're saying here that virtually the entire human race thinking something is right still doesn't make it right, but in the same breath you're trying to suggest the mere fact that you think something is wrong might actually make it wrong. — Isaac
When you stop believing that Santa Claus and his elves - or Baby Jesus and his angels - make Christmas, it doesn't matter how much tinsel you hang or money you spend of gifts - the magic is gone forever. — Vera Mont
I'd say this is too narrow a scope. It's been somewhat overcome, for whom? Events from the New Deal to now validates Marx's description of Capital -- class bifurcation from capital expansion that through its economic power has come to revolutionize democracy itself, putting it up for sale, undermining New Deal era social programs to continue to accumulate and create an industrial reserve army. — Moliere
tl;dr - Marx is still relevant to the events we see today, regardless of how we parse the New Deal and whether having stock-options as payment is owning the means of production. — Moliere
Morality as Cooperation Strategies is a non-zero-sum game. This produces many opportunities to increase the benefits of cooperation without harming others. — Mark S
I doubt that real life can be reduced to such axiomatic schemes. The point, which has been stressed ad nauseum, is that most people do not view life in terms of pain alone. You can say these people are deluding themselves or something along those lines. Yet the fact remains that most people don't buy this argument, no matter how much you stress the forced aspect. — Manuel
I have sympathy for your view - I do think that there is too much pain and destruction and misery and depression, partly (only partly) for these reasons I don't have children. The difference being that I also recognize that there are good things in life, things which make it worth living, even if there is pain - all these things are imposed on us by life. — Manuel
And yes, there is pain and suffering too, but it shall pass, as shall we. — Manuel
So I don't buy your argument. What else is there to say? Are you going to impose on me more arguments? — Manuel
