I've already answered this..However, in the same vein as it were, would you prevent a child being born in heaven? No, you wouldn't, oui? — Agent Smith
I've stated many times that if life was someone's individualized utopia, then it's no longer an imposition. — schopenhauer1
If you insist that with respect to antinatalism no one exists to be deprived of joy and hence my objection fails to pass muster, I'd be forced to respond likewise - no one exists to benefit from not being born into a life of pain. You can't have your cake and eat it too is what I mean. Be consistent and antinatalism has no leg go stsnd on, oui monsieur? — Agent Smith
Imagine you know for certain that a child about to be bern will live an enchanted life, perfectly happy in every possible way. Would you not do your utmost to ensure the birth of this child? This demonstrates, in my humble opinion, that antinatalism too can be immoral. — Agent Smith
Nevertheless, I can't shake off the feeling that not giving birth to someone who could've enjoyed life to the fullest (suppose his/her parents are super-rich) is also a privation. This too is an imposition of sorts. — Agent Smith
No. How would it be?Is antinatalism murder? — Agent Smith
Not really. Euthanasia entails someone exists and is already being harmed. It just leads to poor framing of it to mislead.At the very least it is a kind of preemptive euthanasia. — Agent Smith
But many natalists are doing the exact same thing. Just look at the severe judgment with which the antinatalists on this forum are being met. — baker
But people who procreate don't typically seem to see it that way. What do you make of that? — baker
pain now for glory later. — Agent Smith
I think the objection would be that many here believe us not just to be victims, but also beneficiaries. Would that change the nature of the pyramid scheme? — Tzeentch
Exactly so, however it has been Isaac's argument that one is thereby creating conditions for harm, and is thus immoral. (The way this ties back into the original topic is that he is arguing that not having children creates conditions for harm). — Tzeentch
Because that's how governed is used unless in the context of talking about government, as in "The people were governed by X government". Anyways, this is pedantic asides. Look up govern in the dictionary, besides the political usage, it means controlling something.irstly, how could you possibly know what they meant? — Isaac
Secondly, one is no more 'controlled' by one's own rule than one is governed by it. If you can change the rule any time you desire, then you are de facto controlled by your desires, not the rule. — Isaac
One is not 'governed' if one gets to make up one's own rules. One is simply doing as one pleases. — Isaac
There are many things that are natural, e.g. we're violent by nature, but does that mean we should be violent? — Agent Smith
Same thing. Key word being 'govern'. Not do as you please. — Isaac
So, Benatar has to be inconsistent in how he treats nonexistence to make the case for antinatalism. That's the flaw in his argument in my humble opinion.
That's why I wished to take nonexistence out of the calculus by proposing we assume people exist before they're born on Earth. That way we can avoid the metaphysics of nonexistence, a complex topic in its own right and reduce the problem to a mathematical game of chance. — Agent Smith
The point is we already disagree, you and I.
So we've only two choices. We arbitrate (come to a binding agreement), or you do as you see fit and I do as I see fit (we do as we please). — Isaac
Because the alternative is that everyone just does whatever they want. Again, if you prefer that system, that's your deal, but it just not what morality is. — Isaac
Yes they are. They're making an assumption that all the b people who would benefit from the prospective person should suffer. — Isaac
So who gets to decide what the rules are? — Isaac
So, each person does exactly what they wish. Doing exactly what you want is not ethics, not by any definition at all.
The only alternative is that someone has the right of expectation that another will adhere to some behaviour even if they don't want to.
But then you can't avoid the question of who gets to set what that behaviour is.
You have three choices...
1. Everyone does whatever they want.
2. People are expected to behave in certain ways even if they don't want to. The community comes to a decision somehow as to what that behaviour is.
3. People are expected to behave in certain ways even if they don't want to. You, God, or some other arbitrary person, decide what that behaviour is. — Isaac
To my reckoning, Benatar is guilty of an inconsistency - look at 3 & 4. In the case of 3, nonexistence diminishes the value of possible happiness (Not bad only), but in 4, the value of unhappiness remains unaffected by nonexistence (Good). Benatar is trying to eat his cake and have it too. — Agent Smith
When subjectivity is involved, all bets are off!!! — Agent Smith
I'm with you in that it would be presumptuous of anyone to think for someone else given that people differ so much in all the relevant respects (the subjectivity of hedonism comes into play). To illustrate, I might be happy living on minimum wages, with no health insurance, in a one-room apartment while you maybe miserable in a 40-room mansion with a full complement of staff to run the place. — Agent Smith
However, for this very same reason, I can't defend antinatalism and nor can anyone justify natalism. To do either, we need objectivity (we are arguing, oui?) but that as we just discovered isn't there (vide previous paragraph). — Agent Smith
People's own private objectives are not ethics, it's just subjective. If I want a big car it's not ethics to get me one. — Isaac
That's exactly what morality is, a general agreement among a community — Isaac
Absent of agreement it's just personal preferences, not ethics. — Isaac
Why not? More arbitrary rules. — Isaac
Then you've no ethics. If the community don't get to have any expectation of anyone they don't personally agree with then all you have is everyone just does whatever they want. that's not ethics. — Isaac
People do already exist with these needs. The current community. All of whom will suffer if there's no succeeding generation. — Isaac
See above. What is 'good' for a community cannot be a subjective decision because we all affect each other, so I have expectation of you and you of me on the grounds of our mutual need for each other. It is not only reasonable to expect others to adhere to the general consensus on what is good, it is completely necessary for a community to function. — Isaac
So? Why care about affecting others? — Isaac
You talk about meaning, I'm talking about good. — Isaac
What is 'good' is not fine being subjective because you sffdct me and I affect you, we share common resources, we share space, we collaborate to achieve stuff we couldn't achieve alone. We must come up with an agreement as to what constitutes the common good. — Isaac
Once we have such an agreement, the maintenance of it is all morality is. Anything else is pointless. You could say "you mustn't do X", " you must do Y", but why? Who sets these bizarre rules and why ought we obey them? — Isaac
If you don't want to build a better community, if you don't care for their welfare, then that's fine, you do you, but you've got no business with morality, the subject matter of which is the welfare of our community. Anything less is just a set of arbitrary rules for no purpose. — Isaac
So your concern for the autonomy of the as yet unborn is noble, important, but completely pointless unless in the service of the larger goal of community welfare. Otherwise, why? Why bother with autonomy? Why bother with rights? Why bother with dignity? What's the purpose? — Isaac
Reading Schopenhauer left me pondering the limits of the intellect, at how some intellectual avenues seem to be dead ends. This is a theme I'm picking back up in the Tractacus. — Tate
The Schopenhauer and Kierkegaard connection makes that seem fairly likely. — Tate
I believe I grasped the gist of the OP's antinatalism.
Pronatalists are of the opinion that a person (the child) will share the same values as his/her parents and agree to their assessment of what kind, and how much, of that kind of suffering s/he will consider acceptable. This assumption is unjustified. People suicide for various reasons that differ from one another in kind & degree!
Unfortunately, the knife cuts both ways. The antinatalist too is unwarranted to, in their turn, assume that children will have the same thoughts about life & suffering as theirs. This is also, sadly for the antinatalist, wrong.
In short, the subjective nature of joy/sorrow precludes both antintalism & natalism.
What next?
Left to the reader as an exercise. — Agent Smith
This is more to the spirit of the OP.. Great arguments going on here, but this specific thread is about if/when/the right to make impositions on others unnecessarily.. The key word you used there was "unasked".. Otherwise it could just be typical ameliorating greater with lesser harms with a bad outcome, but someone who sought the help or something.What gives A the right to interfere unasked? What's the sacrifical lamb to make of this? — Tzeentch
Why are you so off the rails hostile? Kill yourself is callous. I don’t even jokingly say that.kill themselves asap. — 180 Proof
Not an apt wording. Atomic facts are not constituted from things; rather things are constituted by their relations to each other. — Banno
