So by what principle would you be making those choices? — Possibility
To the extent that I am ignorant of, isolated from or excluding the effect my actions may have on others, those actions are more likely to be perceived as forceful or harmful to someone. By instead acting to increase awareness, and choosing to connect and collaborate in some way with every interaction, I minimise harm and aggression without the need for negative ethics, and continue to exist and to act without fear. — Possibility
People make choices in that direction in the form of suicide. — TheMadFool
I guess I'm saying, in a very important way, antinatalists are unable to distinguish the patient (life) from the disease (suffering) and this leads them to the mistaken conclusion that life (patient) = disease (suffering). — TheMadFool
Of course the antinatalist will now mention inevitable irremediable suffering to revive their now dead argument but for such situations people generally agree that people so unfortunate be given the choice to end their lives. However, this in no way gives any support to the antinatalist position that all life, everywhere, always = suffering. — TheMadFool
You mean through things like envy and financial access to such methods leading to vast merit based differences and prejudice fueled ever more by increasing wealth inequalities? I mean; the ego of a human dictator is somewhat tolerable because at least they are mortal and bleed... However how do you contain the ego of someone who can habe god like abilities the common man could never dream of having? Scary notions indeed. — Mark Dennis
So how would you respond to the notion that their may be ways to edit our very experience of suffering into something not only tolerable but useful? I mean if your children could be like Claire from heroes or wolverine from X-men with a regeneration factor and had access to a mental switch to turn off pain sensation at will and is immune to most diseases and can freely choose to opt out of life due to fatigue or the human lifespan remains largely untouched how would you feel then?
Y'know assuming we can survive climate change and travel and colonise the rest of our solar system. To be honest to that end I feel gene editing might become vital to surviving different environments. I'm sure future Astronaughts could do with the ability to maintain muscle mass in zero g for starters.. — Mark Dennis
I mean, obviously I have lots more reasons but challenge is a good one. What else is there to do? I mean, religion likes to call all this testing but really I think its challenging and I'd be very open to hearing your thoughts on the value of The Challenges of Life.
However obviously that is not to say negative ethics aren't without challenge as you yourself can attest but it would be interesting to hear what you feel is more challenging; negative or positive ethics? Or are they both different challenges that aren't worth comparing in that way? — Mark Dennis
I have to agree that this is where your argument breaks down, schopenhauer1. A principle should be able to stand without exception, otherwise it is neither a foundation, nor is it fundamental as such. It’s like the Ten Commandments...followed immediately by hundreds of qualifying regulations and exceptions... — Possibility
As a suggestion of positive ethics, I offer the following ethical principle: increase awareness, connection and collaboration. There being no positive without a corresponding negative, one should also strive to reduce ignorance, isolation and exclusion - but that’s pretty much the same thing. I think you’ll find that this principle stands without exception (although it requires more courage than most of us can summon on our own). — Possibility
In following this ethical principle, procreation often appears to be a good thing, but it’s ultimately an act of ignorance - one that also encourages parents to isolate and exclude in a number of ways. So to reduce procreation, we should be increasing awareness of more far-reaching and less exclusive ways to connect and collaborate in the world. — Possibility
Negative ethics seems more effective, even when it’s flawed, only because it allows you to perceive yourself as ‘good’ simply by opposing certain behaviour in others. But negative ethics is for evaluating our own behaviour, not the behaviour of others. It isn’t meant to be prescriptive, and employed as such, it can only limit our actions, not encourage them. — Possibility
Positive ethics gives us a path to follow, a way to go. Negative ethics only tells us which is the wrong way. — Possibility
The topic was about whetever negative ethics on it's own entails we ought to kill all life or not. So, my scenario was obviously about that-i do not know why you thought my scenario was about procreation. — HereToDisscuss
Since there can be exceptions to this principle, can you tell us how we can know when we can violate this thing and why we can violate it at these times-that is, why they are exceptions to the rule?
I believe this approach may work better instead of us just repeating our points. — HereToDisscuss
Positive and negative ethics can be a seriously useful distinction when exploring moral systems...
Broadly, all humans have values that are important to them, and morality is roughly the process of promoting/protecting those values in rules/judgments/decisions that encode or enshrine them... — VagabondSpectre
As such, positive ethics are more about agreement than justification. — VagabondSpectre
What justifies a positive ethics? When children and people love life. What makes people hate life? Lack of love.
Love is that thing that when you don't feel it it's just a word, it's like it doesn't exist. It's only when you feel it that you see how important it is and that you see the point.
You're constantly conflating love and happiness with well-being and pleasure, they aren't the same. You can be well off and experience lots of pleasures while having a life devoid of love and happiness. You're constantly missing the most important part of the picture. — leo
While you're on a mission to spread antinatalism, I'm on a mission to tell you that if you had received more love you wouldn't see things that way.
You would have preferred not to have been born, so you want everyone to feel that way because you think you have it all figured out, but most people don't feel that way and don't want to feel that way, because they still feel or believe in that thing that you've stopped feeling and believing in.
I'd honestly want to meet you, to help you see what you've forgotten to see, because I can't show it to you using words on a screen, and it pains me to imagine you following that path for the rest of your life. Reading your threads it feels like your life has become completely devoid of joy, and all that's keeping you here is that mission to destroy life, because you think you're doing a good thing, but all the people you're ever going to convince are those who focus on the suffering like you. — leo
It's an argument. It's quite a strong argument against any form of utilitarianism. "Your joy cannot justify my suffering." Schop is extending the complaint of the monster against Frankenstein to that of every unhappy person against their parents. Repetitive is a fair complaint, but not preaching. — unenlightened
Putting money where one's mouth is - if you'd like to be taken seriously - entails passionate political action. Is your anti-natalism a fair-weather posturing directed exclusively toward feckless internet chatter? Or have you thrown your hat in with the movement? — ZzzoneiroCosm
It seems to me worth adding that Plato also was much concerned with the abuses of rhetoric called sophistry, his notions of ideals coming into play as a defense against lies. That is, if you can say what something is in some sense, then you can say what it isn't. And if you can't the former, then the latter becomes difficult, contentious, ultimately a matter resolved by force. — tim wood
The path to hell is paved with 'positive ethics'. — ovdtogt
Why would it be the other way? I think this is purely up to subjective judgement, though it is a common fact that most people are much more loss averse than gain seeking and I'm one of them — khaled
This means that a lot of the problems which form the basis of an antinatalist outlook are being or will be solved. — TheMadFool
On my view, there is no higher state of 'happiness' anyway, than the way in which the antinatalist conceives of the unborn. To be unbound from all causes and conditions, where "exists", and "does not exist" doesn't even apply. How could any temporary experience of happiness or pleasure in this world even compare to this? All positive experiences in this world are filtered through the lens of our temporal embodiment as a deprivational human animal - subject to stress, pain, need. suffering, aging and inevitable death. If impregnating a woman somehow thrusts conditions on what was previously unbound by causes and conditions, then it is the ultimate crime. Compared to the timeless peace of the unborn/unconditioned - the experiences of this world are nothing but stress and suffering. — Inyenzi
This reasoning discounts the suffering that would result from frustrating primordial biological drives to procreate - whether self-abstemious or state prohibitionary it's the same deprivation - which trades-off increased suffering of current childless persons for the price of "preventing" "future suffering" of offspring while indifferent to the fact that being regretfully / involuntarily childless persons increases the suffering of their future selves. — 180 Proof
Misery breeds company. As you point out, schopenhauer 1, at the "the procreational decision" it's always already (2.5 million years!) too late for the "once born" to excise, or talk themelves en masse out of, our species-hardwired, libidinally-facile, procreative drives .... Ethics more profitably focuses on how sufferers Can/Must avoid minimize or relieve increasing suffering (I prefer harm) to sufferers - ourselves and others - rather than, in effect, assuming counterfactually that in some possible world sufferers do not exist, suffering does not exist, and that we ought to strive to actualize, so to speak, that (utopian? extinction?) possibility. 'Destroy the village in order to save the village' - irrational ad absurdum as well as immoral. — 180 Proof
I am antinatalist in the same sense I am pro-suicide, pro-euthanasia, & pro-abortion: philosophically, that is, as a hypothetical prospect, or option, - pro or con - for each thinking person to choose for him or herself without coercion by any manifest authority or violence (i.e. non-aggression principle). The reasoning is clear: sufferers ought not increase their own or any other sufferer's suffering, because this abject condition - existence - cannot be prevented ex post facto. The reductio (above) exposes an interpretation of antinatalism that (by neglect) increases suffering (of the "once born") more than it speculatively prevents. — 180 Proof
In the context which requires us not to ignore negative ethics. — TheMadFool
Well, what about the will-be automomous individuals that won't be born yet? Are those "autonomous individuals" so important that the suffering that they cause are okay? Or, in other words, if the individual brings about a huge amount of suffering, aren't we entitled to prevent their desires and wills so that they do not do it anymore? Isn't this the reasoning we use for punishing criminals?
You do not account those other individuals. — HereToDisscuss
I have showed why it was not merely an agenda though. You just choose to ignore it and are now pretending nobody has tried to justify it-at least in this thread. — HereToDisscuss
And "using individuals", in some cases, is okay, right? For example, we punish criminals. We punish children. We sometimes make decisions on behalf of people who are not informed enough to make a good decision even if they do not want it. — HereToDisscuss
What do you mean by an "agenda" then? How can it be an agenda when it is the only thing that actually matters when making moral decisions?
Please define that word. — HereToDisscuss
I mean basic necessities kinda screams out at you that it should be a priority doesn't it? — TheMadFool
I don't know whether I'm agreeing/disagreeing with you here. "Basic necessities" seems self-explanatory right? Perhaps people will argue over what counts as basic but the words "basic necessities" has a ring of compelling urgency right? — TheMadFool
Well, i was just trying to show that this has unwanted results (both negative ethics and the non-aggression principle). It just leads to more suffering. So, why exactly should we accept this principle by default? Just because? — HereToDisscuss
Also, how can principles contradict each other? I do not think that is deontological ethics anymore, so i am curious to see your explanation. — HereToDisscuss
Last of all, when confronted with two contradictory principles when assessing whetever one ought to make a certain decision or not, on what basis should one pick one over the other? — HereToDisscuss
Well, is preventing desires and wills really a bad thing compared to letting suffering go on? The problem is, these desires and wills lead to more suffering (almost every single one of them, i would say) and, more importantly, they also lead to new individuals that will definitely suffer being born. If you end the human race, you will also prevent the suffering of these new people who will be "forced into existence" and it is justified as a result-and i am ignoring the fact other living beings, aside from humans, can experience pain and suffer too. I would argue that this means that if you have the power to destroy all life on planet Earth and you choose to not do it, you are indirectly responsible for the suffering of those individuals and other living beings who will be born. In that case, is not preventing desires and wills of living individuals really better when not doing that means more people (and other living beings who will experience pain) will suffer? That does not seem to be the case for me, especially when one considers how many animals also get forced into existence in a more cruel way-it is countless. (especially the ones we use as food, like chickens) — HereToDisscuss
In the spirit of pragmatism and wisdom it behooves us to tackle any problem, yours/this included, in the best way possible. For that we must give some weightage to positive ethics. After all we're, hopefully, not in hell, tormented in such manner that makes the desire for pain relief so urgent that it makes positive ethics moot. I don't mean to make light of the real and horrible suffering some have undergone but to consider this as a problem for all is a hasty generalization. — TheMadFool
False dichotomy. "Positive and negative" entail each other. Like coin faces. Like mass-gravity. Like yin-yang. Etc ...
Besides, double negation yields positivity: 'negation of suffering' is caring for 'well-being' of a sufferer. So I reject the premise of the OP. To wit: claiming, or assuming, that there are two types of ethics, practiced separately or "mixed", begs for Occam's Razor; rather, in effect, ethics has (at least) two aspects (i.e. foci): indirect self-care (1. positive - 'actualizes' (i.e. optimizes) self - which is also suffers - as a moral agent) via direct care of sufferers (2. negative - helps eliminate hindrances to well being).
Perhaps this 'dual-aspect' concept is more apparent with
agent-based systems (e.g. here's mine (sketched)) than with (mere) rule-based, act-based or preference-base systems. — 180 Proof
The idea that we should uphold some principle that only exists to avoid suffering (If it does not, why even have it? It can not be a morally good principle then.) when all it does is allowing for more suffering sounds counter-intuitive to me. — HereToDisscuss
Positive ethics is intra-worldly, i.e. how to live.
Negative ethics is prior to the world, i.e. whether or not one should live.
Once a person exists, they have interests which include having positive experiences.
Before a person exists, they have no interest in having positive experiences.
Metaphor: once noodles are boiled, the noodles cannot become rigid again. They also taste better with spice. — darthbarracuda
Regardless of an individual’s goals, wants, desires, etc, the belief that any action is fully determined by a singular will is false - hubris, even. Just because only human will is aware of itself, does not mean it’s the only will involved in determining action. I’m not referring to any ether, and I’m not suggesting the parents aren’t creating the new human, only that they aren’t acting in isolation. They’re collaborating with cause and effect. — Possibility
What we can’t stop is every instance of collaboration, every instance of procreation - that would be thinking we can ‘force’ our will onto others. — Possibility
Your non-aggression principle is followed either by ‘force’ OR by increasing awareness, connection and collaboration, period. — Possibility
I think the assumption of a “negative ethics” is the problem to begin with, because “not bringing about negative experiences” seems to me to be the same as doing nothing. One cannot show ethical conduct towards beings that do not exist, so it turns out negative ethics is more an exercise in self-serving than an ethical stance. — NOS4A2
If Antinatalism is ethical, why not genocide or mass sterilisation? Come to think of it, in order to really eliminate pain and suffering, (important distinctions which I'll get to in a moment) doesn't the problem demand a universe ending solution? Is that not a little too demanding of a principle for our small little species to have? — Mark Dennis
Suffering however, that is letting the abstract self via esteem or ego be harmed is entirely within ones own control. You can just not put your sense of self value on such shaky pedestals that bodily pain has any bearing on them. You dont have control of your body, it's out of your control. Bacteria doesn't ask our permission to make us sick its just trying to live itself. You can make choices which contribute towards positive outcomes but the outcomes themselves are mostly out of your control. You can be healthy as a horse and still fall and break your leg. — Mark Dennis
The key thing to remember is that humans are getting better at reducing pain inducing environments. — Mark Dennis
Can I ask you something which I feel is very important? How teachable is Antinatalism to a child? How would a child feel if they were told that having children is the worst thing a person could do? Pretty sure the reaction would not be a good one. — Mark Dennis
You seem to know a lot about your ethical principles, but what about your metaethical ones? — Mark Dennis
I don't understand what you think you're going to get out of keeping on hammering this. — Isaac
Imagine a bucket with a hole. Yes the hole (suffering) must be adequately sealed (negative ethics) but the goal actually is to fill the bucket (positive ethics). — TheMadFool
Apart from the unnecessary word -"violation", which has negative connations and can just be replaced by something like "trade off"-, this is exactly what people who claim that positive things have intrinsic value say. I'm not sure what your point is. — HereToDisscuss
These two things make is so that we are inclined to do the best thing for our species and the species may actually function properly as a result.
This is probably oversimplified, so there are most likely some errors. Howewer, the point is, there is no reason to treat them very seperately-they exist for the same thing (the betterment of society), they just work differently. — HereToDisscuss
Of course you don't, because the 'goodness' of a reason is subjective. You think other people's reasons are not 'good', they think they are 'good'. Unless you have a definition of 'good' on which you both agree, no further progress can possibly be made can it... And yet you persist. — Isaac
While not completely true, negative ethics is a thing of the past for a good number of modern humans. They're now in the self-actualization business. Much like you are and others who pursue the arts and sciences. At a very minimum the world now has the environment for positive ethics. Of course, even taking only a wild guess, the vast majority live in conditions that validate your claim for emphasis on negative ethics. Yet, the dark ominous cloud does have that thin silver lining where some are lucky to reside. — TheMadFool
Again, just imagine an answer "what should be important to all humans is the opportunity to find happiness". What's wrong with that answer? — Isaac
This is the crux of the problem. Nothing at the level of rhetoric, where we now are, is important 'to humans'. Some things are important to some humans, other things are important to other humans, and there's no external judge to determine who's right and who's wrong about that. — Isaac
And isn't 'persuing what I prefer' an end... the only end, in fact? — Isaac
At some point in asking why people prefer the things they do, you have to defer to either their final say on the matter (usually "I don't know, I just do"), or you look to empirical evidence you see as correlating with unconscious desires (say sociology or human biology). Asking people is never going to get you further back than their own first principles, which could be almost anything. — Isaac
Or, is pessimism actually a rational, logical, intelligent, and realistic thought? — niki wonoto
