I’m not convinced going to school will help him more in the long run than it has harmed him — Pinprick
They’re the ones experiencing the pleasure, so of course it’s good for them... — Pinprick
Also, perhaps intent is relevant after all. I don’t view accidentally harming someone as morally wrong, unless it’s due to some gross lack of judgment or neglect. — Pinprick
I’m pretty sure kidnapping someone causes them distress... — Pinprick
It is bad when there is not a good reason to do so. It is acceptable if the pleasure they are seeking infringes on the liberties of others, or otherwise needlessly risks harming others. — Pinprick
However, if the risk of harm is minimal, but the potential benefit is large, the risk is worth it — Pinprick
and also why having children under most circumstances is ok. — Pinprick
Paying taxes does not improve my situatio — Pinprick
You can reasonably assume that they will by using the available data. — Pinprick
Are we just so divided that certain people crack from the stress of knowing people out there disagree with them so so much? — DingoJones
If we think it’s more likely that they will find life worthwhile, — Pinprick
So making kids go to school is wrong? What about making them eat vegetables, or going to bed on time, or dress appropriately? What about making people pay taxes, or go to jail/prison, or pay for car/health insurance? — Pinprick
Yeah I can, it’s good because they will experience pleasure. More specifically, it gives them the opportunity to do so. You agree that’s good, right? — Pinprick
I don’t see it as black and white, there’s definitely some gray areas. Not having children does prevent them from experiencing pleasure, but sometimes doing so is justified. — Pinprick
The outcome of murdering someone is certain, but that’s not the case with having children. It is certain that they will experience pleasure/pain (unless they happen to have whatever disease it is that doesn’t allow them to feel pain), but we have no real idea of how much of either they will experience. — Pinprick
Acts that directly cause harm can be considered wrong, but simply being born does not directly cause harm, or pleasure for that matter; it just creates the opportunity — Pinprick
It’s a denial of the opportunity to experience either, which is fine to do as long as there is a good reason to do so — Pinprick
Besides, doesn’t AN claim not having children is for their benefit — Pinprick
’m not meaning to. The pros outweighing the cons is a pro. — Pinprick
it looks like it's below a 6, but when asked to sum later on it is an 8 or something. I'm just saying sometimes there are biases even in answering a question like that due to social expectations, forgetting each moment actually felt, etc. — schopenhauer1
You could say that this "forgetting" then clears out the bad that was experienced prior, but I don't know. — schopenhauer1
What to trust? — schopenhauer1
for the badness in play is not contextual, does not depend on anything form its being bad. — Constance
I also have a notion, you may disagree with, that existence short of being an ideal existence, would be one where someone should not be born into — schopenhauer1
I guess, my question to them is, why do they think it is justified to impose this game on someone else? — schopenhauer1
But, there are examples in society where people are forced to do things against their will, even when there is the potential for harm. Mandatorily sending kids to school is a good example. — Pinprick
Some, perhaps even most, do not want to go to school, but we judge that doing so benefits them, so we send them anyway. — Pinprick
I don’t consider not having children as bad. — Pinprick
I object to propagating your personal choices, which boil down to mere opinion, as if they should be some sort of absolute rule (which is precisely what AN does, unless I’ve misunderstood something). — Pinprick
I would never judge someone else’s decision to have, or not have, children as bad. — Pinprick
The actual act of giving birth is amoral, because it causes no harm/pleasure. — Pinprick
I can wish good on someone for their own sake. Like wishing that my loved ones continue to have a happy life after I’m dead. I won’t be there to share their happiness, but I wish them the best nonetheless. — Pinprick
Why can’t it be the same for a child? — Pinprick
Could it be argued that reproducing is a biological need, similar to sex or companionship? — Pinprick
It isn’t meant to be a reason, it’s a justification. When you are considering doing something, isn’t it good practice to weigh the pros and cons? — Pinprick
even without being certain of it. — Olivier5
What do you think of people who say that people need to be born into non-ideal circumstances so they "strive" to do better, and get themselves to more ideal circumstances? In other words, they think that the value of getting out of a less ideal state to a more ideal state is a goal above and beyond not suffering? — schopenhauer1
Based on relevance to continued practice of one's freedom, so life would rank highest, as the conditio sine qua non, then bodily autonomy, since you can only act through your body, and so on. — Echarmion
But if we're willing to allow such general and abstract notions of suffering — Echarmion
As I said before, you use actual, emotional suffering as your standard for the clear examples, but as soon as the water gets muddy you fall back on more generalised notions of "danger" and "harm" to shore up the holes. — Echarmion
Seeing as you are happy reaffirming your view with schopenhauer1, I think I'll leave it at that. — Echarmion
The presumption is.. First it is okay to put someone in the mess.. and it is only okay after the fact, and not question whether it is okay to put someone in the mess in the first place. — schopenhauer1
These consequences are predictions, things I'm concerned about — Isaac
In conceptual terrain, you get lost in logical contradictions if you assume that none of what you can say can be true (the liar's paradox). — Olivier5
So the concept of truth is necessary for science, if only to rule out what is certainly not true. — Olivier5
also to assume that we can say something true about it. — Olivier5
Of what? — Olivier5
These idealists must have assumed they lived in the same world as other people, then. — Olivier5
Well then, once again there would be nothing to agree or disagree — Olivier5
Oh, so you agree we all live in the same world? — Olivier5
if your world is different from mine, — Olivier5
And what does "They don't actually live in the same world" even mean? Here you are proposing the existence of multiple, objective, and independent worlds. Idk why you are still doing that.
The closest thing it could mean that makes sense is "Why would we want everybody to have the same views when they don't actually have the same views", which I answered. But also, not postulating an objective reality doesn't prevent people from having the same view as you so idk where you get that either. — khaled
channel 1 and I was watching some crappy western movie on channel 2 — Olivier5
Why should we want everybody to live in the same world if they don't actually live in the same world? — Olivier5
there is nothing to try and agree about. — Olivier5
Otherwise e.g. the flat-earthers' world would be actually flat — Olivier5
You do need to agree that the world is one in spite of our different views of it, in order to WANT to resolve differences of opinion — Olivier5
Then it is in principle possible to judge whether or not God exists between these on the basis of that difference, and you’re not appealing to things beyond all phenomenal experience after all. — Pfhorrest
Two people who agree that there is an objective answer and disagree about what it is have reason to try to sort out which if either of them is right — Pfhorrest
If they think there is no such thing as objective answers at all then there’s no point trying to figure out what it is — Pfhorrest
You can analyse people's biases, it makes sense to do so. And hence you can start to resolve differences of perception. — Olivier5
So if you admit that we might be wrong about what is objectively real, is that the same thing as saying there is no objective reality? I suspect your answer to that is "no", so why the double standard when it comes to morality? — Pfhorrest
There are things that feel good to some people in some circumstances that are still wrong, but they're wrong on account of them feeling back in other circumstances or to other people. — Pfhorrest
Claiming that there's something that's good or bad in a way that has no bearing whatsoever on what hurts or pleases anybody anywhere ever is as absurd as claiming that there are facts about reality that have no observational implications. — Pfhorrest
If it makes no noticeable difference whether it's true or not, how are you to assess its truth? — Pfhorrest
I'm not suggesting that individual hedonic value can be directly equated with societal-level moral judgement — Isaac
You could, but I wouldn't. — Echarmion
I suppose that'd be some kind of moral realism or evolutionary morality. I'd consider that an is-ought-fallacy though. — Echarmion
Certainly, as we have already alluded to, property rights would be a lot weaker, since mass produced stuff would be legal to take if you really needed it. — Echarmion
What's the "extent" here? The strength of the associated emotions? — Echarmion
In one case you have something that's measurable - like an emotional reaction. In the other, you have abstract values like "bodily autonomy" or "self-determination" which have no intrinsic scale. — Echarmion
not having children also causes someone to experience something they'd rather not experience. So we have a conflict here, how is it resolved? — Echarmion
the suffering you experience is incomparably small to that which you are planning to inflict to alleviate it. There is a much better solution to this known as adoption. Or volunteering in child care. Or or or or.... All of these inflict a lot less suffering and still solve the problem. — khaled
Indeed. So why do you hate the person? Are all wars considered morally wrong, for example, despite that fact that they involved much suffering? It seems that in most calculations of 'moral', these considerations have already been taken somewhat into account. Stealing from a orphanage would definately cause more guilt than stealing from someone you hate, but it would also be considered more morally wrong, especially if you hated the person in question for good reason. — Isaac
What is guilt if not a 'bad' feeling, thus rendering the activity one which does not 'feel good'? — Isaac
This clearly specifies a reason for inclusion in the category 'morally wrong', not the category 'moral claim' which has not, in this topic, even been mentioned. — Isaac
The idea that the only common factor in what is considered 'morally wrong' is that lack of ulterior motive is ridiculous. — Isaac
How does this explain the overwhelming grouping of moral codes, the presence of specific brain regions activated in moral decision-making, the similarity of endocrine response to moral activity, the overlapping psychology of anti-social behaviour with moral impulse control problems, the involvement of regions like the vPFC in moral decision-making, the commonality in criminal psychoses... — Isaac