“ Preventing suffering takes precedence over the creation of pleasure, especially when not creating 'good lives' does not harm the unborn. It's an unjustifiable risk to create life where it needn't have existed in the first place.“
This is your opinion. That’s what makes it a political issue, and why you have to honor the voices of those already living who say that preventing suffering does not take precedence over the creation of pleasure, and it is not an unjustified risk to create life. They are speaking from their own experience , just as you are. Why are you a better proxy for those not yet born than these other voices? Especially if they are the majority? Maybe your unhappy life gives you a skewed perspective. — Joshs
They could choose preventing further suffering over the creation of pleasure , but they don’t. Why? Perhaps because even the suffering has meaning and value to them. If they feel this way about their own lives, maybe you can see why they feel the same about conceiving children. — Joshs
Is it that the people who regret having been born are essentially collateral damage justified by the majority who don't? — Inyenzi
I think the lesson here is you can try to quash life in the aim of preventing suffering, but life will
always re-emerge one way or another anyway, so really the only ethical direction is embracing and improving life. — Joshs
See what percentage of the population thinks it would have been better if they hadn’t been born — Joshs
So if you’re trying to make a proxy decision for the yet to be born, that poll should tell you that the odds are 70% you are not doing the yet to be born any favors. — Joshs
Meanwhile, you as the anti-natalist are very much alive, and while the decision you make not to bring a life into the world is designed to ‘prevent causing pain’ in another, it has a paradoxical effect. Because it at the same time is relieving your pain. That is , your decision on behalf of the yet to be born resolves a dilemma, problem or dissatisfaction within you. It eliminates or reduces your pain (felt on behalf of others). So your voting for ‘non-being’ enhances and
furthers the functioning of your cognitive system. One could say your decision against another’s birth is a kind of fecundity. You are after all a self-organizing complex system , and your vote on behalf of ‘non-being’ does what all personal choices do , it increases the complexity of your living system by resolving interruptions in its functioning and therefore transforming and strengthening itself further. Your vote for the other’s non-being was at the same time a vote for the affirmation and enhancement of your own life vector. This is why I think that the motive of not wanting to CAUSE suffering in others cannot be separated from the ELIMINATION of suffering in yourself. Not just because you would not be motivated
to do the former if it didnt also achieve the latter. But because the two are really one motivation.
My point isn’t that all supposedly altruistic acts are
really selfish. Benefiting others benefits ourselves because our personal and social welfare are inextricably intertwined. It’s that not wanting to cause suffering is in the service of life enhancement, even when couched in the confused terms of anti-natalism.
So while anti-natalists think the terms of the debate are about being versus non-being, they’re really about how best to move forward in life. — Joshs
The problem is I don't see how "do not cause pain" can possibly be a reasonable goal in isolation. In the abstract, pain is just a fact of the universe. It's a bit like making a rule not to strengthen magnetic fields. — Echarmion
“A better future for ourselves and the world” was my original query. — Brett
In this context, what would it mean to wish to have never been born? — Joshs
we dream about how nice it would be not to ever have been born — Joshs
that our freedom of choice has been taken away by being born. ? — Joshs
You don’t take away MY pain by not having me be born in the first place. You only take away MY pain by giving me the choice of removing an obstacle that is interrupting my ongoing self-functioning. If I choose suicide, I havent chosen ‘non-being ‘ , since that notion has no meaning in itself. I have only chosen that way of thinking which reduces pain, provides a sense of relief , and so ENHANCES my functioning. — Joshs
This seems a very obvious point, but it's not one that the anti-natalists here accept, so there must be some fundamental disagreement about the basics of the argument involved. — Echarmion
Beliefs have no spatiotemporal location, because it would need to cover the entire area between internal and external content. I have not claimed that beliefs are in the mind. — creativesoul
you can't have one without the other. — Janus
Of course it's theoretically (as in logically) possible to want things without being affected by losing, or not getting them — Janus
The downside is that nothing would be more important to a person without any attachment than anything else. — Janus
The evidence for me is that I have never met anyone I could say was free of attachment. The accounts of the lives of so-called gurus I have read attest to the same conclusion. So, I think freedom from all attachment is more likely a fantasized ideal; — Janus
If Buddhists say yes, that is because it is an article of their faith. — Janus
If it isn't desirable that would be because it has downsides. — Janus
Yes, that one. Where are you getting this definition from? — Isaac
So I don’t think we can expect healthy communities and interpersonal relationships without attachments. — Brett
I’m not sure what your point is about the dying man. — Brett
“Grief is the price we pay for love.” — Brett
On what basis are you making this claim? — Isaac
I wanted to revisit the word “care”. To “want” something is different than to “care” about something. So I’m going back to the idea of “caring” for something. — Brett
We seem to form attachments without much thought. We all do it in different ways, we find different things to be important or valuable. So attachments seem to be part of human nature, even though different cultures might have different attachments, though there are consistent attachments across all cultures, — Brett
like the care for children or family. — Brett
So these attachments contribute towards a healthy strong community. — Brett
you keep loosing the thread of the argument and so it's become very tiresome. — Isaac
as now you're defining a rule as moral that is only followed for the sake of undoing a 10mm nut, not for it's own sake. — Isaac
Descriptive morality isn't about that. — Isaac
Otherwise, again, every single thought counts as a moral one and the term becomes useless. — Isaac
agree that moral premises are not arbitrary — Isaac
That one should use a 10mm spanner (or indeed that one should undo 10mm nuts) cannot be reasonably shown to fit either. — Isaac
The point is that I don't believe there is a person on the planet who is totally free of desire or attachment; and I don't think that to be totally free of desire and attachment is even a desirable ideal. — Janus
The point is that Buddhism is as much a form of attachment as any other pursuit. — Janus
I don't see any reason to think that caring about anything would not involve some degree of attachment. — Janus
it does not follow that Buddhism advocates violence. — Janus
From the fact that some people, who lived in a country where Buddhism (along with Shinto) was a predominant religion, practiced violence — Janus
In Buddhist and Hindu religious texts the opposite concept is expressed as upādāna, translated as "attachment". — Janus
Or do you think I could desire to drink, even if I’m not attached to being hydrated, etc.? — Pinprick
philosophies which simply proclaim detached as a hollow goal. — Jack Cummins
I think it's really hard to evaluate to what extent it's possible. — Judaka
Truly being able to overcome attachment in any context would mean overcoming a lot of what makes us human. — Judaka
the complement of a set can't contain an element that's in that set — TheMadFool
I think It's possible but only in certain contexts, the more you care, the more impossible this is. — Judaka
The word “care” is a bit of a problem for me. I’m not sure what exactly it means. — Brett
All it takes to become attached to something is to care,
and caring is worth more than the pitfalls of attachment by itself. — Judaka
How big enough of a problem does it take to qualify as attachment? — Pinprick
I was disappointed my burger had onions on it, does that mean I’m attached to onion-free burgers? — Pinprick
On the other hand, I’m never disappointed if I get Coke, even though I prefer Pepsi; but if I’m dying of thirst, not having either is a very big problem. Does that mean I’m only attached to Coke/Pepsi sometimes, but not others? — Pinprick
You are supposed to attach yourself to the eightfold path and the community — Janus
Buddha says that Buddhism itself is like a raft, used for 'crossing over' the river of suffering, but to be let go of once it's served its purpose. 'Dhammas should be abandoned, to say nothing of adhammas'. That is specifically about not becoming attached to Buddhism. — Wayfarer
So, the upshot is that Buddhism becomes, in practice of not in theory, just another of the myriad forms of attachment that people attempt to find solace and security in — Janus
Anyway, the OP question is whether attachment is desirable or not, and my answer to that would be that people cannot live happily without caring about, that is becoming attached to, one thing, person, activity or institution or set of things, people, activities or institutions. — Janus
what value would such a live have to the human community if the blissed out sage is not politically active — Janus
If the value is only measured in terms of the life or lives to come (after death) and if one does not accept the idea of any form of afterlife, or even if they accept the possibility, do not count it as important as the present life, what then? — Janus
To establish the existence of the self, as every first year philosophy student knows. The 'nature' of the self in question is simply irrelevant for that purpose. Descartes answer to the OP would simply be: who cares? — StreetlightX
Descartes' purposes — StreetlightX
people think that simply living must be good in and of itself and antinatalism is preventing this — schopenhauer1
At some point, you either agree or disagree with the axiom. I have maintained for a long time now that at that point it is more about appealing to a person's emotions on why exactly that premise is so important, not embedding it in another principle that is some sort of air tight case. That will never be the case. — schopenhauer1
At some point, you either agree or disagree with the axiom. — schopenhauer1
If anyone can provide any further ideas.. this scheme of creating people who can evaluate the very givens of life as negative and then re-educating to "get with the program".. why does this seem immoral, not right, fishy, wrong? I think it has something to do with using individuals, but I'd like other ideas for why this intuitively seems wrong. — schopenhauer1
the self being the source of thought. That it thinks is enough. — StreetlightX
but I’m also prepared for it to possibly NOT work — Possibility
How you determine a ‘maladjustment’ is based on subjective/culturally influenced perception of value/potentiality. — Possibility
Life is a negotiated collaboration with the world, not a well-worn path through a shopping aisle. Loss, lack, pain and humility are all part of the process, and we have more capacity to adjust than we think. — Possibility
You won’t lose anything by non-attachment, you won’t be unable to love, to have a family or friends. It’s more than likely you’ll have more because you are open to more. — Brett
Misunderstand what? — Janus
It’s as hard as the line between cause and effect. Attachment causes desires. — Pinprick
Well, it depends on two things; whether or not wanting to win caused you to participate in the tournament, and how general/specific an answer the questioner accepts. If the questioner is looking for a sort of “first cause” the questioning would continue with “why do you want to win?” But this issue arises when determining cause and effect as well. If someone shoots me, what is my cause of death? The bullet entering my brain? The person who pulled the trigger? Me for pissing off the person that pulled the trigger? It can go on and on, but an effect is always preceded by a cause. — Pinprick
So how do you define it? — Pinprick
This is just an aside for me, but there are still plenty of other options. Translation issues, the meaning of the term could have changed in 2000 years, perhaps he didn’t fully understand what he meant. Perhaps people find sense in what he said because it is vague enough to allow people to project or insert their own concepts into it? — Pinprick
I don’t know, and I don’t have a strong opinion one way or the other, but your conviction looks a bit more like faith than fact to me. — Pinprick
Almost as if you consider ancient secondhand accounts of the Buddha’s teachings to be infallible or divinely inspired. — Pinprick
Desire is more specific, or narrowly focused on specific things (money, sex, objects, etc.), whereas attachment is more abstract (life, pleasure, etc.). So we desire whatever it is we desire because it fulfills/sustains (temporarily, of course) an attachment. — Pinprick
it could suggest many things; that the Buddha didn’t literally mean what he said, that he was imperfect, that he lied, etc. — Pinprick