It seems a similar delusion is happening here — Isaac
if you want to use a term in a particularly unusual manner you'll need to explain it first — Isaac
What on earth kind of heterodox definition of 'conservative' are you using which allows the extinction of the human race to fall under it?
— Isaac
"Does no harm". — khaled
Right. Which is a harm if what I wanted was a suit. — Isaac
if you want to use a term in a particularly unusual manner you'll need to explain it first — Isaac
You've still not given anything close to an explanation of why you think non-action has some moral strength over action when faced with uncertainty about outcomes and the impossibility of consent. Either could equally bring about a negative consequence, or lack virtue, or defy a duty... whichever moral framework you subscribe to, inaction does not just magically trump action. — Isaac
How can you reasonably expect not to hurt others while driving? — Isaac
What on earth kind of heterodox definition of 'conservative' are you using which allows the extinction of the human race to fall under it? — Isaac
You will have caused harm if it turns out you're right too. I'll have no suit. — Isaac
Every time you drive anywhere, for example. — Isaac
If your moral framework includes a feature which you cannot even predict changes in, it would seem little better than just throwing your hands up and saying "I'll just do whatever everyone else is doing". If the law said you must murder Jews would you do so? — Isaac
I guess what it boils down to is the claim that at the point of decision there is no individual whose well-being can be violated, foregoing the fact that we already know such an individual will come about as a direct result of our actions. — Tzeentch
Well don't you think that looking into it might be relevant, if you're going to make claims about it? — Isaac
Why? The vast majority of people broadly agree about stuff that's good, so it can't be a case of making a poor prediction. It's not reasonable to deny action in cases where we cannot obtain all potentially relevant data (we'd literally do nothing if that were the case). So I'm lost as to why you think this particular inaccessible bit of data prohibits action. — Isaac
Indeed. Sounds like a fantastic reason not to force those things upon someone.
— Tzeentch
There is no someone. — Isaac
No. Some might be making that point, but it's not mine. I'm quite comfortable with imagining a future child and acting in what I imagine to be it's best interests. — Isaac
So it is a moral premise of yours that whatever is the law or social norm is morally relevant? How, in your world, do laws and social norms get changed? — Isaac
No. Some might be making that point, but it's not mine. I'm quite comfortable with imagining a future child and acting in what I imagine to be it's best interests. — Isaac
The justification is... being able to foresee the consequences (life is really good - love, sunsets, adventure etc) and we can't possibly check in advance whether they want these things, so there's obviously no moral obligation to do so (to have a moral obligation to do something impossible is stupid). — Isaac
It should simply be "in accordance with freedom". — Echarmion
And if you should have children, you should have children. There is no other result here, you either should or you should not. — Echarmion
You don't have to go out and create a specific situation just so you can then have children. — Echarmion
See, what I consider funny about all this is that first you confuse law with morality — Benkei
second that you let your morality depend on what others think is right with the lovely result that your morality will change by crossing a border. — Benkei
Now is the question. Why must it be a near certainty? And more importantly, why is it wrong to claim that if there is any chance the proximate cause will exist and cannot be avoided, then it makes sense to move up the causal chain (Antinatalism)?
. — khaled
Look op negligence. — Benkei
But good to know you have no intrinsic moral compass and are easily swayed by what others expect from you. — Benkei
For proximate causes, if it's a near certainty the proximate cause will exist and cannot be avoided or alleviated then it makes sense to move up the causal chain. — Benkei
It's why different murderers get different sentences and why murder is sometimes excused due to circumstances. — Benkei
What if society agrees it's everybody's responsibility to intervene, so it's everybody's "job" to save drowning people? — Benkei
To expound a bit, generally it's a good rule of thumb not to kill people but sometimes it is. Generally, it's a good rule to be nice to people but sometimes it isn't. When it isn't has such a wide variety of reasons that it's no use to try to catch that in a general rule. It's enough to realise that almost every moral rule we can think of, can be provided with circumstances where the opposite is better.
So generally it's perfectly fine to have babies but sometimes it isn't. — Benkei
But you just said you're not responsible if a thing would happen if you weren't there. Why is the doctor responsible for something that would occur even if he wasn't there and yet you're not when someone is drowning? — Benkei
But giving random percentages isn't "circumstances". — Benkei
I'm coming from: to me the outcome comes about precisely because you are there and don't do anything — Benkei
How about a doctor, who can treat a life-threatening condition, and he just decides not to treat a patient? That would be a serious breach of his duties and promises but since the patient would die any way, no responsibility based on the above. — Benkei
That would be a serious breach of his duties and promises — Benkei
What thread have you been reading? it's in the OP and has been discussed several times in these pages. And, no I don't specify what "too much" is, because it depends on the circumstances, so I can't. — Benkei
This is rather perplexing to me. Your choice not to intervene causes the person to drown and die because if it hadn't been for your choice the person would still be alive. So your choice is a conditio sine que non for the drowning. If you aren't supposed to cause harm, you have to intervene. — Benkei
Nope. As you indicate yourself this is all surrounded by unknowns. All I do know is that these types of suffering aren't caused by living because being alive is not a sufficient condition for suffering, only a necessary condition. This is why when I "calculate" this borders on certainty. I'm not concerned with heartbreak of my daughter because I don't cause it. — Benkei
And yet it continually happens in this thread and I've already pointed it out several times. The last time was here: https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/480046 — Benkei
Small quibble: I gave "abject poverty" as a reason, which is something different than just poverty. People can be poor and happy, abject poverty and happiness usually don't go together. — Benkei
We can't calculate if someone is going to be happy or not so the question to me is for all intents and purposes moot and so would be my answer. — Benkei
What's important is whether we can intervene in the circumstances leading to suffering. If I can intervene in the causal chain because there's a proximate cause that I can affect, then there's a moral duty on me to do so and avoid another person's suffering. If the proximate cause is certain but unavoidable, only then would I consider intervening earlier in the causal chain as a moral obligation. — Benkei
Which reminds me, I might have missed it but if you don't recognise moral obligations to save drowning people why a moral obligation not to have kids? — Benkei
There isn't much point in responding to the same thing over and over again. — Echarmion
I don't claim that there is a moral duty to produce more people, as I already wrote. Just that there is a motivation for having children which is in accordance with free will, and as such moral. — Echarmion
The subjects are an end in an of itself, and having a further presence of subjects furthers free will by creating it's necessary preconditions. It does not necessarily follow from this that not having children is immoral - freedom isn't quantified, so there being more subjects doesn't equal more freedom. — Echarmion
Antinatalists are using the same "as if the child existed" model as well. As I stated over and over, it all about someone who could exist in the future. That person X (you called him Billy or Sarah as a placeholder), would prevented from suffering. — schopenhauer1
But would you will such a world into existence? Rawls' veil of ignorance provides a good analogy here: Imagine you're going to end up in this society as an inhabitant, but your socio-economic position is chosen at random. Would you want to live in a world where people go around doing whatever they want? — Echarmion
But, having children in order to continue a society of free subjects is different. — Echarmion
There is no outside reason for this to exist - the universe doesn't care. — Echarmion
The subjects are an end in an of itself, and having a further presence of subjects furthers free will by creating it's necessary preconditions. — Echarmion
It does not necessarily follow from this that not having children is immoral - freedom isn't quantified, so there being more subjects doesn't equal more freedom. — Echarmion
Robots don't have experiences. They don't feel, they don't hear, they don't see things. — Daemon
I can't pretend "as if" a non-existent child (eg. nothing) is better off because I don't know how nothing feels because it can't have feelings. They're not the same comparison. This point seems rather obvious. — Benkei
No, the difference is that I can pretend "as if" a child would exist and attribute qualities and states to it and compare that what I know about lives lived by those around me. — Benkei
And if they would be born into a situation of abject poverty, where the good does not outweigh their suffering or because of a biological defect that cannot be treated, we understand that "poverty" or that "defect" would cause unacceptable suffering and we should not have a child under those circumstances. What we are comparing then is a possibility of existence with other examples of possible lives lived and we find that possibility unacceptable. — Benkei
But this is fundamentally different from saying this "non-existent" child is better off never having been born because when we talk that way, it is neither a child nor a person nor capable of having any properties, because it is nothing. — Benkei
The essential nonsense that we cannot consider the future person being born because there is no person currently existing. — schopenhauer1
The community is not bearing the brunt of what it means to live out a life. It is simply a notion in the head of the actual people living out life. It is the individuals which are what are being prevented from suffering. — schopenhauer1
What sort of community do you envisage existing according to this premise? — Brett
Then why mention it in the same post as you seemed to imply that evidence was required for such claims? — Isaac
Why would they be relevant to the moral case? — Isaac
The community. You and them — Isaac
That would depend on the net gains you foresee. If you can see net gains, then you have no choice but to pursue them in the environment you have available. — Isaac
How could you determine this from your position of moral relativity? — Isaac
So do you have a citation for me for your assertion? — Isaac
Why? — Isaac
That you can will it be universalised. — Echarmion
Premises can also be conclusions, those aren't ontological categories. — Echarmion
What's innocence in this context? — Echarmion
Because we live in a community of generally like-minded people who rely intrinsically on each other for our mutual survival. So... — Isaac
(if anything like even a significant minority didn't we'd never have survived this long). — Isaac
If ever this is not the case, again, it is the fault of the society, not the act of having children. — Isaac
We impose all sorts of harms on children for the sake of wider community goals. — Isaac
Anything from social censure to full on imprisonment imposes harms on parties who may consider themselves innocent for the sake of the community. — Isaac
What's unwarranted about harm that results from following a "worthy goal"? — Echarmion
I justify it by making the assumption that other humans are like me, are capable of reasons, and thus if I use my reason sufficiently well I will reach the same conclusions they would. — Echarmion
Like putting people in prison I judge to have violated the law (if I have that power), — Echarmion
boycotting a business I judge to be unethical. — Echarmion
"Intending to" isn't enough. You also need to be able to actually being the goal about. Which includes considering other outcomes. — Echarmion
Nothing I said had anything to do with "arbitrary desire". I said your reasons need to be moral. That's the opposite of allowing your arbitrary desire to rule. — Echarmion
It'd be wrong even if we also genetically engineer the slaves to like it, on the basis that the motivation is immoral. — Echarmion
So long as you could honestly judge having the child is in line with the maxim, having it would be ethical. — Echarmion
For example, if we're creating some sort of slave caste, because we'd like others to serve us as slaves, this seems like "bad" motivation regardless of the fact that no slaves are yet around. Should we act with the intention to make other sentient being serve us? I'd say no. — Echarmion
For example, you may want children so you can help create a new generation of compassionate and capable humans. — Echarmion
Both these problems stem from looking at morality as a set of injunctions against specific outcomes, like a criminal law code listing a bunch of injuries you are not allowed to cause. And if a victim cannot be found and thus a prohibition not established, it then follows whatever you do is moral.
The alternative view is to ask what reasons we have for doing something — Echarmion
Creating suffering for the sake of suffering is not an acceptable motivation regardless of the outcome. It doesn't matter if I apply it by genetically engineering beings that suffer, or whether I punch my neighbor in the face for fun. — Echarmion
...you imply there's a moral duty beyond that which any community merely 'think' is a moral duty. — Isaac
I think most people would say that I do NOT have a moral duty to steal and murder. — khaled
Anything which attempts to work forward from some premise to undermine an already held position is a form of moral realism. — Isaac
We also have a moral intuition that ending the human race would be wrong. — Isaac
It's disingenuous to keep switching as it suits your argument — Isaac
It is only the task of a moral realist to attempt to show one to e 'wrong' by use of the other. — Isaac
It won't hurt if you use enough bombs. — Echarmion
Well then, nothing else needs to be said. Your argument ultimately rests on nonsense, in the most literal sense of the word. — Echarmion
If you’re indifferent, then you don’t care enough either way to make the issue a moral one. — Pinprick
I think this is mostly down to interpretation. — Echarmion
I mean if you don't care about whether rules like "you cannot kill people" can be derived from more basic principles, that's fine. But it is kinda the point of moral philosophy. — Echarmion
I only really associate "conservative" with a political movement and an approach to social questions. In that sense it's very much associated with the root "to conserve". I don't know where you take your usage of the word from, but if that's the definition you wanna go with, I am not going to argue. — Echarmion
It's trivially true only if you suppose that people that don't exist nevertheless exist — Echarmion
The problem is that you then have to answer why we're not nuking the planet into oblivion. — Echarmion
And if we cannot divine what the child's feelings are about being forced to live, isn't that a great reason to refrain from forcing it to?
— Tzeentch
This implies that there is a child with feelings, floating around as a disembodied soul or something, before the decision to even have a child is made.
Otherwise, the sequence of events doesn't work out, because by the time there is a child, it's already living, and the relevant decision is in the past. — Echarmion