the qualities of consciousness that are experienced by living things may arise from out of inanimate matter which possesses no inherent qualities in and of itself; outside of our subjective perceptions. — Beautiful Mind
But do we have a model that states, "If I send 3 nanos of dopamine to cell number 1,234,562 in quadrent 2 you'll see a red dog?" Not yet. — Philosophim
I don’t know exactly, but I find it more reasonable to assume that perhaps we aren’t aware of all properties a physical thing can have, as opposed to assuming things must be immaterial. — Pinprick
absolute truth is not the same thing as absolute fact. — Merkwurdichliebe
Again, what is added to talk of the difference between "700 nanometer wavelength electromagnetic wave" and talk of red by introducing qualia? — Banno
So if that debt can accrue to me for benefits given without my consent to the deal — Isaac
If "being a productive member is good enough payment." for the boons that previous generations gave then that is almost literally the definition of doing something for a boon they didn't ask for. — Isaac
We don't 'know' they'll benefit. We just have good cause to believe they will. If that's still all that's required then it's OK to bring someone into being without their consent on the same grounds - that we've good cause to believe they'll overall benefit from that action. — Isaac
Have you been to America? — Isaac
how people are motivated to do things which help future generations in your system where there's no duty at all on the beneficiaries of those actions toward the common good that has been thus built. — Isaac
We don't 'know' they'll benefit. We just have good cause to believe they will. If that's still all that's required then it's OK to bring someone into being without their consent on the same grounds — Isaac
Do I not owe society anything for all that? — Isaac
The people who give this support do so because they see their community as a moral good in its own right, but they wouldn't be so keen to contribute to that good if those who benefitted most from it incurred no duty to similarly nurture it. — Isaac
Once born you will inevitably be looked after by 'society' and benefit from its boons, without your consent. — Isaac
I'm fairly certain that your neo-liberal 'morality' would lead fairly rapidly to a vicious and unpleasant world of ruthlessly competing individuals — Isaac
Any takeaways for you? Anything you've learned from participating in this thread? — Srap Tasmaner
I would like you to explore the self-refuting nature of the statement, N = never say never, never say always, because N does exactly what it says shouldn't be done. — TheMadFool
Not alien, no, and not unheard of, but I still think the Kantian approach is wrongheaded. — Srap Tasmaner
But to me this is clearly a mistake — Srap Tasmaner
If the whole point of the underlying system is lost by abstracting principles from it and then spinning out new deductions from those principles, either your inferences are faulty or your principle-abstraction process has gone wrong. — Srap Tasmaner
you have to have a way of judging how well you have reconstructed our moral sense as a system of principles — Srap Tasmaner
hold yourself to the same standards of model building that scientists use. — Srap Tasmaner
As a child I benefited from a considerable amount of societal boons, right from birth. — Isaac
So how should I handle the duty that accrues, in your system? — Isaac
Similarly, I benefit from the fertility put into my soil several generations ago, how should I absolve my repayment of that debt? — Isaac
How, under your system would anyone undertake any project whose benefits will only accrue to future generations? — Isaac
The child above shouldn't ever have been put in that position because they should never have been born. But in this case it's not so much your moral system leading to antinatalism as antinatalism being required in order to make your system coherent. — Isaac
Well yeah. My position is that the "conviction" that kin-harming is wrong almost certainly comes wired in, but it doesn't come wired in as a belief. It shows up in our behavior (and in the behavior of ever so many animals), and it shows up in our feelings — Srap Tasmaner
I've got some big hitters on my side too though — Srap Tasmaner
Otherwise what prevents an individual from benefitting from a community's protection, safety-net, shared resources, etc., and then when the time comes to give something back saying "you've no right to tell me what to do"? — Isaac
So, just to clarify, for you my second caveat to "Get the consent of others before doing something potentially harmful to them", the one about taking part on wider social objectives, that's just completely irrelevant? — Isaac
You have moral intuitions about sacrificing your preferences for the sake of others I assume, so is it just that any such duty must be secondary to one's personal preferences? — Isaac
I'd feel perfectly within my moral bounds just going ahead and making that purchase on those grounds. That's how communities function, they have a goal which is more important than any individual. — Isaac
yet the part we play is still going to need playing — Isaac
The point I'm making is actually no different to Srap's (I think). Morality is a story we tell ourselves to explain the feelings our biology and early childhood experiences have left us with. It can't be 'worked out', but it is vitally important, and that story is about the community, not the individual. The morality story wouldn't even make sense at an individual level. — Isaac
Morality is social. Always has been — Srap Tasmaner
Genuine questions arise when we face situations never contemplated before in the long history of our living together in communities — Srap Tasmaner
The premises in such exercises simply do not have the sort of standing that you think of the premises in a logical argument as having — Srap Tasmaner
When a thought experiment is proposed ("What if it was your daughter?") the idea is to activate our intuitions, give them something more concrete to work with. — Srap Tasmaner
If it doesn't feel right, or if several of us, or millions of us, reach different conclusions, all we can do is try some other starting points we think generally right and talk to each other. — Srap Tasmaner
Is having children a new phenomenon among human beings, something our double inheritance has left us ill-equipped to deal with? — Srap Tasmaner
and it's clear how genuine moral questions arise. — Srap Tasmaner
second would be someone making a good balanced choice for me — Isaac
I agree, but I don’t understand why they both can’t be physical. — Pinprick
but do you think consciousness is required to experience qualia? There are animals with no brains, which implies that they are not conscious, which are still able to navigate their environment and discriminate between different types of things (food, mate, etc.). — Pinprick
The question is why on earth anyone would publish their personal preferences in a public forum when those preferences are the metaphorical equivalent of saying one prefers mud-flavour. We've no cause to say you shouldn't, but it's just a really weird position with nothing in favour of it. — Isaac
If you know already that there are perfectly reasonable caveats which avoid antinatalism (just ones which you happen to find unintuitive) then there's nothing philosophically interesting here - psychologically interesting, certainly. — Isaac
ah but you're really benefiting them in the future when they exist", that's fine (but unnecessarily clumsy) — Isaac
I don't see how that changes anything. — Isaac
Where have I suggested the antinatalist doesn't believe this? — Isaac
No. I know antinatalists have this weird idea that you can't do anything for a person who doesn't yet exist,but tell that to the parent who's saving up children's toys for their as yet un-conceived grandchildren — Isaac
Balance that against the pleasures they might experience. — Isaac
a stupid mistake in their agreement to end it — Isaac
I've literally written the exact opposite of this in a comment you even reply to further down — Isaac
Yes it is. Do you even read what I write? "1. That the person exists, is conscious, is able to respond, and is judged to be of their right mind - absent of either you have to guess what they might want done — Isaac
This is actually your problem, right here.
Anti-natalism is not a moral position at all. It is, as I said before, a logical paradox. — Srap Tasmaner
Morality is how we manage to do that, and how we manage to go on doing that, generation after generation — Srap Tasmaner
Either of us could dig in and argue that it's "really" the fault of the other. (I'll spare you the arguments, and assume you can fill them in yourself, though I find them pretty interesting.) I think both accepting some "share" of the blame is just a way of saying we've decided not to argue about whose fault it "really" is. — Srap Tasmaner
If a drunk driver kills somebody, is the bartender who served them partly responsible? What about the dealer that sold him the car? — Srap Tasmaner
There are so many "variables", and your judgment of responsibility can swing back and forth with each detail I could add to a story; why is that? — Srap Tasmaner
I think you'll say no, but schop will say yes. — Srap Tasmaner
I think you have it in mind that genuine responsibility can be assessed — Srap Tasmaner
Are you sure you're done? Couldn't we parse that further? Couldn't I still be partly responsible if I warn you not to do something but I'm not certain you understood me? — Srap Tasmaner
What if I give you a blanket warning to do nothing that might lead to you suffering, is that okay? — Srap Tasmaner
Neither you nor schop are willing to consider our intentions. — Srap Tasmaner
But you know for a fact that's false, because hardly anyone you've ever presented the argument to accepted it, right? — Srap Tasmaner
So now you need to claim that they're not logical, maybe not even capable of being logical (again, some extra pessimism), or that they're capable of it but engaging in motivated reasoning that blocks the inference they really should make. — Srap Tasmaner
or griping about the world without actually having to bear any responsibilty for doing anything about it. — Isaac
I know antinatalists have this weird idea that you can't do anything for a person who doesn't yet exist, — Isaac
As far as you're concerned, the only option available for rejecting anti-natalism is denying the principle that is applied after the causal analysis is done: if someone wants to say, yeah I'm down with causing unjustified suffering, you pack up your argument and leave. — Srap Tasmaner
They can fail morally, fail intellectually or they can agree with you. — Srap Tasmaner
It is literally stupid, in the sense of not knowing or pretending not to know something everyone knows, — Srap Tasmaner
that if you're going to talk about who caused what to happen you're already swimming in moral seas. — Srap Tasmaner
Why are you adding that particular set of limits and not some other common constraints such as harm done in the pursuit of wider social objectives (like punishment for crime), or harm done where the harm is considered 'character building', or harm done where a greater harm would befall if not done — Isaac
All common caveats to the definition of 'harm' in this context, many of which could be used to mitigate the harm of conceptions, all of which you conveniently leave off your addendum. — Isaac
No. I know antinatalists have this weird idea that you can't do anything for a person who doesn't yet exist, but tell that to the parent who's saving up children's toys for their as yet un-conceived grandchildren, or planting a woodland, or putting money into a trust fund. Who are they imagining will enjoy these things? — Isaac
We might, perfectly reasonably, have a child on the grounds that they'd probably like to enjoy some of what life has to offer. — Isaac
and all agreed it was so, then ending the human race would become a viable moral option — Isaac
Oh and it's not "...at all costs" — Isaac
1. That the person exists, is conscious, is able to respond, and is judged to be of their right mind - absent of either you have to guess what they might want done (where the harm might be weighed against benefits).
2. That no wider important social objective is undermined by avoiding that harm, if so a balance might need to be made - we're a social species, not just a bunch of unrelated individuals.
3. That you don't have good reason to believe you already have consent - I add this one because the 'before' bit is ambiguous - how much before, to what specificity? — Isaac
Being forced to exist implies there is ‘A Will’ behind my existence. — KerimF
My first thought was to assume that ‘IT’ expects something from me for ‘ITSELF’. — KerimF
My second thought was to assume that ‘IT’, being perfect — KerimF
I personally didn’t like the answer in {G}. — KerimF
This ‘Will’ is perfect and allowed me to exist in this world just to offer me something special/personal. — KerimF
So what could be the gift in {I}? In brief, ‘IT’ offers me knowing, if I want to, how to replace my temporary existence in this world with an eternal one in ‘ITs’ Realm which is not defined/limited by the notions of time and space (it is much like the dream realm in which I existed many times... also without my will :) ). — KerimF
{N} Do you think it is good/wise that I also give you my answer of the question in {M}? I bet that many of you, if not all :) , prefer not to hear it. And I respect your wish. — KerimF
Yes, but this is part of the main point I'm trying to make. You seem to have this sharp line between a moral intuition used as a premise and a moral intuition used to reject (or choose between) counter-intuitive conclusions. I can't see any justification for such a divide, they're all just moral intuitions. — Isaac
No, not in the least bit. — Isaac
It isn't. It relies on premises (moral intuitions) taken without the usual caveats which is not at all popular. — Isaac
What is your claim anyway? You must consider parents responsible for something, or you'd have nothing to say. I could guess, but you could just say what that is. — Srap Tasmaner
I think my morals do apply to you. I just recognise that you will have different morals that you (might) think apply to me and that there's no objective means of determining who's right. — Isaac
and letting others do the same? — Isaac
But if believing them leads to antinatalism then each premise leads to counter intuitive conclusions if believed too. You haven't removed the counter intuitive conclusions by believing them. — Isaac
If you're claiming that your premise is actually that we should seek consent from those potentially harmed by our action where we have a legal responsibility to do so, or some legal right may be infringed, — Isaac
The point is that everyone does this. Except antinatalists. Antinatalists do it to a point but then seem to reach "end the human race" as a conclusion and instead of adding another caveat to avoid such an obviously wrong conclusion, they just accept it — Isaac
What both of you did want to talk about -- not with each other but with the rest of us -- is that there is someone else who is responsible for that harm — Srap Tasmaner
The example here was about disabled children, not children in general. You were implying that disability was a harm which it would be immoral to cause with foreknowledge. — Isaac
this is offensive to disabled people because many feel that their disability is a harm because of society's failure to accommodate them, not the circumstances of their birth — Isaac
What I was actually looking for in asking this question was the grounds on which you'd claim the premises of antinatalism were not 'completely ridiculous', — Isaac
Otherwise what distinguishes antinatalism from just 'not wanting to have children'? — Isaac
As I said before, I think you've misunderstood moral relativism. A moral claim is a claim about how others should act, not a claim about one's personal prefernces. — Isaac
But if there's no compelling argument (other than just "well that's what my unusual premises lead to") — Isaac
then I can't see any good reason why someone would repeatedly say something so unpleasant. — Isaac
You've missed the point. You asked about examples of situations where consent is not asked of non-existent persons for actions which may harm them. Finding no shelter from the rain where there might have been shelter definitely harms a future person. I did not ask their consent before removing that shelter. The specifics don't matter. the point is absolutely everything I do has the potential to harm future people by the absence of some resource which I've used that they might have benefited from. I do not ask their consent. Every structural alteration I make to the world might harm a future person who so much as trips over it. I don not ask their consent before doing so. — Isaac
So what is the difference then, you haven't answered the question, only shown that social or biological obligations are not sufficient. — Isaac
Nothing is unclear, it's offensive. The idea that the only thing making disabled people's lives worth living is the difficulty of suicide is deeply offensive. — Isaac
How are we determining what is and is not 'completely ridiculous' in this sense? — Isaac
You seem to have avoided the issue of how antinatalism atttacks natalists simply by positing a moral harm. — Isaac
I agree it's not directly about antinatalism at first, but that's the main reason why I responded in such an exasperated fashion, because we all knew it was going to end up that way. — Isaac
'The position' being 'it is possible to have some set of axioms which lead to antinatalism'? — Isaac
Yes, if I want to fell a tree I don't typically have to ask for the consent of every potential future person who might shade under it's boughs. — Isaac
The point was that there's no logical method of deriving antinatalism. It's not the conclusion of a Modus Tollens or something, it's just a moral feeling (or set thereof) — Isaac
What more is a moral judgement than a feeling of social or biological obligation? — Isaac
If there is no wave, there is no color red. — Pinprick
