I’ve said that I believe existence has an underlying impetus, but that’s not the same thing at all. — Possibility
I believe doing so will ALWAYS reduce suffering — Possibility
that procreation is ‘forcing’ others into existence and suffering against their will, and therefore violates the negative ethics of ‘don’t use force/aggression’ and — Possibility
‘don’t harm’ — Possibility
I’ve argued that a sound ethical system would not contradict its own principles — Possibility
positive ethics and negative ethics must work in harmony, — Possibility
I’ve also argued that these principles of force/aggression and harm will ALWAYS break down in application to reality - but everyone seems to just sweep that aside as if it’s insignificant — Possibility
Given that Antinatalists often feel that even ordinary lives are bad, — TheHedoMinimalist
She reasons that as long as she donates enough money to Project Prevention that prevents more people from being born than the people that she creates, it is ok for her to have children. — TheHedoMinimalist
I didn’t say they should be punished. I don’t care if they are punished or not. What’s important is to acknowledge that they are doing something morally wrong by not intervening — Congau
But when the possibility of acting comes very close to you and the amount of inconvenience it costs you is very small — Congau
Actually the law also sometimes identifies a duty to act — Congau
nobody else would read end-to-end. — god must be atheist
And this would ensure that people would not do something else. — god must be atheist
By that logic you’re saying blind people are incapable of experiencing. — I like sushi
I don't see how 'shape' would be 'primal' in your terms — mcdoodle
Personally I'm wary of 'etc'. Just what is included and excluded by an 'etcetera', and how am I to know? — mcdoodle
. is location in space — christian2017
a line is an infininte of the above (marked as .) that all are in line with two relatively "extreme" points — christian2017
very often have elaborate definitions. — christian2017
mentioned above "primal concepts" only involve assigning names to objects. I might have used the word "understand" somewhere above in re "primal words" as if there's a meaning there that needs to be understood but as it turns out "primal words" are meaningless — TheMadFool
These are the first words a baby hears, repeatedly hears, and later understands by way of visual and other sensory verification of the phonymal string's cognitive image — god must be atheist
So what you're describing as 'primal words' actually goes a lot deeper than simply words. The triangle, which you mention as an example, is a concept — Wayfarer
good luck with finding some foundational collection of 'primal words' in terms of which everything else can be understood. — Wayfarer
We cannot ‘conceptualise’ ANYTHING a priori — I like sushi
In any case I must necessarily refer to experience to understand ‘line’ — I like sushi
without sensory input sensibility is mute — I like sushi
The statistics for the aggregate outcome are not an explanation of the particular outcomes. — GeorgeTheThird
I could argue for it, but I want to hear your explanation first. — Congau
True, but I was just turning around your argument. The same applies to what you’re saying. How can you harm nothing? — Congau
Well, some people sometimes say: “I wish I had never been born”. If that’s possible, one could also say: “I’m glad I was born”. I think most people would choose the second sentence. — Congau
If the student still doesn’t agree or understand, I could do it even more slowly and elaborate until he gets it. — Congau
But then you seem to have backed away with the zero conclusion. Which still leaves the victim caught between — Brett
But then you seem to have backed away with the zero conclusion. — Brett
Are you asking who should as in: "In any given situation should the spouse or parents take priority" or as in: "Which do you side with the spouse or the parent"
If it's the first: idk
If it's the second: I am leaning towards the parents but it really depends on how hellish hell is — khaled
No natural cause has been found for the outcome of any individual particle event. Therefore, whenever someone says, "God has caused this event", — GeorgeTheThird
Yes, it completely fails to explain why the aggregate of particles behaves predictably even though not one of the individual particles behaves predictably. — GeorgeTheThird
The question is how order at the macro level comes out of complete chaos at the individual particle level. — GeorgeTheThird
‘Suffering’ is also a subjective concept of value, which is commonly negative in relation to the individual to whom it refers. — Possibility
So anything you can KNOW from this statement is entirely dependent on the value attributed to each element by each individual — Possibility
An individual is as much a concept as existence. That we only talk about humans as having a ‘will’ and then prioritise that will is a symptom of anthropocentrism in how we conceptualise our experience. — Possibility
continuing to ignore, isolate and exclude the subjective experience, goals and will of others as it suits us. — Possibility
What our ‘suffering’ (from prediction error) and impending eco-crisis demonstrates is that the individual is NOT more important than existence — Possibility
that we are an integral part of ‘something’ broader, which we are too self-absorbed to acknowledge because we might be humbled by it - and that might cause us to ‘suffer’ even more. — Possibility
That ‘the individual is more important than existence’ is a gross misconception that causes more suffering than it can hope to remove — Possibility
If we are certain of nothing else, we are certain that something exists. I’m thinking we should focus on that first. — Possibility
That the individual is more important to the individual is obvious. But the individual is just another concept drawn from how we perceive reality. — Possibility
You're not making a dot of sense imo. So, Tim is killed by a headshot - it kills him instantly. You're saying that's not a harm — Bartricks
Please explain how I can have an instrumental reason to avoid something that will not harm me. — Bartricks
So you don't think it is true that we have reason to avoid killing ourselves and others? — Bartricks
That's just incoherent. — Bartricks
But death clearly is a harm, for it's self-evident we have instrumental (and perhaps moral) reason to avoid it in our own case, and certainly moral reason not to visit it on others (extreme circs. aside). — Bartricks
It is irrational to reject a self-evident truth of reason — Bartricks
reason represents death to be a harm to the one who dies — Bartricks
So you feel that the parents are acting more in the interests of the victim than the husband? — Brett
Who has this right over her future; the man who loves her or the women who gave birth to her? — Brett
