As long as you think non-trivial harm exists for all humans, the argument stands: — schopenhauer1
Do we agree that foisting non-trivial, unnecessary impositions/burdens/harms on someone else is wrong? — schopenhauer1
I said it was definitional. — schopenhauer1
I am answering your question, but this requires you to answer my question: — schopenhauer1
All we have to agree on here is that there is a distinction, and that non-trivial harm exists for everyone born. — schopenhauer1
What’s the “set of features” that go into making an imposition non trivial? — khaled
. I'll allow the fact that this can be subjective, even. — schopenhauer1
What’s the “set of features” that go into making an imposition non trivial? — khaled
I'll allow the fact that this can be subjective, even. — schopenhauer1
Do we agree that foisting non-trivial, unnecessary impositions/burdens/harms on someone else is wrong? — schopenhauer1
Can we agree on what an imposition is? — schopenhauer1
Do we agree what non-trivial means? — schopenhauer1
Do we agree with what unnecessary means? — schopenhauer1
Do we agree that there is an extra duty of care when it comes to doing something on another person's behalf? — schopenhauer1
In light of that person would not be harmed (which is good) and that person would not have happiness (neutral), that makes sense. However, once alive, there might be a case that after already being born, that preventing happiness, when one can for someone, with minimal cost to oneself, would seem to be some sort of morally worthy act. — schopenhauer1
I don't think that this example is similar to the case here. It's like you already assume that "stealing" (wrong) is the "having kid" case. — dimosthenis9
I really can't understand how you and schopenhauer measure harm and happiness and you decide that harm counts more. — dimosthenis9
So you lead the conclusion to your preference already. — dimosthenis9
Why then you don't consider as depriving happiness from an unborn kid a bad thing also? — dimosthenis9
Of course not it isn't right. — dimosthenis9
Where exactly is the problem? Why his choice is wrong and yours is right??
My point is the same as I wrote before: it is NOT a matter of right or wrong. — dimosthenis9
Of course not it isn't right. When you know that your kid will face serious illness, it's not right at all to have it. — dimosthenis9
We will never agree on that. Let's face it. It's OK. Not saying that I m surely right and you are wrong. We just think different on that. — dimosthenis9
Lower perspective: Assuming, people exist who can evaluate good or bad in the FIRST PLACE..
An actual person (that is being affected) does not need to exist in order for prevention of harm to be good. An actual person (that is being affected) does need to exist for prevention of good to be bad. — schopenhauer1
You either agree imposing harm on another is wrong (if it's unnecessary and non-trivial) or not. — schopenhauer1
That harmful burdens and suffering is not good, and thus not good to enact on another. Happiness may be "good", but not enacting it seems to not matter in a moral sense in the same way not enacting harm is. — schopenhauer1
I will go back to things like Willy Wonka's limited choices, and the Exploited Worker, and that is not even discussing agreed-upon, contingent (non-structural yet likely) harms such as physical ailments, accidents, disasters, and the rest. — schopenhauer1
I guess when we are arguing, yes. — schopenhauer1
You are actually making my argument. No person, means no goods of life. That no one is harmed is good though.. — schopenhauer1
Not sure what you mean. — schopenhauer1
Rather I see it as just not fully understanding the extent of the unnecessary, non-trivial burdens put upon another person. — schopenhauer1
unnecessary (not for amelioration of a greater for lesser suffering for that person) — schopenhauer1
non-trivial — schopenhauer1
But to whom does that matter? Certainly, not the non-existent being, as that makes no sense. — schopenhauer1
1) A person is not born, and a person is not imposed upon — schopenhauer1
That question would be valid only if there was a way to "ask" the unborn kid if it want that or not. Since that it's purely impossible the choice to be made is on parent's hands. — dimosthenis9
Where exactly is the problem? Why his choice is wrong and yours is right?? — dimosthenis9
My point is the same as I wrote before: it is NOT a matter of right or wrong. — dimosthenis9
otherwise you have no non question begging evidence that physical events can only have physical causes. — Bartricks
So you need first to establish that the mind is physical — Bartricks
Why? Because minds and their contents exist with the utmost certainty and it would be irrational to reduce the more certain to the less. — Bartricks
Perhaps there's a good argument out there that has "therefore, my mind is my brain" as its conclusion - but if there is, I haven't heard it yet. — Bartricks
That person who tried harder that anyone did so because he believed is the promise of greater pleasure that would come if he won, that it would all be worth it. Just like a suicidal person who believes that if he keeps on living then all his pain would end, then it would all have been worth it. — I love Chom-choms
Once born, however, a human being is highly unlikely to have the sufficient skills to commit suicide before the age of five – often, in fact, not before turning ten or even fifteen. When this wish arises and the individual aims to fulfill it, surrounding people strive to prevent the suicide almost without exceptions if they only can. Furthermore, a vast number of highly retarded people exist who, due to their condition, will never really be able to commit suicide. One must in any case consider the possibility of having to live a perhaps highly agonizing period of life before suicide, due to a choice – that of creating life – for which the individual him/herself is not responsible — Antinatalist
So you also support that poor people shouldn't have kids? Poor people should be deprived of that joy in their lives? — dimosthenis9
Kids from poor families can't live happily? — dimosthenis9
Only rich family's kids? — dimosthenis9
Kids need love way much more than money. — dimosthenis9
If a poor guy loves his kids he will do whatever to raise them happily. Even with little money. — dimosthenis9
I don't think that this is your intention but poor people shouldn't have kids sounds kind of racist to me. — dimosthenis9
Gift could be harmful, but comparing gift to having a child is, although natural, but also very extreme thing to do. — Antinatalist
Having a child is not a trivial everyday task. — Antinatalist
There is something odd of the fact that you find this whole line of argument ridiculous and yet you engage. — schopenhauer1
Or at least did you not acknowledge that I posited this and then explained about degrees and limits to practically 0? — schopenhauer1
That's your whole strategy to say, "If this isn't wrong, life isn't wrong". — schopenhauer1
What do you think we’re debating? Whether or not AN is right? Again, that’s not what I’m arguing. What I am arguing is that your version of AN is personal and can’t be generalized. — khaled
Irrelevant. If the majority found X wrong thing to be good, doesn't make it so. Some people are ameliorated by things that harm others. — schopenhauer1
What I am arguing is that your version of AN is personal and can’t be generalized. — khaled
No I don't want to. I want to have my own kids and raise them with no misery at all. Why should I help others kid and deprive myself from the joy of having my own kids just because I m poor — dimosthenis9
Finally, nobody will know is it better for human being born into this world or not. However, we know that if child born into this world, her/his life could be painful, perhaps she/he will suffer really hard. — Antinatalist
Even situation like this, I don´t think it´s obligation to reproduce. — Antinatalist
Same goes to you buddy. Why are you debating me so much? You feel your life's mission is to put me in my place on this forum for some reason? — schopenhauer1
When something is just "the way it is" for a long time, it isn't really questioned as there was never a precedent for it. — schopenhauer1
Create a situation where no one gets harmed and then compare it to one where there is immense harm. — schopenhauer1
here is a case of so limited a prospect of harm as to be negligible in terms of "harmful imposition". — schopenhauer1
For example, right here you ignored all the examples of wrongs that are so negligible as to not matter, like the limits of calculus. — schopenhauer1
But again, procreation is one place where no ameliorations have to take place. No using anyone has to take place either. You simply prevent unnecessary harm, period. No ONE loses. — schopenhauer1
Don't need painkillers if there was no pain to begin with. — schopenhauer1
Maybe, but then you had fighter pilots committing kamikaze. — schopenhauer1
So why should anyone debate anything that they care about? — schopenhauer1
Yes, a lot of women didn't really rally around it for a long time. — schopenhauer1
I am saying that. Surprise parties are >0 wrong (but just barely). — schopenhauer1
This one. I've already said it. — schopenhauer1
Because you keep bringing them up — schopenhauer1
The unnecessarily part there negates any ideas about cases of ameliorating greater harms with lesser harms as we already went through that. — schopenhauer1
I have been and did say I'd "bite the bullet" for your little analogy. — schopenhauer1
It is an extent. But what if I were to bite the bullet and say surprise parties are wrong
— schopenhauer1
I’d stop talking to you because it seems ridiculous. — khaled
And as I said previously, no one is obligated to bring happiness to people, so that part of life isn't what's in question. I see happiness-bringing as supererogatory. — schopenhauer1
People don't know when to stop when everyone's points are made and the dialogue can't go any further. — schopenhauer1
I think there's a right answer based on the logic and evidence, but that not everyone is going to see it that way, and I accept that. — schopenhauer1
At one point Japan's majority thought it great to expand into China for things like resources and perhaps even racial reasons. — schopenhauer1
So my meta-ethical theory is more Hegelian.. Ethics is discovered over time, but has been true all along. — schopenhauer1
It took real effort and convincing- compelling arguments, to ensure things like "rights", "human rights", "women's rights", "minority rights", etc. — schopenhauer1
That is to say, stealing is wrong no matter what. However, stealing a pencil from Walmart, while wrong would not be on the same level as stealing let's say your neighbor's car, or lifesaving medicine from a pharmacy because you can sell it on the black market. There are degrees of wrong. — schopenhauer1
So I can very well say that surprise parties are wrong, but to such a minimal extent that its negligible. — schopenhauer1
Your line of argument seems to try to push me against the wall to not notice any degrees at all. Why should I overlook degrees of wrong? — schopenhauer1
The degrees are so incommensurable that to not save the child would be the much greater wrong. — schopenhauer1
Two wrongs can make a right if the wrong of one is to mitigate the worse wrong. So yes, Kant can be right in a way. .Lying to the perpetrator could be wrong, but it is necessary to overcome the greater wrong in contributing to your friend's death by telling him where he is. — schopenhauer1
There is no obligation to create happy people, but there is an obligation to prevent harm (when it is possible). This axiom prevents all sorts of utilitarian exchanges.. Such as making a person who will be harmed to prevent so X future event. — schopenhauer1
So going back to what I said earlier, ALL I CAN DO, is show how indeed life DOES contain more suffering than they may at first realize. That's all I can do.. convince — schopenhauer1
We have to admit this.. Once born, there is a conundrum that one cannot be unborn. One can only commit suicide if one wants "out". But this is not the same thing. By being born, we exist to be harmed but if we didn't exist there is no us to know anything one way or another. — schopenhauer1
But as far as telling people "Y'all shouldn't have kids", that is a poor and uncharitable interpretation of what I'm doing. — schopenhauer1
Even hardcore anti-abortionists knows that the otherside thinks their point of view is just as valid. — schopenhauer1
But again, different values leads to different ethical arguments. — schopenhauer1
These are all debatable and highly contentious for some people. — schopenhauer1
But I am just saying that it is still just a viewpoint, similar to how I have a viewpoint. It can be debated as well. — schopenhauer1
I mean to say that you take people's subjective view of what is right and wrong. — schopenhauer1
That is because it is a discrete event that people generally like.. Life isn't a "discrete event people generally like". — schopenhauer1
container with various kinds of events/experiences — schopenhauer1
However, even if we were to keep your example, because the stakes are so low (dislike of surprise parties aren't a big deal to the person), the imposition becomes negligible as to not be equivalent to (literally), a lifetime of negative experiences of all degrees and kinds. — schopenhauer1
I'm saying that the harm doesn't matter to those who never experienced the surprise party (and didn't know about it), it matters to those who had to go through it and didn't like it — schopenhauer1
Does almost all life have some impositions? — schopenhauer1
It is unnecessarily creating conditions of harm and impositions for others that is what matters here. It is not ameliorating anything, but unnecessarily creating it. — schopenhauer1
Yes, the surprise party becomes somewhat negligible when compared to the impositions of other harms of a whole lifetime. — schopenhauer1
The point is when people think there is something problematic, they may speak up and explain why think think it's problematic. — schopenhauer1
By the way where do you address your circular logic of arguing that I should not try to convince people, when you are trying to convince me not to try to convince people yourself? — schopenhauer1
Not really. It is a difference of values how people prioritize things like what the government should fund, whether it's okay for it to be in their "backyard" (NIMBY), whether what they say and what they do is aligned, whether shelter matters more than other priorities, etc. Any number of issues can be about any number of viewpoints and usually people bring their values to this. — schopenhauer1
Yes, of course you have purposely done so, because that would lead you to actually have an argument yourself which would make it easier for others to attack and you hate making claims yourself it seems — schopenhauer1
But anyways, you are still being radically subjective in the fact that it has to be perceived as such by a majority. — schopenhauer1
You have picked something that is imposed upon on others, but pretty much falls apart in all the other way in which life itself has negative experiences over someone's literal lifetime. — schopenhauer1
If there's no downside to no good of the surprise party, and those who would be harmed from the surprise party are not being harmed.. There ya go. — schopenhauer1
I am saying that summing up a (let's say) 4 hour event might be easier than summing up 90 years worth of experiences. — schopenhauer1
Even if I am wrong on this.. It doesn't change that one is summing up 90 years of experiences into a binary statement of "Is life good or bad?". — schopenhauer1
It is still a life time of pervasive inescapable negative experiences and that is not okay to impose on someone — schopenhauer1
There's a lot of things that are not "provable".. Are conservatives or liberals "right"? — schopenhauer1
Why should politicians care to convince people? — schopenhauer1
So, someone who thinks a homeless shelter should be built and funded with government money values this, and thinks this is generally good. Maybe the opposition says that it leads to other, unintended consequences, and this is actually not "good". — schopenhauer1
Your seeming insistence that wrong is only taking place when the person wronged perceives it as such. This seems an absolute rule for you. — schopenhauer1
Things like this prove the above.. You have been saying "no"? Your whole line of argument is "You can't say that there is wrong if others think there isn't". — schopenhauer1
But wait, here is an instance where you actually can avoid burdening someone with unwanted harms. — schopenhauer1
And yeah you don't like the asymmetry but look at it again.. There is no downside to anyone when it comes to the goods of life. — schopenhauer1
I mean yeah, there's unavoidable harms we do to others all the time — schopenhauer1
He is the one who is the main proponent of the theory so I think it is wise to quote a professional who spends their career studying how this bias affects perceptions. — schopenhauer1
Which article would convince you? Nature? Psychology Journal? Cognitive Science Weekly? — schopenhauer1
Right a minor event that is only slight isn't a big deal but is problematic. A major event (oh let's say a whole life time of negative experiences) is indeed problematic. — schopenhauer1
Isn’t it possible that an event can have inconveniences, and still be ok to inflict due to it overall being positive? — khaled
I think it is a wrong, and ethically problematic. — schopenhauer1
despite my annoyance at anyone who would throw me one I wouldn’t say they’re doing something ethically wrong. — khaled
There is no way to "prove" this. What you think is proof, isn't for someone else. — schopenhauer1
If the majority of people are anti-vaxers, are they right? — schopenhauer1
I guess everything is subjective right? — schopenhauer1
If a majority of people are exploited by a big boss smoking a cigar laughing his ass off in a backroom, is it right? — schopenhauer1
I will ask again, does almost all life contain unwanted burdens, yes or no? — schopenhauer1
Does almost all life encounter burdens and inconveniences, yes or no? — schopenhauer1
Do we disagree that something can be wrong, and people don't realize it, yes or no? — schopenhauer1
You said earlier YOU don't like surprise parties — schopenhauer1
like the ones life "itself" imposes. — schopenhauer1
The debate is of course how much and to what extent its taking place — schopenhauer1
You think it is absolutely up to the person's report how much inconvenience there — schopenhauer1
Other than that kind of evidence, I can only invite you to look up the phenomena and read up on OB. — schopenhauer1
But the difference is I am not entreating you to do this on this thread's dime. — schopenhauer1
I can only invite you to look up the phenomena and read up on OB. I also recommend Benatar's writings on it. Not too hard to search — schopenhauer1
incredulity — schopenhauer1
It is an extent. But what if I were to bite the bullet and say surprise parties are wrong — schopenhauer1
I guess you are a strong "NO" to anything being contrary to someone's report — schopenhauer1
EVERYTHING is ONLY up to the person, and ONLY on self-reports on evaluations of the events. — schopenhauer1
I am taking a view of the event itself. As long as imposition has happened, that should be considered, despite evaluations. There is not much we can do at this point because there is not much to prove one way or the other. — schopenhauer1
If someone (maybe yourself) is burdened with the surprise party — schopenhauer1
it is THEY who lose out. — schopenhauer1
I am saying, it is simply wrong to impose on another, despite if someone minds it or not post-facto. — schopenhauer1
You are saying that it only matters if someone minds that they are being imposed upon. — schopenhauer1
I am not sure I would classify it as an imposition if people like it — schopenhauer1
You are pissed at me for having a certain viewpoint. — schopenhauer1
They are sort of axiomatic differences that are hard to "prove" other than explaining a perspective and seeing if that is compelling enough to the other person. — schopenhauer1
You are not respecting that this particular line of debate is for me, not interesting anymore — schopenhauer1
Your point was either that people don't under report or that the report is just as accurate as the occurrence.
This just goes around and around now — schopenhauer1
Can't you accept that sometimes that's just the nature of arguments? There is no "winner" in these kind of arguments. — schopenhauer1
No person exists prior to existence, no? Another disanalogy. — schopenhauer1
who "is" indeed missing out. — schopenhauer1
No one has the injustice of "not living" applied to "them" — schopenhauer1