the point the book seems to be making is that both the Left and the Right tend to describe each other in psychological terms, perhaps the Left more so. — Apollodorus
Oh, thanks for the link! — Apollodorus
I do agree that political slogans are not psychology but they may point to deeper psychological factors. — Apollodorus
The main reason for this is that it's easier to call people names than to listen to them and answer their arguments. — Cuthbert
I think views tend to crystallize in two opposite categories: one oriented towards "change" ("left") and the other oriented towards "conservation or preservation" ("right"). — Apollodorus
So you exclude the possibility that the two can overlap?
If you do, on what grounds? — baker
So you're saying that morality causes suffering? — baker
Perhaps buy a gun? — Isaac
So much for "suffering an inconvenience for the sake of others". — baker
he strongest position that the antinatalists can take is something like this:
"I do not want to cause any suffering to others." (Formulated in 1st person singular.) — baker
I want to see what you consider "suffering an inconvenience for the sake of others". — baker
seeing how you'd deal with someone who doesn't care whether you live or die and who has no qualms about endangering your property and your person. And the authorities side with them! — baker
Where that came in, was the question of whether science ‘oversteps its mark’ and my claim that such speculative physics might well do that. And there are heated arguments within science as to whether string theory is a scientific theory or not. — Wayfarer
Do you believe that you are "suffering an inconvenience for the sake of others" when you read posts here that you disagree with? — baker
I'd love for you to be in my shoes, to have a neighbor like I do. I really do. I want to see how you'd handle that. — baker
I don't disagree that a lot of people are not successful at this though. I'd say relative success at the project of living well would be good evidence of having attained some measure of wisdom. — Pantagruel
the kinds of things they learn grow beyond the quantifiable knowledge — Pantagruel
every individual has a unique set of experiences (because that is part of what it means to be an individual) all of these life lessons are different, and yet they all reveal different aspects of a fundamental set of truths. — Pantagruel
wherever one experiences the greatest aversion is usually where one has the most to learn. — Pantagruel
What is meant by the term 'construct' is not our conscious building or formation of concepts by putting together parts of our experiences; but rather what it is meant to describe is how our experiences have, since before our birth, 'constructed' our concepts of the world by affecting the development of the brains physiological architecture. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
What you mean by saying, 'We construct,' is more or less the same as saying, 'The processes of the brain construct,' or, 'The human race constructs,' or, 'A psychological construct,' etc, not the deliberate efforts of our conscious executive control over our cognitive processes—that I am speaking of. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Even if I were to grant that we do possess such executive control over our subjective states, it would nevertheless fail to deliver an adequate objection for the premise that our subjective states exist and thus necessitates the truth of our evaluative propositions that describe our subjective states — Cartesian trigger-puppets
we know the phenomenological reality of our own qualia (the individual instances of subjective, conscious experience). — Cartesian trigger-puppets
how do we draw the line at who is able to parent? Can they only parent if they have good reason to believe their children will only be harm reducers? — Albero
this is the Benkei absurdity of "You have to live so you can not like suffering". But it's preventing another person from suffering in the first place and being in the game in the first place. — schopenhauer1
f one's mantra is "always reduce suffering" it seems intuitively correct to give birth to someone who will lead a lousy life but you know for certain they will cure 10 different types of cancer. Alternatively, it seems completely wrong to force someone to be a lifeguard for 40 years even though they'll save thousands of lives. — Albero
Because the project of life is to live well — Pantagruel
It's the actual level of expertise — Bartricks
People see the same evidence, but there’s enormous differences in interpretation, in what they say the evidence means. And that is not a matter of science, obviously - otherwise there could be no such divergences of view. — Wayfarer
The last phrase I still think is focused on an observable/measurable reality - specifically evidence of potency. Why does someone need to be the first to volunteer? If you’re second or third, what does that mean? — Possibility
as people age past middle-age and into deepening maturity, the kinds of things they learn grow beyond the quantifiable knowledge that defines us as working members of society, words, names of things, facts, figures, conventions of politeness, technical skills, and become instead a deeper form of understanding, lessons learned from situations that may unfold over months or years, or may still be unfolding. And because every individual has a unique set of experiences (because that is part of what it means to be an individual) all of these life lessons are different, and yet they all reveal different aspects of a fundamental set of truths. So it becomes a challenge of vocabulary and semantics to translate between the meanings of different perspectives of deeper wisdom. — Pantagruel
I actually agree that given climate chaos, the scourge of neoliberal capitalism, and the rise of authoritarian governments that having kids is a decision on behalf of someone else that will be unreasonable in the near future. But this still doesn't get us Hard Antinatalism, only "don't have kids under predatory capitalism and severe climate breakdown" which seems to be popular given how lots of people aren't having kids. — Albero
the state of affairs of X will do (being trapped in a harmful game). — schopenhauer1
The indignity is overlooking the person who will exist for some other cause, but in some egregious way. But what is this egregious way? — schopenhauer1
Once born, however, a human being is highly unlikely to have the sufficient skills to commit suicide before the age of five — Antinatalist
When this wish arises and the individual aims to fulfil it, surrounding people strive to prevent the suicide almost without exceptions if they only can. — Antinatalist
not even suicide guarantees that the individual will achieve the state or non-state where s/he “was” before the decision of having a child was made. (Be it complete non-existence, for example.) — Antinatalist
For some (many?) people, life is like being caught in a trap. — baker
if you stumble upon a venomous snake, you may experience the emotional state of fear which comes from your desire to live and avoid pain. Now, we can moderate such emotions and desires do change with time, as with everything else, but we do not have the ability to just will fear away or keep it from emerging, nor do we have the ability to simply not desire things or keep desires from emerging. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Especially during these fucking lock downs, we need to take extra care of each other. — Benkei
Just two days ago when we're debating a point and someone's rebuttal is based on issues discussed years ago (getting into the metaphysical problems of ascribing states to non-existent people) my interest deflates to negative 100. — Benkei
Dutch people should be fucking like bunnies. — Benkei
now (how?) exactly is the way out (if someone TRULY hates life) a minor inconvenience? Last I heard suicide is incredibly difficult to do — Albero
I'm saying that the relevant point here is how one deals with such exclusion. How does one deal with unknown things, things currently unknowable to one, things currently undecidable to one. How does one deal with ambivalence and uncertainty. — baker
"Rational" is one of the most debated terms. I refer you to Elster's classic Sour Grapes: Studies in the Subversion of Rationality.
Like I said earlier:
If you want to limit the meaning of "rational" to a particular flavor of secular academic discourse, then you should recognize this as a matter of your choice, not a given. — baker
Neither are the point at hand though, which is the argument for hard antinatalism. — Isaac
"It's evil to act on evil intentions" -- this seems to be the basic argument for AN here.
"To intend to procreate is to set a trap for another person. Setting a trap is evil. To procreate is evil." — baker
once the situation is "inescapable game, that 'hey you might like some aspects'" I believe there to be a problem, even if it has 'hey you might like some aspects' qualities". At that point, what other choice except suicide or slow death is there of course.. It's not like there's a button that we can just say.. "Next!". — schopenhauer1
The thing that occurred in the past is going to affect the person in the future..that developing fetus will become a person at some point. It's just like suffering.. I have a board ready to smack you in the head when a you step in a certain spot.. you step there, as intended, and it smacks you in the head... — schopenhauer1
At the moment a person was put into this scenario, that is the violation of dignity — schopenhauer1
Doing an action that affects someone is messing with someone else's autonomy. — schopenhauer1
Any point where someone's existential situation is assumed for them, would be a violation once someone exists to be the recipient of that existential situation. — schopenhauer1
I never originally defined dignity in terms of autonomy of will, so if that is a sticking point for you (because you limited it to this definition) then refer to my broader point here: As I said...
I don't think "dignity" just covers autonomy of will, but a basic unfairness or injustice that might be more fundamental (you don't need a will involved at point A, let's say). — schopenhauer1 — schopenhauer1
In this case, it's about the intention, and it's the intention that is evil. Setting a trap is already evil. The fact that nobody got trapped so far doesn't change the intention to set the trap, it doesn't undo the evilness of setting the trap. — baker
the focus on intention applies only insofar as people really carefully think through why they want to have children. (But which they usually don't seem to do, so the point is moot.) — baker
To be harmed is to lose one's dignity. — baker
My point was that we have desires and that we experience emotions, though we seem to not have much control over these things — Cartesian trigger-puppets
