You haven't presented any logical relationship between any vaccination and any autoimmune disease. The fact that it is checked for in trials does not demonstrate a logical relationship. — Metaphysician Undercover
What it demonstrates is that some people are afraid that a vaccine might cause an autoimmune problem so it is checked for in trials, in order to demonstrate to these people that it does not. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think it is actually highly unlikely that an injected molecule of any sort could cause a chronic autoimmune condition. These conditions are extremely complex with unknown causes. So, if it were the case that the injection of a molecule into the body could cause such an illness, I think it would not be the case that these conditions are extremely complex with unknown causes. — Metaphysician Undercover
A naturalistic fallacy is when you say "We should do this because it's natrual". For example: "People naturally want to steal therefore they should". That seems to me what you're doing.
There is no 'should'. — Isaac
Bit late for that. — khaled
If by this statement you mean that we should follow this or that moral intuition because they are culturally and biologically evolved that would be a natrualistic fallacy. — khaled
I thought the idea that vaccines actually cause autoimmune diseases was debunked a long time ago. — Metaphysician Undercover
Whatever the evidence is, it is not hard and fast. The line gets blurry at foxes and wolves. — khaled
you seem to me to be asking for hard and fast. — khaled
What makes "Moral acts are for the benefit of the community" so incredibly different than the moral rule we outlined that the former works as a definition and the latter becomes "arbitrary rules followed for no reason"? — khaled
'Moral' is a word in our shared language. — Isaac
Well considering how many debates we have about it, maybe its meaning isn't as "shared" as, say, "dog". It has some flexibility. — khaled
Problem is all you can say about these axioms is that they’re weird. That’s not really important, it’s like saying you don’t like vanilla ice cream. But this thread is an attempt to say they’re wrong. — khaled
I remember hearing that Kant was asked: If there were 2 people male and female, left alive on earth but one of them was a criminal, should she be executed or should the couple try to rebuild the human race and he answered: Executed for her crimes. I don’t know if this actually happened, I only heard it from a friend. But that was Kant’s philosophy. It doesn’t matter what the impact is on the community, it only matters whether or not the act is right — khaled
I was under the impression that the basic technology has been around for 50 years. Is that still new in pharmacy? Sounds ancient. — Benkei
It's just an axiom, no unnecessary harms and challenges are taking place versus they are taking place. — schopenhauer1
It was the refusing to apply it bit I was confused about — Isaac
In my comment I told you how I apply it to get the conclusion “You shouldn’t have kids”. What do you think of that application? — khaled
I said Kant didn’t care about consequences. If you had the option to lie to save some innocent’s life from a killer, he would say don’t lie. Period.
Same for me. I don’t care about the consequences. — khaled
These rules just seem right to me, that’s why I follow them. I don’t see how “embedding” them in deeper, yet still arbitrary rules helps. Though everybody seems to like that for some reason. — khaled
You'll have to point me back to where you think I did this. — Isaac
Here: — khaled
The objective of moral behavior is moral behavior. I don't know how many ways I have to restate this. And this isn't some fringe belief either, Kant thought that way. — khaled
Immanuel Kant (1724–1804) argued that the supreme principle of morality is a standard of rationality that he dubbed the “Categorical Imperative” (CI).
a rational will must be regarded as autonomous, or free, in the sense of being the author of the law that binds it. The fundamental principle of morality — the CI — is none other than the law of an autonomous will.
mRNA is a tricky technology. Several major pharmaceutical companies have tried and abandoned the idea, struggling to get mRNA into cells without triggering nasty side effects.
Behaving morally is done for its own sake. — khaled
You laid out the common ground. You summed it up very well. Then refused to actually apply it. — khaled
I am characterizing the position that other people need to live life so they can find solutions as a smug argument yes. The word I really mean here is paternalistic. Smug is sort of self-righteous condescension. That would be more like the tone of responses from certain posters here looking to start fights. — schopenhauer1
It seems exceedingly one sided that your values, your perspective, and what you want, is somehow of more value than what those who disagree with you want. — Book273
So I can do whatever I want, whenever I want, as long as I check with you first, and you say it's ok — Book273
everyone not you is somehow less than you — Book273
more smug... Smug, smug, smug, smug... — schopenhauer1
Yep yep yep. smug smug smug.. I get it. You can reinforce it with more smug responses and I'll entertain it. — schopenhauer1
What's the point of behaving morally, for you? — Isaac
Behaving morally. — khaled
Having kids is like buying the suit with your money when I don't have a responsibility to keep you suited. Just with way higher stakes. There is no factor here that I’ve outlined as important that I’m not considering as far as I see. The fact that you tried to sneak in the “extinction bad” thing again without outright saying it (because you know I don’t see it as a worthy goal, but something that has to come out of the morality naturally) suggests that you know this too. — khaled
No. It had no notification attached to it, quite deliberately. — Isaac
Weird, I got one. I've been getting notified by quotes sometimes. — khaled
Idk what their duty would have to do with their opinion of life. Don't see what you're trying to say with 3a — khaled
I'm not after "good worlds" whatever those are. — khaled
It is a fact of the matter that having children produces more suffering than not. — khaled
I mean.... it was written in response to me. Kind of confusing. — khaled
It is, but I'm just saying that nothing in it implied that I have the responsibility of keeping you suited. But yes there are cases where that could be true. — khaled
don't tell me "harm you alleviate from others" because I could also easily argue that your child will cause a fair share of harm. — khaled
You will live your life by your tenets, as you should. Wear your mask if you like. Get the vaccine if you like. However, do not impose your values on to others. We are not you, nor do we want to be. We wish to live life on our terms, not yours, or anyone else's. — Book273
I just don't get the idea that we want to make other people deal with any kind of thing. — schopenhauer1
What you said wasn't disagreement, you were refuting a misunderstanding of the argument. I am not arguing that there is a person who is benefited by antinatalism, or that there is someone who is harmed by birth (although suffering does result from it). And yet everyone here just keeps refuting the same 2 arguments, even though I'm not (and no one is really) making them. — khaled
In what world? If I was your parent and you had some important interview or something maybe :rofl: But other than that, I don't see why I would have a responsibility to keep a stranger suited. Didn't cross my mind. — khaled
And NOT driving is also very bad because then I can't work. So my job is to get good enough at driving that the harm done to me due to not being able to work starts to be comparable (hopefully less) than the "expected value" of harm I can cause. — khaled
The difference is, in the case of a future person, the amount of "harm" I alleviate from myself by having a child is insignificant to the amount I cause by having one. — khaled
all is what I would require as a standard before I'd even consider inflicting human embodiment upon another person. — Inyenzi
the pronatalist/antinatalist position starts and ends with a question of what kind of man/woman one aspires to be. — Inyenzi
Do I inflict a burden where it need not exist, or don't I? — Inyenzi
Do I have the self-discipline to deny my biological programming, or don't I? — Inyenzi
Do I aspire to do what is moral, or to simply indulge my base instincts to breed like every other mammal? — Inyenzi
I imagine the vast majority of antinatalist/pronatalist debates on this forum are in reality debates between those with children and those without. — Inyenzi
The antinatalist simply requires a higher standard for the creation of life that another human body must deal with — Inyenzi
I know from my own experience of human embodiment that there are significant burdens involved. — Inyenzi
why create another human body with perpetual needs that must endlessly be strove against, and only for this person to die in the end regardless? — Inyenzi
the joys of eating are predicated upon having a stomach — Inyenzi
the source of this food is rooted in harm (eg, someone must labour to produce the food, bring it to market, in many cases horrific animal harm and cruelty being involved). — Inyenzi
To justify creating a body with a stomach, by pointing out how good it is to feed it, strikes me as absurd. — Inyenzi
Better to just not create the deficiency in the first place, to not create a body with a need for food. — Inyenzi
We can have a very good idea what it might be, humans are not radically different from one another in fundamental preferences. — Isaac
Disagreed. — Tzeentch
This seems to be based on a severely cherry-picked version of history. There are many things humanity has been doing for much of history, where some have suffered and others and have profited, which we now consider inhuman. — Tzeentch
it seems silly to reduce one's choice to have children to generalizations — Tzeentch
where forcing individuals into existence is a "necessary evil" — Tzeentch
Then the argument for inaction seems obvious; by your own words you claim to have no idea what you're getting that person into. — Tzeentch
Why would one feel entitled to make that decision for someone else in the first place, especially considering the fact that the decision is irreversible and can result in a life-time of misery.
You really think it so strange to choose to err on the side of caution here? — Tzeentch
Only because you don't understand the argument. — khaled
Whenever I use harm I mean it in the sense that I strictly made the situation worse...
...And I find this is a much more common use — khaled
By being a good driver. Not being drunk. Etc. — khaled
Any type of information that is lacking only affirms the lack of a basis for our decision. — Tzeentch
what if your judgement on what constitutes benefit may drastically differ from that of the individual one is making decisions for? — Tzeentch
it's like buying a suit with someone else's money, while not having the slightest idea of what type of suit they may like. — Tzeentch
"Does no harm". Last I checked "the human race" was not a person. On the other hand, a generation of resentful malcontents comprises of many people. — khaled
If I was right, and I didn't buy a suit, you would just be where you started. — khaled
The question is what happens if I do buy the suit. I could be wrong: In which case I make the situation worse (you have a useless suit and less money) or I could be right and make it better: In whichcase you got a brand new suit you like. Given these chances, I think we can both agree that buying the suit is wrong, without asking first. — khaled
If I cannot reasonably expect not to hurt others while driving, I shouldn't be driving, you're right. But since I can, I can drive. — khaled
I don't use law and responsibility interchangeably. It is just often the case that if the law think I have a responsibility to do something, I do. — khaled
You have acknowledged that birthing a child is taking a risk in regards to its future, implying we do not have all the information. Whether that information is unknown or unknowable is irrelevant, because the basis (or lack thereof) for our decision remains the same. — Tzeentch
Because one is taking a risk on someone else's behalf, obviously. What necessity is there to make such a decision? — Tzeentch
I have not made claims about the rate of change of laws. So I don't need to look at how they change. I have set out a moral framework where socially placed responsibilities play a role. — khaled
Not having complete data always makes us pick the conservative option, unless we have consent to do otherwise. — khaled
If I don't know that you're going to like a certain suit, I won't buy it for you with your money. Because if I turn out to be wrong, I will have caused harm. — khaled
I cannot think of many cases where we take risks with others' wellbeing without permission. — khaled
One only needs to conclude there is no way of knowing, and make decisions based on that. — Tzeentch
It simply makes me wonder what the justificiation is to take such a risk. — Tzeentch
There is no someone. — Isaac
This keeps being repeated, and it seems to be the last wall to hide behind, but you build your walls flimsy indeed.
Tell me then, for who is it we seek to preserve the planet? — Tzeentch
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
The premise is that you have an obligation to uphold social contracts you are a part of. So if you work as a doctor for instance, you cannot refuse to treat a patient (unless you can't), because treating patients is what you "signed up for". Society has you "sign up for" a lot of things, depending on the society (Just today I discovered you can actually get sued in the Netherlands if you don't help someone as best you can to survive an accident Benkei)
How do social contracts change? I don't know, I'm not a political theorist or sociologist. — khaled
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
Something that doesn't exist doesn't have future interests in existing. — khaled
you cannot claim to have a child "for the child's sake". There is no child who has a sake, whereas in the first case there was. — khaled
since you can't check in advance whether or not the child will actually think life is good, it would be unethical to have them. — khaled
Usually you say something like "Oh sure, risking harming the child is bad, but it is offset by the survival of the human race" but here you seem to be switching to "Sure, there is a risk the child hates life, but that doesn't matter". And I don't see a convincing reason why it shouldn't matter. — khaled
They are unable. They may believe life is worth living, but there's no way of knowing whether their child will. — Tzeentch
we can't possibly check in advance whether they want these things, — Isaac
Indeed. Sounds like a fantastic reason not to force those things upon someone. — Tzeentch
That's my intuition too. I believe snow is white, language competence (piggybacking off object recognition/segmentation/categorisation) does the chunking things into related bits with labels on them for me - what counts as snow, what counts as white, what it means to describe a thing as white and how that's wrapped into the "is" - but what I've got the intentional state toward is snow. — fdrake
what justification is there to make this decision despite being unable to foresee the consequences and being unable to verify in advance whether the child actually wants to experience life? — Tzeentch
