Likely the countries that score the highest points in various studies with the public health sector.
Japan for example has a quite well performing health care sector and it has scored in many investigation top places with it's health care sector compared to others. And it's doing just fine with the pandemic — ssu
I hear you, but I'm not so confident that they engage in any joined up thinking. — Punshhh
We needn't worry about deductive arguments as they're foolproof justifications in that if the argument is sound it's impossible that the conclusion is false. There is no room for error with deductive arguments is what I mean. — TheMadFool
There are rumours going around the UK that the government is secretly happy that many thousands of old people will die, saving a great deal of expenditure in health and social care, as a vast social care crisis was looming before Covid, due to a population with to many old people. — Punshhh
if A = B and C, and you can show that B and C are contrary to each other, you can rule out A. — Pfhorrest
any belief is justified (including contrary ones) until there is support to the contrary, i.e. reason to rule that belief out — Pfhorrest
Do I not owe society anything for all that? — Isaac
As I said, you owe it to become a productive member. Or to at least try to. — khaled
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
Agreed. But "nurturing it" doesn't have to take the form of having kids. As proven by the fact that people don't scoff at those who choose to not start a family nor suddenly think that those people are taking from the community's resources without giving back. As I keep saying, being a productive member is good enough payment.
An even better example is that we still give these societal boons to people who can't have children. Which shows that "having children" is not required payment. — khaled
What I find repulsive is forcing someone to do something for a "boon" they didn't ask for or don't want. — khaled
I think the prices of these "boons" should never be paid by those who never asked for said boons and in return they shouldn't enjoy said boons. — khaled
Once born you will inevitably be looked after by 'society' and benefit from its boons, without your consent. — Isaac
You don't need consent to benefit someone if you know that it will be a benefit. — khaled
I'm fairly certain that your neo-liberal 'morality' would lead fairly rapidly to a vicious and unpleasant world of ruthlessly competing individuals — Isaac
I don't see how. — khaled
I find it interesting that often the individual is indeed the locus of blame/responsibility/accountability when it comes to making bad decisions, working a job, obeying laws (like paying that speeding ticket let's say), but this same individual that will be born (such as myself and you and him and her and any one) cannot (in decisions surrounding procreation) be considered (apparently to some) for the suffering, burdens, general "dealing with life" that will incur to them, except as lumped in as a vague part of continuing the goals of "humanity" in general. — schopenhauer1
It is the individual which should be considered in this crucial of decisions that will affect that person, not an abstract cause, where the locus or carrying out of the burden is actually carried out. — schopenhauer1
As I (and I believe khaled) have reiterated over and over, moral theories at some point rely on one's intuitions and premises. Thus at some point, there is no going past the initial premises. To not recognize that we have stated thus and laid that out from the beginning is willful ignoring of what was said — schopenhauer1
The point is not to castigate ONE moral theory for doing what most (normative and applied level) ethical theories do. — schopenhauer1
The argument of " healthcare services have been stripped to the bone and the scraps sold to the highest bidder" might hold true in one national example, but to argue that ALL NATIONS have gone this route is false. — ssu
As a child I benefited from a considerable amount of societal boons, right from birth. — Isaac
And you knew that eventually you'd have to hold a job and make your own living as a contributing member. And I'm willing to wager you didn't protest because the terms are very very good. — khaled
I doubt whoever fertilized the land expected anything out of YOU specifically so no deal there. — khaled
And I don't get this bit at all. Remember this line of argument started from "I find it repulsive for societies to force their members do fullfil "societal goals"". This argument isn't even needed for antinatalism it's a whole different debate. — khaled
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 don't see how that follows from me thinking that social goals are not a good enough reason to force people to do things they don't want to do. — khaled
First ask yourselves, how much investment and focus is put into vaccine research generally? Compare that with what is now happening with Covid-19. You think those billions now poured into various vaccine programs by major countries won't have an effect? — ssu
I say: evolution produces animals that are capable of thinking about and acting in accordance with morality. Evolution did not create morality. Just as evolution did not create light, but rather eyes that can sense light. — darthbarracuda
Antinatalism is in accordance with a set of perceived moral laws that transcend the survival of the species. — darthbarracuda
Similarly then, I think life is just about the most serious thing you can get someone without their consent (meaning that if they don't want it, it does the most damage out of anything else) so, similar to a house, I don't get it to people without their consent. I don't think life is easy enough to justify that. — khaled
That's a question you should ask shope not me. — khaled
But if we're still talking about that then I wasted about 1.5 hours misreading you, sorry about that. — khaled
Where have I suggested the antinatalist doesn't believe this? — Isaac
Here:
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
Which is why I said this is a criminal misinterpretation of the argument. — khaled
If I really really like a game and I know you would probably really like it too, it is still wrong for me to tape you to a seat and force you to play it for 5 hours. — khaled
It wouldn't be a stupid mistake if everyone believed it because that includes you and if you believe it it is obviously not stupid from you POV :wink: — khaled
I have no excuse for this one. I just straight up misread. Sorry for all the trouble. — khaled
I guess we're done for real this time as I don't really have an opposition against the two points you're arguing. — khaled
It might also work as a paradox of game theory, but I'm not going to work that out. (Not in this post anyway.) — Srap Tasmaner
Meanwhile Dirac was doing it right and seeing reversibility in more accurate equations. — Kenosha Kid
OK, you really seem to believe the proposition that time is reversible, and applying this proposition in physics is "doing it right". I sincerely hope that you do not really have a PhD in physics if this is an indication of what is being taught in physics these days. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, considering the harm the pandemic has already had on the global community, we can already conclude that vaccine technology does not protect public health from negative infectious disease outcomes, and investments in vector control, better outbreak protocols, treatment capacity, but most importantly simply public health in a general sense (preventing preventable diabetes, obesity, lung harm from bad air etc.) are more effective investments. In particular, investments in public health in the sense of healthy people is not even a cost but pays for itself many times over.
And yet, public health policy of the last decades has been based on under-investing in healthy foods, healthy city design, healthy habits, and healthy air -- which turns out to benefit fossil and food corporations -- and over-investing in medical technologies that "fix problems post-fact" -- which turns out to benefit pharmaceutical and other medical corporations. Certainly only coincidence and these policy failings will be swiftly corrected going forward. — boethius
Also the speed that we will get a vaccine will likely be impressive. — ssu
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
I could ask you the same question. This is a vanilla vs chocolate argument. — khaled
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
Because I think those caveats are BS in other words, very unintuitive. — khaled
It would still be wrong to say that they are doing them for "Non existing children". Did you read that sentence? It makes zero sense. You can say they are doing it for the benefit of people will exist but definitely not for the benefit of literal nothingness. — khaled
The whole basis of the argument of antinatalism is that the actions you do have moral weight even if the person they affect doesn't exist yet and on the basis of THAT you shouldn't have children because it will result in them being harmed in the future. This is a central belief to antinatalism so it baffles me that you think every antinatalist doesn't believe in it. — khaled
If you admit that an act has moral weight even if the affected party doesn't exist yet then what do you do about the fact that the child would be harmed as well. — khaled
I could now argue "It is perfectly reasonable to not have a child on the ground that they'd probably hate some of what life has to offer". — khaled
Let me ask you this: Why does there need to be a disease AND everyone agree that ending the human race was preferable for ending the human race to become moral? — khaled
This really undermines your premise that "Anything that ends the human race is bad and should never even be considered" — khaled
So what exactly is your problem if everyone tomorrow became an antinatalist and jointly decided that the human race should end. Because you've raised this issue from post one, implying that "ending the human race" is an unacceptable conclusion a jillion times but here you add the very important caveat "against its members' wishes". Antinatalism does NOT end the human race against its members' wishes so what is your issue with it now? — khaled
So do you approve of malicious genetic engineering? Because it is not wrong according to caveat 1. — khaled
We are born with certain basic innate a priori concepts such as time, space, causation, colour, sound, etc . During our lives, through regular observation and reasoning, we can combine these basic concepts into more complex concepts such as justice, buildings, tables, horses, etc. — RussellA
When looking at a set of shapes in the world, we are only able to recognize those parts of an object for which we already have innate a priori concepts. — RussellA
Then they're useless. — frank
Now that I've worked with people who were in NY and got the whole holy fuck story, yes, I could tell you why the mortality rate was awful. — frank
Wait, what timeframe did this study cover? I'm in contact with people all over the country and nobody is getting results like that. — frank
I think it was in jama, but with all your time in the ICU, I'm sure that number doesnt surprise you. — frank
Not all ventilated covid people have lung damage.
Put your spectacles on, Isaaac. — frank
No. There's a 60% mortality rate for any patients who end up on a ventilator for covid related lung damage.
It's bad. — frank
[for] COVID-19 patients on ventilators in existing ICUs with experienced intensive care teams ... the mortality rate "is in the mid-to-high 20% range...
That's only a bit higher than the death rate for patients placed on ventilators with severe lung infections unrelated to the coronavirus.
Saying that only humans have a first-person perspective isn't saying that we (or someone) only think of first-person perspectives when humans are involved, it's saying that there's something incorrect about considering the first-person perspective of anything else. — Pfhorrest
you just pick the intuitions that have the most intuitive conclusions — khaled
And for antinatalists, antinatalism IS the most intuitive conclusion. — khaled
Let me limit harm to "Psychological or Physical damage done to an innocent party (not self defence) that is not done with the intention of helping that party (not surgery, vaccines, etc)" — khaled
Resonable? If so, and assuming giving birth to someone is harming them, that harm is done on an innocent party and is not done to help them (because they didn't exist to want help) so is not permissable. — khaled
It uses all the same caveats except "Ending the human race is to be avoided at all costs". — khaled
what caveats would YOU put on "You should ask for consent before harming someone". I'd rather you answer that first even if you don't reply to anything else. — khaled
I am not here to say that antinatalism leads to intuitive conclusions. I was saying that not believing in its premises also has consequences so that is the justification for why you would believe them. It then becomes a matter of which is the least counterintuitive which is of course subjective. — khaled
I think we'd both agree that regardless of whatever criteria I use to determine whether or not consent is required that requiring consent when you're about to harm someone is pretty reasonable no? — khaled
That antinatalism an in internally consistent system that doesn't rely on premises that are too unpopular. — khaled
It's actually a very curious experience going over things like fractions and exponents with someone who has a very rich conceptual apparatus — Srap Tasmaner
It was fun for me, but I have my doubts any of them caught the wonder of math I was trying to get across. — Srap Tasmaner
Lately my oldest son and I have been filling in his math gaps so he can get a GED. At the moment it doesn't look like any of mine are headed for college, but you just never know. Life is twisty and unpredictable, and there's no one right way to do it. — Srap Tasmaner
This assumption isn't a conclusion that needs to be there. — schopenhauer1
Completely agree! My youngest son even learned how to read with no formal instruction at all. Reveal
The trickiest thing is math because it takes training. — Srap Tasmaner
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
Letting go of them invidividually causes problems. Example: We shouldn't do something to harm people in the future even if the affected party doesn't exist in the present. NOT believing this will mean malicious genetic engineering is fine. Etc. Each premise leads to some unintuitive conclusions when not believed. — khaled
And the "relativism" bit means that there is no moral claim that applies to everyone. So why do you care what I think you should or shouldn't do if I don't try to enforce it (which I won't because I recognize that my view isn't objective) — khaled
For something to be a moral judgement it has to be reasoned about. — khaled
But if there's no compelling argument (other than just "well that's what my unusual premises lead to") — Isaac
Again, how can you have a MORE compelling argument than this? — khaled
Again for the 100th time. Shope didn't make this abount antinatalism you did. — khaled
Once again, not all harm done is your responsibilty. — khaled
I'm surprised to hear you of all people asking for a justification to physicalism. Aren't you hard-core all-there-is-to-the-mind-is-the-brain?
In any case, you've already seen my arguments against the supernatural, as you were engaged extensively in the thread where I presented them. And by "metaphysically special" I mean pretty much "supernatural" — Pfhorrest
everything has a first-person perspective, because the alternative is either that even we do not, or that something is metaphysically special about us. — Pfhorrest
