Do I aspire to do what is moral, or to simply indulge my base instincts to breed like every other mammal? What kind of person do I want to be, and what kind of self-discipline is required to achieve it? — Inyenzi
It doesn't matter what we think, it is the mode of existing as a human being embodied in the world. You don't have to make a judgement as you are being deprived. You are just deprived. — schopenhauer1
Again.. way too many words for something you probably knew. — schopenhauer1
It is simply asking not to create this deprivation or deprivation-states. — schopenhauer1
I should really qualify "affecting" as imposing and causing conditions of harm on another person. — schopenhauer1
If you take away any contingent forms of contextual suffering (which is actually common enough to be structural anyways), this form of lack is always there churning away in the psyche, all the more compounded by self-awareness of this very situation that we lack. — schopenhauer1
You created the very deficiency that eating solves, and call that good. Better to just not create the deficiency in the first place, to not create a body with a need for food. — Inyenzi
How is it not? A decision was made. This affected the individual being born. The individual being born could not possibly be a part of the decision affecting him/her. — schopenhauer1
The violation occurs because a decision was made affecting someone else, even if the affect for the person is displaced from the time the decision was made and there was no person there previously. — schopenhauer1
If there is a state of affairs that a person is born, there is a person affected by someone else's decision. However, if there is a state of affairs with no person born, then there is a state of affairs where no person was affected by the decision, thus no violation, and no new individual who suffers will take place. All of this is encompassed with colloquial terms like "potential child" etc. — schopenhauer1
Displacement of when decision is made to when person is affected doesn't negate that a decision was made that affects a person. — schopenhauer1
And you keep doing it. — schopenhauer1
One can prevent all risk for a future person, period. — schopenhauer1
Clearly a parent gets to decide whether they want to create children. — Tzeentch
Indeed. They want a child and therefore they will create one. So 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
Indeed, the parent gets to decide. — Tzeentch
How does one reconcile the fact that when making the decision to have a child, one does not know A: whether the child wants to live in the first place, and B: whether the child will have a good life, even by one's own standards (let alone those of the child)? — Tzeentch
Sounds to me like: "It is good to have children, but you don't have to". Even though you kept asking me why I distinguish between things that are good to do and things that you must do, you seem to be doing it. — khaled
This seems like a contradiction to me. One sentence you're saying "furthers free will" and the next you're saying "free will is not quantified". Wtf does "furthers free will" mean? — khaled
If you answered it, I must've missed it. — Tzeentch
I wasn’t clear that’s on me, but what I mean is that I don’t agree with his approach to antinatalism, but how can we deny that birthing people affects them ? — Albero
There is someone who who is going to be affected because you create a being into the world. This doesn’t necessarily lead to antinatalism but that’s not the point — Albero
we force humans into being? — Albero
I don’t agree with Schopenhauer1 but what he’s saying is undeniable — Albero
I think this is an example of the problem, that people don't really realise the extent of other people problems despite paying lip service to them but when they have first person evidence they have to commit to real intervention. — Andrew4Handel
All I know is that it raises questions I cannot answer, and, judging by the tone of our conversation, you cannot either. — Tzeentch
What I have described is the way I look at the matter, at least. — Tzeentch
I don't think that's inherent to the position, but rather inherent to some individuals' desire to impose their views on others. That's a flaw in those individuals, and not in the position. — Tzeentch
The fact that I cannot find sufficient justification to force individuals to exist doesn't mean it is the same for others. — Tzeentch
Views are not actors, but to follow the spirit of your comment I would say no.
I don't seek to create such a universe. I haven't seen anyone here expressing that they do.
As far as I have seen, the anti-natalist argument as shared in this thread consists of observations and questions to which there do not seem to be any good answers. Every individual can draw their own conclusions and make their own choices based on that. — Tzeentch
But yes, if every person on earth were to conclude at once that the questions and observations of the anti-natalist argument are sufficient reason not to have children, humanity would eventually cease to exist. If that is a result of people's voluntary choice not to have children, then what business is that of mine? — Tzeentch
I don't know what you are saying here. Are you saying parents don't have freewill or that consciousness can be created regardless of whether people reproduce? — Andrew4Handel
The problem is the current lack of real effort to question the ethics and ramifications of having children. — Andrew4Handel
What puzzled me is the person I was responding to did not seem to think a parent could cause a child any suffering simply by creating them. If you were going to create a child why not consider the suffering that already exists. Like I said in my initial posts we do this predicting the future all the time.
For example if you were going to a shop and someone said that there was an active shooter on the loose would you want to know this before you started out on your journey? — Andrew4Handel
I am concerned that most people do not seem to make the link between creating a child and the reason there is suffering and inequality etc. The first post I made on the Old Philosophy forums was about this. The only reason we do philosophy is because our parents created us and that is the reason we exist and why we asks all the questions we do and few people question why we were made to exist on the first place. — Andrew4Handel
Creating a new sentience (deliberately) is profound and has profound implications. (Compare this to being the first person to create a sentient robot) If you create the first sentient robot it would make international headlines and you would be considered a genius yet people are creating sentient beings everyday as if it was the product of a fast food chain. — Andrew4Handel
I was referring to the nature of the empirical evidence used in Antinatalism which distinguishes it from a purely theoretical or logical argument. — Andrew4Handel
But you are right we are all in the building, which is what puzzles antinatalists. We point out past present and future suffering like the holocaust , world wars, slavery, cancer, depression and nuclear proliferation and damage to the environment, none of which is apparently enough to dissuade people from having children. — Andrew4Handel
There are lots more examples if you need them." — Andrew4Handel
I can't say I don't appreciate a little armchair psychology, but this makes little sense. — Tzeentch
The anti-natalist viewpoint as I have seen it expressed in this thread is based on A: the idea that voluntariness and consensuality form the basis for moral conduct in regards to others, and B: that childbirth does not fit these criteria.
It has nothing to do with distrust of others, a desire to be left alone, the assertion of ego or self-destruction. — Tzeentch
Nothing comes out of psychonalayzing the guy giving arguments. Respond to the arguments or please don't respond at all. — khaled
This has not been shown to be good in what you have highlighted. You have shown that maximizing PEOPLE'S ability to choose is good (or rather, that limiting it is bad, same thing). You have not shown that producing more people so that those people can go around making choices is good. Those are 2 different things. — khaled
What do you mean “will it be universalized”? I can conceive of a world where personal pleasure is a worthy moral goal and people go around doing whatever they want. — khaled
I know. But you didn’t present any reasoning behind your premise that having the next generation is a worthy goal. So until then it’s an unreasoned premise. — khaled
Someone will exist, and it is that person who will exist that we are preventing either the suffering or non-consent, or the "not being used for means to an end" result. — schopenhauer1
Essentially what this comes down to is the themes I have seen here regarding community vs. the individual. The community may be ordinarily needed for the individual to survive, but it is not the community that lives out life. — schopenhauer1
I would expect the person being harmed to also share the goal at least. Or else I can just say go around killing people because I find my own enjoyment a “worthy goal” and I’d be innocent then. — khaled
You do not reach the conclusion that the next generation of humans is something worth striving for by employing reason. That’s a premise, not a reasoned conclusion. One your child may not share. — khaled
INNOCENT party. — khaled
You haven’t answered the main question. What makes a goal “morally worthy” or not? — khaled
All the time we refer to non existent things which feature in our mental life as ideas and possibilities.
It seems completely necessary to function so that we imagine and predict the future is we head into it. — Andrew4Handel
It seems very arrogant to me to assume you should be able to create someone else and they should desire you as a parent. Most people don't feel entitled to snatch a baby if they see it left unintended but parents subconsciously have this entitlement. They want a baby so they create one and come to possess it. — Andrew4Handel
We are not supposed to expose other people to harm — Andrew4Handel
Antinatalism is less of an argument and more an empirically based claim about the harms of and nature of life. It is like telling someone not to enter a building because it is on fire. — Andrew4Handel
So was I. An individual is a single, a single is one, and one is a fundamental unity. The common meaning of "individual" is a fundamental unity. You might say that an "individual" is a person. But isn't this exactly what a person is, a fundamental unity? — Metaphysician Undercover
At this point you seem to concur, that the existence of the group is caused by the existence of the individuals. But if this is the case, that the capacity, or propensity for empathy is prior to the group which it produces, it creates a perplexity. Why are individual living beings naturally endowed with a propensity toward creating groups? — Metaphysician Undercover
Because it's at the core of the issue. By your use of the word "we" I'm assuming you are a parent? — Tzeentch
The individual one is considering forcing into existence. — Tzeentch
Forcing others to do things without their consent needs to be avoided. — Tzeentch
Sure.
The reason is simple; even if one intends to do good by birthing a child, the ends (odds for a happy life) do not justify the means (forcing someone without consent). — Tzeentch
Not being able to get consent for an important decision that is made on someone else's behalf would greatly impact how I would weigh predictions and make a decision, if I choose to make a decision at all. — Tzeentch
If I come to the conclusion the decision is too important to be made without consent, then I have no issue with choosing non-action. — Tzeentch
You don't force people to eat your ice cream. — Tzeentch
So just like Isaac, the only reason inflicting harm by having children is acceptable for you is because there is some "more worthy" goal which apparently justifies causing unwarranted harm. — khaled
I do not see how you justify causing suffering on a third party for your own desire, knowing full well they may not share your goal of creating the next generation of caring and capable humans, and knowing full well that they may come to despise their existence. — khaled
Are there many other situations where you impose harm on an innocent party for your own goals? — khaled
An unborn child developing into an individual with a will and well-being is (generally speaking) a logical consequence once one makes the decision to have children, thus should be taken into account prior to this decision. I don't see why this is controversial. — Tzeentch
What are such overarching moral principles based on, other than the well-being of would-be children? — Tzeentch
Indeed. Isn't that a great reason to think twice before having children? — Tzeentch
I'm not trying to attribute personhood. There's no need for it.
I'm challenging your suggestion that because a child is not yet born, one can do whatever they please in regards to its future. — Tzeentch
Isn't it as simple as taking into account the consequences of one's actions prior to carrying them out?
It seems we're playing dumb, pretending that individuals decide to have children and when the child is born and has a will and well-being, we scratch our heads and wonder where all that came from? — Tzeentch
So the motivation is the only determining factor?
So someone who is millions in debt with no home, who has a drinking problem, and 15 inheritable genetic disease should have children in his current state as long as he intends to try his best to raise them? — khaled
So as long as I can judge that the child will fulfill my arbitrary desire of them (in your case to create the next generation of compassionate people) then having them is ethical? Might as well say it's ethical in every situation, which I strongly disagree with, and you don't even have to be an AN to disagree with that one. — khaled
Here you seem to be placing the child's wellbeing ABOVE the desire of the parents. So creating a slave caste is wrong because everyone in said caste will hate it, even if its creators will love it. — khaled
No that does not follow. — schopenhauer1
Starting existence, there is no person to be harmed — schopenhauer1
If born, they will be harmed. — schopenhauer1
And yes, you can have it such that suffering is sufficiently bad enough to never have been, but life sufficiently good enough that once born, would not want one's interests obliterated. — schopenhauer1
Here you seem to be placing the child's wellbeing ABOVE the desire of the parents. So creating a slave caste is wrong because everyone in said caste will hate it, even if its creators will love it. — khaled
What if for example, you knew your next child was going to be severely disabled, would it still be ethical to have them? They WOULD contribute to making a generation of compassionate humans in all likelyhood, but does that justify the harm they will go through? Why or why not? — khaled
Also, another thing to consider is there is a difference between starting existence and continuing it. As I said many times earlier, prior to birth, there is no person who could be harmed by not being born. — schopenhauer1
So how many times does consent and the individual matters do I have to say? How is nuking someone who already exists respecting the individual? Now that they exist, indeed they do have thoughts, desires, fears, preferences, etc. Ironically, this is back to making a decision for someone else again. — schopenhauer1
I don't see why you say that. We know suffering exists, with almost 100% certainty. We know of the varieties and kinds that could happen. We also know there is unknown sufferings we didn't even think of. All these things can be prevented. Doesn't seem hard to me. — schopenhauer1
The latter must include the former. When looking at reasons to do something, some of those reasons will be "bad" and therefore the action should not be done. For example malicious genetic engineering. I am asking why that is bad. — khaled
What is the reason that makes creating suffering acceptable in the case of having children then? — khaled
What I sought to point out is that your objection implies that actions that undermine the well-being of a future child cannot be considered wrong or immoral under your premise, which goes against all notions that I am able to conceive of what is considered "good". — Tzeentch
If you wish to shift morality from being about outcomes to being about intentions, I'll take the next step and state that "good" behavior requires both intention and outcome. — Tzeentch
Either way I do not see how this deals with the problem I have presented. — Tzeentch
The problem is simple. If one accepts the premise that children do not have a well-being to take into account before they are born, this implies that it is perfectly acceptable to have children even when one is fully aware that they are causing them a life-time of suffering.
To me this contradicts any conceivable notion of parenting and morality. — Tzeentch
Malicious genetic engineering is fine. Even if your next child would have been born healthy. Because there is no actual harm being done when you genetically engineer a child to be blind and deaf for example. There was not a child that was harmed, as once the child is born they are already blind and deaf, the relevant decision is in the past.
I am sure you don't agree. But how do you justify it? — khaled
Because that hurts people, and Antinatalists are striving to eradicate all suffering. I don't understand why people keep using this ridiculous argument. It's tiring. — khaled
That's just false.
Grass is greener than freedom. Because freedom has no color. — khaled
Then we arrive at the problem already presented: — Tzeentch
So are they important or not?
You seem to be beating around the bush here. — Tzeentch
If not the interests of the child, from where do these obligations stem? — Tzeentch
And if we cannot divine what the child's feelings are about being forced to live, isn't that a great reason to refrain from forcing it to? — Tzeentch
So you are now saying we are taking freedom away from the thing that does not exist yet? — schopenhauer1
At instant X when that person is born, there was a decision made that affected it, that it could not possibly make. Yep. — schopenhauer1
I don't know what that means.. suffering that's necessary in the first place. Again, no one "needs" to exist just so they can realize suffering exists. — schopenhauer1
If a baby is 99% sure to get tortured if born, we don't need it to be born to have torture, so that torture exists so that we can then say it is wrong — schopenhauer1
Clearly all cases of suffering can be prevented, but were not if procreation occurs. Same odd thinking as Benkei to not be able to generalize all instances of suffering and then realize that this can be prevented, and not initiated on someone else's behalf. — schopenhauer1
Clearly I meant if you believe that you should follow it — schopenhauer1
This is the ridiculous move Benkei also makes.. You don't believe in future outcomes. There is no actual person now, but there will be in the future. It is the person who will be in the future that has the suffering you are preventing. Stop with the sophistry. — schopenhauer1
I don't know you, but when I was conceived, I was only me, not a group of any kind. — Gus Lamarch