Your analogy is a good one in terms of proportion. By that I mean it would hold true for life if, say, we knew 95% of it would be agonizing pain. In that case, sure -- no person deserves that. — Xtrix
That's a difference of degree, not kind. Remember: innocent people do not deserve any harm. Any.
But in any case, that's your assertion. If you feel your parents owed you something -- specifically, a life free of any harm whatsoever, that's your business. But it's just that -- an assertion. — Xtrix
No, it's not an 'assertion'. It's a 'conclusion'. The conclusion - not a premise, but a conclusion!!! - is that innocent persons deserve a harm-free happy life. (Note, to make any argument whatever one has to assert some things - it's like criticising me for using language. The only relevant consideration is whether my conclusions follow from premises that are self-evident to reason or far more self-evident than their negations.)
If you're the one responsible for creating such a person, then you owe them that. That's how debts work. If you run up a debt, then you owe the debt. Not me. You.
If you create a person who deserves a harm-free happy life, and you do that of your own free will, then you owe them that. They don't owe anyone anything. They haven't done anything!
No. First, one doesn't "order" anything in life. — Xtrix
Point. Missed.
Life isn't a pizza. That's not a good reply to my analogy. It just means you don't understand what's relevant and what's not.
Sex isn't a phoneline. That's not a good reply to my analogy.
Again, the proper analogy is: expecting a pizza which is impossible. Not one without "poo," but one without dough. But dough is what makes it a pizza. So either you want a pizza (which means dough), or you don't. — Xtrix
No, you clearly don't understand how the analogy works.
Now, I have already said - and I am just going to keep saying it until you acknowledge or understand the point - that possibility does not affect desert.
When you threw James off the bridge, you rendered his death two seconds later inevitable. That doesn't mean that upon throwing him off the bridge he ceased not to deserve to die.
Now, once more, in the pizza example James deserves something - a pizza.
The people in the pizza place can't give James what he deserves, because they only have shit pizzas.
So what ought they have done? Ought they have advertised cheese pizzas and let people order and pay for cheese pizzas - thus generating a deservingness of cheese pizzas - when they know full well that all they can possibly give people are shitted-upon pizzas?
No. Join the dots. Ought you procreate? No.
You know that if you procreate you'll be creating someone who'll deserve a harm-free happy life.
You also know that you can't give them that.
So, you own a pizza place and you know that the cupboard has nothing but shat-upon pizzas in it
Is it right to open up shop when you know full well that what'll be advertised - and so what people will be ordering and thereby coming to deserve - will be cheese only pizzas, when you know full well that it is impossible for you to give them cheese only pizzas, indeed that you'll be giving them shat-upon ones?
No. It's not right. You don't 'have' to open up the pizza place. But if you do, all the above will happen. So, don't open it. It's wrong. It's bad.
You don't have to procreate. If you procreate you know you'll be creating someone who'll deserve a harm-free happy life. You also know that you can't possibly give them that - the cupboard only has lives that have shit on them in it and you know full well that anyone you bring into being will have to live one of those slightly shat upon lives (and you know as well that some will have really really shitty ones...but let's not get distracted by that highly morally relevant consideration because my argument - my one - doesn't require that to be the case....just an itsy bitsy bit of shit will do). So you ought not to procreate, then, yes? You'll be creating a desert of something you can't provide.
Note another thing - the pizza analogy is importantly different from procreation cases. If you don't open the joint, no one will get a pizza. There will be people deprived of pizza - people who may have wanted pizza enough to be willing to scrape the shit (the shit they still didn't deserve) off.
But when it comes to procreation, if you don't procreate you haven't deprived anyone of the slightly shat upon life they would otherwise have led, have you? They don't exist to be deprived.
That's a relevant difference between the cases - but it operates to make it even clearer that procreative acts are wrong. For the fact that by not opening the pizza joint you'll be depriving people of pizzas - albeit slightly shitty ones when they deserve much better - is a fact that speaks in favour of opening. Procreative acts possess no similar feature.