All logic starts with premises. You would just reject that, and it would be a waste of time. — schopenhauer1
Well, what does it mean for the "ethical concerns" to "lie with" individuals? Assuming you are not begging the question by saying our ethical concerns are only about individuals and not society (which is not really correct, see people who advocate such a concept), how does that entail your conclusion that the betterment of society is just some kind of abstract construct that is just really not in touch with this reality?One actually encompasses and respects the individual, and not using them. The other is in a locus that is not where the ethical concerns lie. An principle does not feel pain, people do. Wanting people to be happy and doing something for the principle of happiness are two different things. But it really becomes egregious when the third-party entity is not just happiness (as this can be construed as trying to make the largest number of individuals happy and thus possibly bypassing this argument of third-party), but things like "humanity", "civilization", "technology". People need to be born to keep these kind of things going. That would be a very poor argument for putting conditions of harm on others. — schopenhauer1
Because "society" doesn't actually experience suffering or happiness or anything, individuals do. It can be many individuals, but once individuals get reified into an abstract concept "the greatest good" "pursuit of happiness", it goes out of the bounds of the locus of the experience. — schopenhauer1
Ok, is this a debating point? You'd have to explain. — schopenhauer1
I don't. It's my personal choice. I just looked at how I act when it comes to any other situation where one can choose to use another's resources in any way. Most people (including myself) are risk averse in those scenarios. For example if I saw a house I think you like going on sale, I wouldn't just steal your credit card and buy it without your consent simply because there is a chance you don't like it or don't want to spend the money right now. I doubt you would either. So I just extended that to procreation out of a desire for consistency. — khaled
Well, the discussion was not about that, but if you really want to criticize my position, please do it without assuming that ethics should be based on the individual and not society as that is just begging the question. Why is "overlooking individuals for 'third-parties'" bad?A lot, because you keep advocating for a greater good principle and I'm saying this is overlooking individuals for third-parties. — schopenhauer1
Violating the principle by forcing everyone not to procreate is not bad as one is preventing harm from the violation of non-aggression by doing so.In the case of one's non-harm principle being violated from someone else:
Non-aggression followed | Non-aggression violated
Following = good | Following = not bad as one is preventing harm from the
violation of non-aggression — schopenhauer1
I'm not understanding how the principle would not apply in this case because "humanity will break this principle". — schopenhauer1
But, assuming that you have the power to "prevent" people, by not doing it, you let the 15 billion people come into the world and have their consent violated. Are those individuals not the center of your ethical considerations because they are not born or..? The problem is-in the scenario i presented, it is not only the living people that will be autonomous but rather also the people that are not born yet.Ok I think I see. You are saying, shouldn't we prevent people who will cause pain to others. My response would still be that once born, considerations of other people's autonomy come into play. This autonomy is based on the fact that it is individuals who are the center of ethical considerations, not amorphous principle calculations (like the greatest good or something like that). Thus, the amorphous utilitarian calculation of destroying people who cause harm, would not be moral, even with good intentions. There is preventing harm and there is non-aggression. Both have to be followed. — schopenhauer1
That is good and all (and i did not quote the later part because it would have been too long and did not have to do with what i was going to say ), but you are presenting examples:I was asking for the rule. Anyways, judging from what you have written, i think i got the rule:Yes, in the instance of procreation one would perfectly be following the principles of non-harm and non-aggression by abstaining from procreation. AFTER someone is born, they are an autonomous person, an individual, someone who has an identity to point at in the world. Once born, circumstances of time and place are immediately something to consider. There is the fact that people need time to develop into autonomous individuals, and there is the fact that sometimes, at the end of life, or in unconscious situations, individuals can lose their autonomy as individuals. If ethics is at the level of individual, we have to define individual. People become more autonomous over time. The time of being an adult would be one's most autonomous. However, prior to this, the parent/guardian can have some say in the upbringing of the individual because the assumption is that the person is not developed enough to be autonomous yet. Thus, it would be immoral to leave a baby/small child to defend for itself when this leads to obvious harm for that person. The non-harm principle would take place here as there is less autonomy of the child. Once that person is an adult, the full non-aggression principle, comes into effect, and thus "forcing" something (even if you think it is good for them) would be violating this principle. We can debate "when" that transition comes to be, but that would take us down a rabbit hole that is probably beyond the scope of what we are trying to get at. It is not about the impreciseness of that transition, but that a transition does take place... — schopenhauer1
You'd have to explain this a bit more. I'm not quite getting the scenario. If we prevent birth, and that person who was prevented from birth might have caused suffering to others in large quantities.. is it that sort of thing? I'm not quite getting it. — schopenhauer1
Since there can be exceptions to this principle, can you tell us how we can know when we can violate this thing and why we can violate it at these times-that is, why they are exceptions to the rule?As I've said elsewhere: Except for cases which I acknowledged- children needing guidance from parents, self-defense, or the threat-of-force, there are no excuses other than people have an agenda, and they want someone else to follow that agenda and that agenda is more important than the non-aggression principle. — schopenhauer1
The second premise is questionable because it appears either to equivocate with respect to premise 1, or it is simply unsupported as a claim about objective moral knowledge. While premise 1 seems to hold that, without God, no objective knowledge is possible, premise 2 might be taken simply to mean that we have knowledge of our own moral beliefs, which might be purely subjective. — ModernPAS
Well, what about the will-be automomous individuals that won't be born yet? Are those "autonomous individuals" so important that the suffering that they cause are okay? Or, in other words, if the individual brings about a huge amount of suffering, aren't we entitled to prevent their desires and wills so that they do not do it anymore? Isn't this the reasoning we use for punishing criminals?So again, you are ignoring the autonomous human part. Autonomous individuals have to be accounted for. If you are paying attention, these ethical theories are grounded in individuals NOT third-party agendas (like some amorphous utilitarian calculation of harm that you proposed in your life-ending scenario). — schopenhauer1
I have showed why it was not merely an agenda though. You just choose to ignore it and are now pretending nobody has tried to justify it-at least in this thread.In fact, one of the main reasons for not having people is that it is not using people in order for them to follow third-party agendas, however starry-eyed the reasons (like pursuing happiness, character-building games, finding their way in the current society, making society better, tending the farm, advancing the tribe, following religious principles, etc. etc.) — schopenhauer1
And "using individuals", in some cases, is okay, right? For example, we punish criminals. We punish children. We sometimes make decisions on behalf of people who are not informed enough to make a good decision even if they do not want it.Individuals are where ethics resides because individuals bear the brunt of existence. Society and outside entities may help form individuals, but it is at the individual level that life is experienced, decisions are made, suffering occurs etc. Thus, third-party reasons that affect individuals who can otherwise have a say, would be using those individuals. — schopenhauer1
If people are not to be used in agendas (as is the case of birth), then to be consistent here, people once born, cannot be used in agendas (like ceasing all harm and suffering). — schopenhauer1
Well, i was just trying to show that this has unwanted results (both negative ethics and the non-aggression principle). It just leads to more suffering. So, why exactly should we accept this principle by default? Just because?So, if you pay attention to my arguments, I put a lot of weight on non-aggression. Once born, people have their own autonomous identity as individuals and should be respected. Thus the principle of non-harm is contradicted here with the principle of non-aggression. Thus, this ethic would not be one of some Lex Luther villain, purely contemplating calculations of loss and harm. People as individuals are taken into account. Thus, as I have always advocated, the only means by which an antinatalist can further their cause is through argumentation and convincing of the individual. That is it. — schopenhauer1
Well, is preventing desires and wills really a bad thing compared to letting suffering go on? The problem is, these desires and wills lead to more suffering (almost every single one of them, i would say) and, more importantly, they also lead to new individuals that will definitely suffer being born. If you end the human race, you will also prevent the suffering of these new people who will be "forced into existence" and it is justified as a result-and i am ignoring the fact other living beings, aside from humans, can experience pain and suffer too. I would argue that this means that if you have the power to destroy all life on planet Earth and you choose to not do it, you are indirectly responsible for the suffering of those individuals and other living beings who will be born. In that case, is not preventing desires and wills of living individuals really better when not doing that means more people (and other living beings who will experience pain) will suffer? That does not seem to be the case for me, especially when one considers how many animals also get forced into existence in a more cruel way-it is countless. (especially the ones we use as food, like chickens)Once born, the principle of forcing the end of others to prevent suffering, does not hold up for reasons darthbarracuda was getting at. That is to say, once born, the rules of the intra-worldly affairs hold sway. That is, there are people with their own wills and goals. Prior to birth, there was an asymmetry of preventing pain (which is absolutely good even if no one to realize no suffering), and relative good (preventing good only matters if an actual person is around). Now, preventing someone's desires, wills, and negating that DOES come into play once born. Thus not only the prevention of harm, but the principle of respecting that a person exists with desires, etc. comes into play. Notice it is STILL a negative ethic.. Prevent suffering when you can, but prevent aggression as well. — schopenhauer1
So the species work properly and betterment of society are the two positive ethics I see here (an example of X that I proposed for whatever positive ethics one proposes).Why do we need people born to better society and the species to work properly? I guess, a) Why prima facie does this matter? b) Why would forcing existence on someone who will definitely suffer be justified for this? In other words, why would the two negative ethical principles of non-aggression (non-forcing) and non-harming be violated on behalf of this grand agenda of species and society? — schopenhauer1
Well, should that principle really be upheld if billions of people, not to mention any other living beings capable of experiencing pain, suffer everyday and will continue to suffer untill they eventually die? I can not see a reason not to violate it. The idea that we should uphold some principle that only exists to avoid suffering (If it does not, why even have it? It can not be a morally good principle then.) when all it does is allowing for more suffering sounds counter-intuitive to me.Nah, I couple the prevent harm principle almost always with non-aggression principle. You should not force anyone into your perspective. In fact that is one of the main reasons for antinatalism in the first place. — schopenhauer1
Thus the "mixed bag" approach to ethics leads to an inevitable violation of negative ethics in favor of positive. — schopenhauer1
Well, i would say that it comes from the fact that pleasure/happiness and pain/suffering come hand in hand-suffering is there so that we are discouraged from doing that thing in order to avoid suffering (for example, we do not come too near to a fire because of the pain that we would experience if we did so) while pleasure is there so that we are encouraged to do another thing in order to achieve pleasure (for example, a little child may do his homework because the mother will give him a chocolate if he finishes it) These two things make is so that we are inclined to do the best thing for our species and the species may actually function properly as a result.However, I do not see why this assumption must be true that negative ethics must give way to positive or that the positive necessarily needs to override the negative. Why would the prevention of suffering take a back seat to the promotion of "well-being"? — schopenhauer1
All positive experiences in this world are filtered through the lens of our temporal embodiment as a deprivational human animal - subject to stress, pain, need. suffering, aging and inevitable death. — Inyenzi
Why does some goal have to include society. This is your big assumption. — schopenhauer1
No that's not my reasoning. It wouldn't matter if the person was overjoyed that you forced them into this character-building exercise. The principle of non-aggression was violated, period. — schopenhauer1
Again, why are individual harms used for some type of social balance, happiness, or any agenda? It makes no sense. Ethics are not for abstractions but persons, individuals, identities. — schopenhauer1
If you think of it like a "fuzzy" intent and that the spesific version of the principle we actually use actually applies to this case, then yes.What am I not being skeptical at all about? In my view, if no one is born, there is no one to worry over or nothing to worry about- literally. I am skeptical about "fuzzy" "warm-hearted" intent that brings with it negative baggage though, yes. One has no consequences for any actual person, and one definitely does. This already puts the balance in the side of never having been. — schopenhauer1
What i meant by "viable" was "actually possible."Viable to enforce what? Intent was clear that one had good intentions? That is not a reason to force one's agenda on someone else. You may like a game and think it builds character to anyone that plays it. But to force people to play it because you think they will thank you later on is wrong. — schopenhauer1
So doing things for the sake of humanity is not good in itself? Isn't that egoism?Also, why is an individual beholden to a species? To force people's hand into existence (and deal with this consequence) for the sake of humanity, or the species, is to use someone for an agenda. That is wrong to use people as such. If I have an agenda, should I force you into it simply because I want you to? If no, why should this hold for instances of furthering the species? If the species goes extinct, what is the wrong here? The universe will cry? The ghost of HereToDiscuss lamenting on what could have been? — schopenhauer1
Yes I am very much doubting that any basis for morality is working towards a perfect society. It would be just as insane if someone said that the basis for morality is working towards communism, religious fundamentalism, or techno-utopianism. It is insane grandiosity to actually think that we should put more people on Earth to advance this type of agenda (and indeed it would be an agenda). I have a vision of a way society should be, therefore everyone should follow it? Of course not. Same goes for procreation. Again, the same pattern emerges- procreation is NO EXCEPTION to the non-aggression rule. — schopenhauer1
I do not get this. To me, you essentially sound circular when you argue that positive outcomes do not matter.Again, what is it with the focus on positive outcomes? What is the need for this when no one existing would matter not for this need for positive outcomes? Non-aggression entails non-procreation which means that forcing someone int he name of positive outcomes matters not if we want to be consistent with not forcing others. — schopenhauer1
The emotional language aside, technically, all consequentalists treat an individual as "a pawn in some consequentalist calculus".So now you are fully admitting to a morality where the individual is simply a pawn in some utilitarian calculus. — schopenhauer1
Probably because your analysis of the situtation is flawed. Like i said before, the negatives will almost always be more than the positives in that situtation. It is not feasible and annoying them is not worth it.This is your idea on it. But forcing it on others? I say no, this is a violation of the non-aggression principle. Where is it justified that one ought to create negatives for someone so they can have some positives too? If I prefer a game and think most people should play it, am I right in forcing others to play it? I would say no. — schopenhauer1
Try Googling it then. It is also called the "Irenean Theodicy" and it is based on that very idea.I have no idea what "soul-making theodicy" is, but it sounds like an excuse to cause harm. There is no reason to cause harm in the hopes of some positive outcome. — schopenhauer1
If society agreed that suffering was good and all, then suffering would still be bad. I am not a moral subjectivist.If we have a society where we all agree that to make others suffer is good, then we can pat ourselves on the back that creating suffering isn't bad. If we try to turn the tables and make suffering a positive, then we can invert negative experience and pretend that it is justified to create for others, like in cases of procreation. But let's be consistent. If this was applied in almost any other realm on an autonomous adult, this would not fly. You couldn't justify force harming them (violating the principle of non-aggression) in order to save them, which is essentially what this idea's logical consclusion is. — schopenhauer1
I'm not sure how "collateral damage" doesn't make sense. It means unintended bad consequences that go along with the "good stuff" intended. — schopenhauer1
Well, all there has to be is some kind of a goal that includes society, so "Should it be the goal?" does not work here. If you want me to, i can change the first premise.Fuzzy meaning "warm and fuzzy". It sounds good so it must be good, sort of thinking. Wait what is the goal of society and how is that goal justified as THE goal? Why would individuals be used for society's goals or any future generation's goals? That seems wrong- to use people as fodder (with imperfect happiness) for some utopian future happiness (that is not guaranteed at all or in the realm of achievable perhaps). Either way, this is a poor excuse for procreation- that it is some unwritten goal to work towards X. That is nowhere near being justified. — schopenhauer1
Collateral damage is not persuasive enough, and you need to clarify how it is "excess baggage" and how that means it is bad in this particular situtation.2) Going back to the premise of this thread regarding happiness. The point is happiness (you use the term "good") is a sort of cudgel to banish any objections raised against not forcing others. Force is force. Intending to force a good outcome on someone is still aggression. Why does it get a pass? Combined with the idea of collateral damage, and excess baggage (more than the intended good does actually get forced onto someone), is doubly damaging. An aggressive act, which does more than the intended good (i.e. negative outcomes) is pervaded onto someone in the hopes the collateral damage isn't so bad. We are assuming starting a life for someone is good for them, if you project that the outcomes are indeed going to be likely. This does not override the force that is taking place because you have a warm and fuzzy intent in there (Happiness, Good, Love). — schopenhauer1
If you want to be consistent in following non-aggression, even creating new people should fall under this.. As you stated at the beginning, "An action taken on your view without consent that affects another" is still bad, even made with the intent of good outcomes for that person.Unlike unconscious, elderly, children who have already had the force put on them, and we are mitigating the worst scenario..birth unnecessarily forces a situation onto someone. In other words, once born, certain things need to take place to prevent death or pain for that person, but certainly the force of having the person was not justified in the first place. — schopenhauer1
4) Why should a person be beholden to a principle (happiness, the good, society), in the first place? If you're looking for more abstract principles.. using someone for your own or society's agenda is a good place to start. An agenda to further society and to create "good experiences in the world" is counterintuitively using people's lives as a way to follow this agenda. What is it about this agenda that it needs to be forced onto a new person? What justifies this other than people like the idea so they will do it on behalf of someone else? Even if we use terms like "more positive outcome" what is it about this that this NEEDS to take place? — schopenhauer1
I will say "yes", if you really want me to.I will ask again, are parents on a messianic mission to bring positive outcomes? — schopenhauer1
If accepted, this only entails that morality is essentially meaningless as, if the universe is devoid of any morally principles, there is no difference to the universe itself.If the universe is devoid of positive outcomes, then what? The mission has failed? — schopenhauer1
I love how you say "unnecessary at best" when lives of a species is at stake here. It is the single most necessary thing we need in order to have such positive outcomes in the first place (or any good thing, really). The principle is violated for a good cause.We already acknowledge life is not JUST positive outcomes, its a mixed bag, but bringing suffering into the world in order to have positive outcomes seems unnecessary at best, and aggressive for sure as it still perpetrates to another person, forcing their hand if you will, and obviously affecting them for a lifetime (as it is the start of life itself). — schopenhauer1
And i do not adhere to the claim that a person that has never experienced pain or happiness (the net is zero, going by hedonism here) is better than a person who has experienced pain but experienced happiness more. Pain is okay if it leads to a positive outcome. The whole idea of "soul-making theodicy", for example, is it is okay for there to be evil because it helps humans develop. In a relevant sense, they experience suffering but the outcome is better.So there are two things here- a) Positive outcomes don't need to take place at all, even if the outcomes are "better" as the alternative of nothing is not actually affecting any actual person negatively or harmfully — schopenhauer1
) Despite positive outcomes once born, there are always negative outcomes that are brought with it, thus the person is forced into negative outcomes by this decision. Thus the non-aggression principle should still stand, even in the decision of procreation. — schopenhauer1
) Collateral damage. Your experience is not another person's experience, even genetically related. In fact, you can have siblings and cousins that have radically different ways of being, personalities, and experiences. The projected outcome for a child that the parent intended MAY not be the case for that child. You can provide me the "But often times it is" or the "Most people say they find life good" but it is questionable whether even if a majority of people outweigh the collateral damage of the suffering of others. — schopenhauer1
Why are you assuming that:Given the Benatar asymmetry (from David Benatar's book, Better Never to Have Been), this reasoning is more compelling. The reasoning is that since the good that is not experienced by the person not born is not good nor bad, since no ACTUAL person is deprived of it, and that it IS good that an actual person is not actually suffering, on the whole, this asymmetry always balances the equation towards better never to have been. — schopenhauer1
Like any ethical debate, it comes down to first principles. — schopenhauer1
If you don't believe forcing others to do things is wrong, then this argument would not matter to you. — schopenhauer1
However, for those who do think so (most non-sociopaths it would seem), then yes this would be an issue and more a matter of consistency than questioning the actual principle itself. — schopenhauer1
I am going to accept all of you said: This is a violation of this principle, we do it in order to "deliver happiness" (my argument would not be that they would experience happiness but rather that, in order to have a society that we want, be it an utilitarian or a Kantian or something else one, we have to have alive people-otherwise there would not be a society at all, but this particular argument still holds against your objection, so there is no problem) and parents are on such a mission that they hold that individuals must follow.So, why should we adapt the non-aggression principle? Why should people be forced into anything at all? That is the heart of the matter. There is an agenda taking place, and this agenda is literally forced onto the next generation. Why should the person be forced into this agenda, be it happiness principle or otherwise? Let me ask you this, if happiness is the goal, are parents then messianic "deliverers" of happiness by having children? Are they on some sort of mission whereby individuals are beholden to follow? This may sound odd, but that is the logical conclusion of such thinking- even if the person presenting it has not thought it all the way through. — schopenhauer1
I do not understand this. Is the argument that people experience happiness when alive and it is a good thing, so we should procreate? If so, it is as good as the argument that existence has harm and we should steer away from harm at all costs, so we should not procreate-not that good.Correct. They are misguided as they are using "the pursuit of happiness" as an excuse to justify violating the non-aggression principle (not forcing others). It is the ultimate "get out of free card" because somehow the connotation of the emotion/state-of-being of happiness makes people fee warm and fuzzy and therefore must be automatically a good justification. — schopenhauer1
It's not really question of binary either because it's about the body. If the issue is you exist with a penis, then whether one is male, female or anything else doesn't define the problem.
If one ought not have a penis, then there is motivation to remove it whether you are male,.female or something else entirely. Whether having a penis is binary or non-binary does nothing eliminate the issue. Either might be true, the person question would still want it removed, it's the state of body which they hold to be a problem. — TheWillowOfDarkness
i guess you could say the creator creates a blue print (dna) and puts it under stress conditions to test the result. The actions we take our a product of nurture/nature or dna and lifetime events. — christian2017
I open to that we are not responsible for our actions. If we are not held accountable i would be fine with that. — christian2017
i would argue to be completely predictable does not mean something does not have a will of its own but maybe i'm not thinking about it the right way. — christian2017
It means the given definition is lie.
Supposedly, the body is meant to make the identity, but this is not the case. We find the presence of the body is not granting the identity at all. The body is silent upon identity. The body is not making or stopping anyone being male, female or anything else. — TheWillowOfDarkness
But we use definitions for identities and "the truth of an identity" does not give the definition in the sense you are using. So, no definitions fit your criteria. Or all definitions fit your criteria but you just take it to be the case that the biological definition is not correct (not the one we should use) and thus end up being circular in your judgement, which is worse.If one has an identity, it must be given by a truth of identity. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Well, but they are not morally responsible for their decisions, are they?i understand completely why you would say that.
On the first part of your post, i would argue both new born babys and even bacteria as well as animals can make decisions. Those decisions however have little to no impact on the world. — christian2017
Well, it having eggs or sperm makes it female or male as per the definition. If you wany to say that it is "identity", then so be it. (Well, then, any definition would be ascribing "identity".)Both of those definitions comment on identity. They don't describe bodies at all.
The account is of which people can belong an idenity (male or female), supposedly, by which body they have. It's all about idenity.
If we look at the bodies, we find they don't care about these identities. A body which produces sperm does so whether it has an identity of male, female or something else. A body which has eggs does so whether it has an idenity of male, female or something else. The body does not define only those with sperm are male or only those with eggs are female. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yes, it does. Howewer, it is primitive in the sense that it behaves exactly like animal counterparts.How is a new born baby's movement primitive or should i say what do you mean by that? I'm sure you would agree the new born baby feels pain as well as positive feelings? — christian2017
Yeah as to the rest of what you said, that is for the most part true. I guess the point i'm making is that the human brain is like a billiards table of particles and those particles are effected by events that occurred billions of years ago. — christian2017
For sure, my point I'm the notion of biological sex is exactly like gender is this respect. It is not a description of bodies, what bodies can do or what bodies might do, but rather a concept of (supposedly) when and where certain identity and traits(e.g. male, female) can occur or not. — TheWillowOfDarkness
it can move its arms, make noises — christian2017
Okay. So, how does that allow for free will? In that case, we are reducible to events or states in a casual history of events and we have no bearing on what decision we will make. Our decisions were decided by something other than us. (our DNA and our environment). This, i think, does not allow for free will in the "basic desert" sense (i.e. us being blame or praiseworthy for our actions). A baby lacks free will in that sense too.Scientific determinism is a concept that arose in the early 1800s partly due to Newton's work.
As i stated to someone else i see the universe as giant billiards table and our dna as well as our environment completely decide what we will do. I might have inferior dna and a good environment and someone else might have superior dna and a bad environment. — christian2017