All things knowable are in constant flux because what makes up all things knowable are in constant flux... — synthesis
If you mean Absolute Truth, then I would say these do exist but are not intellectually accessible. — synthesis
Intellectually, you can have near-truths (like it is immoral to kill another) but most truths are reasonably personal and change constantly. — synthesis
At what point can you be sure you got it right and are not just making a mistake? — khaled
The funny thing is, Jack, even if you are able to eloquently provide the latest and greatest explanations of this, that, and the other thing, how long does it take before an even "better" version becomes popularized. It's a treadmill from which there is no exit. — synthesis
The question here: whether it is necessary to suffer for Christ to be a Christian — tim wood
so what, exactly, is the suffering for, and for what purpose if it is necessary? — tim wood
I just don't believe a charmed life can ever be the case based on that no life has ever been so charmed as far as I know.. — schopenhauer1
No one should have to suffer to keep the species going. — Andrew4Handel
Why of course, it’s not your decision to make. I trust that the AN are not trying to stop other people from conceiving children, and that they are just personally opposed to it for themselves. — Olivier5
But that is incredibly unlikely. — khaled
Would Adam and Eve suffering from childlessness compare to the suffering of all mankind thus far? — khaled
I am doing so in both situations. Try comparing potential harms in the case of birth. There is no way having children is the less harmful alternative. — khaled
It is NOT always okay to risk harming others by building a pipeline that was my point. It matters what that pipeline accomplishes. If it alleviates more harm than it is likely to cause then it's fine. If it doesn't (say, because it connects to nowhere and some rich guy is building it for literally no reason) then it's wrong. — khaled
We know the child suffers 20%. Let's assume THEY don't have kids. After they grow up, we can assume 5% of that 20 comes from them not having children. Then we take into account their spouse, another 5%, and the parents of the couple (in this case you are part of them), another 20%. So it comes out to: 20% + 5% + 20% for a total of 45% total for having a child that then doesn't have a child. — khaled
Let's assume they DO have a child. Then the percentage is still bad. 15% from the person themselves (since I counted childlessness as 5% and that won't be the case here) and 20% from their child. 35% right there. Not even considering whether or not this child will have kids or not (both will increase the percentage) — khaled
And this is WITH counting childlessness as 25% of a person's suffering throughout their life which I find inaccurate in the first place. — khaled
Because I think the alternative is even worse for them* — khaled
Yea. — khaled
But your principle would imply that if I think I know your price I MUST press the button for you. I don't think either of us thinks so. — khaled
A bit extreme eh? What if the parent says "I kinda don't wanna have a kid". By your principle that would not be enough to outweigh the "benefits to the child" (still think this doesn't make sense but ok). So in that case they should be FORCED to have the child. That's the consequence of requiring that people don't deny pleasure. — khaled
You can't even say that much for certain. Many parents regret having children, because they weren't actually prepared. — khaled
Because in this case if we don't buy it we ourselves get harmed comparably to how much we can expect the other person (who now can't buy the bread) to be harmed. I don't understand what's so difficult about this. — khaled
Is it more harmful to not build the pipeline than it is to build the pipeline? — khaled
It is basically always the more harmful option, because you're comparing a lifetime of suffering to the suffering of childlessness. — khaled
Because not doing so risks killing them. Which is a much greater harm than a broken rib for most people. I don't understand what's so difficult about this. — khaled
Most people don't want to die. — khaled
Would you mind if I press the button that has a 2% chance of killing you or breaking a bone for a 98% chance of giving you 1000 dollars without asking? Most people walk away 1000 dollars richer.... Heck, most people who have gone through the experience say that it was worth it! — khaled
If it is possible that someone will find life not worthwhile because they stubbed their toe once, yes. — khaled
On the other hand you are suggesting that benefits should also be factored in. That would mean that you are obligated to have children in many scenarios. If you can show that it is likely that they will be beneficial to have overall, then it becomes a duty to have them. But you don't agree with this. Which is weird. Furthermore you say that the risk of significant harm outweighs any considerations of pleasure. I don't see how you balance this. You have two different "variables" whereas I have one. — khaled
The criteria required is basically impossible. I’ve gone over it before with echarimon. You would need to show that having kids is the less risky option. IE: That you need kids SO BAD that you would suffer more from childlessness alone than your kids are likely to suffer their entire lives. This becomes impossible if your kids are to have their own kids. That’s also on you (though you’re a lot less responsible) — khaled
Because it’s not you paying the consequences. You have no right to endanger others. — khaled
No it’s for the PROTECTION of others. Not their benefit. Humans like to get revenge but that’s not the primary reason we put people in jail. The primary reason is that we need to protect others. We judge the people in jail as dangerous, which is why we put them there. Letting them walk around is the risky option. We don’t put them there for the population to have fun indulging in a feeling of righteousness. — khaled
You can’t prove that your next child will benefit others. — khaled
Point is, we don’t take risks with others. Even if we think they’ll think the risk is worth it. We ask first. And when we can’t ask we don’t do it — khaled
It doesn’t. You said the good reason was that it infringes on liberties. — khaled
It is bad when there is not a good reason to do so. It is acceptable if the pleasure they are seeking infringes on the liberties of others, or otherwise needlessly risks harming others. — Pinprick
Seriously though, how do you say this and at the same time say having kids is ok. — khaled
How do you differentiate? — khaled
Obviously we’re not considering harm done to them, as that is irrelevant. They didn’t consider the harm they did to others, so we don’t consider the harm we do to them as part of the equation at all. They lose the right to be treated as a human in a sense — khaled
What is the cutoff? — Inyenzi
Not to mention the absurdity of using the amount of people who resort to lethal self-harm as a parameter of a "worthwhile life"... — Inyenzi
I couldn't imagine justifying this with, "well, I guessed it was more likely you'd find it worthwhile, so I did it". — Inyenzi
Why is it a good thing to create the conditions of harm to take place, for another person? — Inyenzi
Say in my power is the ability to instill within you a 6th sense, which has both the capacity to be experienced as painful or pleasurable. I guess that you are 51% likely to judge this added sense as "worthwhile" to have. Do I therefore have the right to bestow this sense upon you, without your permission? — Inyenzi
They are only doing it because the opportunity has provided itself to them. — Down The Rabbit Hole
It wasn't suicide by mod but a stupid mistake (you can read up in the Bannings thread). It was a combination of an apology, the assurances after the ban it wouldn't happen again and his otherwise good posting history that led to an unban. Suicidees by mod tend to not want to get back to the forum. ;-) — Benkei
I didn’t say that. You should examine it situation by situation. Sending kids to school is not always right and not always wrong. — khaled
My point is, there is never a case where you can 100% say that the person will live a worthwhile life. So why are you taking the risk for them? — khaled
This is different from sending kids to school. If you DON’T send kids to school then you INCREASE the risk they suffer. Sending them to school is usually the least risky option. And when it isn't the least risky option, we have agreed that sending kids to school would be wrong in that instance. However if you don’t have kids you don’t harm anyone. There is no obligation to have kids. There is no need to take the risk. So don’t — khaled
Because there is absolutely no need to take the 2% risk. — khaled
If there was a button I could press that has a 98% chance to give you 1000 dollars and a 2% chance to kill you, should I press that button without asking you first? — khaled
Now, if “do not deny pleasure” is your principle — khaled
Huh? But you’re the one that proposed the principle. Are you saying you don’t actually follow it? That you don’t actually think denying pleasure is bad? — khaled
No. It is not like the school example. Because with school, NOT forcing a child to go to school IS the risky option. Even there you’re minimizing risks. — khaled
Either “do not deny pleasure” is a principle or it isn’t. — khaled
And so we can agree that it’s dubious whether or not they should be forced to go to school by their parents no? — khaled
In order for something to be good for someone that someone must exist first. — khaled
If you want to say that being born is good for someone because they will experience pleasure then by the same token it is bad for someone because they will suffer. You either take both or neither. You can’t say being born is purely good. — khaled
If someone is harmed due to being born that’s hardly accidental. You don’t “accidentally” have kids. There is planning and a 9 month delay. You knew they were going to be harmed in some way. — khaled
In other words, if the act of kidnapping itself doesn’t cause any harm is it fine? I doubt it. So why is it wrong? — khaled
By this metric you should be obligated to have a child whose life will be perfect. — khaled
Also by this principle: Having kids needlessly risks harming others (the kids), therefore it is fine to deny pleasure in this case making the act overall wrong. — khaled
The potential benefit is much smaller than the potential harm. — khaled
You consider having kids as something that can be beneficial/harmful to the kid:
In which case having children is wrong because it unnecessarily risks harming someone. In this case you cannot “counteract” this effect by saying that not having kids denies pleasure because in this case your ARE allowed to deny pleasure (which is why you don’t have to have a child even knowing their life would be perfect). — khaled
That’s not good enough justification. For example, I know that people on average are happier when they exercise regularly. Doesn’t give me a right to force you to exercise at gun point does it? — khaled
If I happen to be a masochist and I think it’s likely that you will enjoy being tortured does that give me a right to torture you? — khaled
I was implying that all of these things were done to reduce the suffering on them or others. I thought that was obvious. We make Kids go to school and eat vegetables because it’s good for them in the long run. We don’t just arbitrarily make kids do stuff for no reason. — khaled
But not good for them. That would make no sense. — khaled
When is preventing people from experiencing pleasure bad and when is it acceptable? — khaled
The outcome of pointing a gun at someone and pulling the trigger is uncertain, as the gun might jam. That doesn’t make it ok to do. It is ridiculous to require certainty to say that something is wrong. Because then nothing is ever wrong — khaled
I’m sure you’d agree that kidnapping someone and putting them in a forest to fend for themselves is wrong. Even though it doesn’t actually cause harm, or pleasure, only creates the opportunity. Why is it wrong then? — khaled
But a second ago you said it was fine to deny but did not provide a reason. Why is it you require a reason here? A second ago it was a “gray area”... Until you clarify exactly when denying pleasure is acceptable and when it isn’t you’re just being disingenuous — khaled
Having children on the other hand is a risk act that is not accompanied by consent nor can be said to improve anyone’s situation which makes it wrong. So far you have not provided an example of an act which does these things that you consider fine except having kids. — khaled
You cannot know that the pros will outweigh the cons. — khaled
I think if we know the person in question will find their life worthwhile then it's fine. Problem is we don't. — khaled
There are no examples in society where people are forced to do things against their will unless it reduces suffering to them or others. Or at least there shouldn’t be. — khaled
There you say it yourself. You cannot logically say that being born is good for the person being born. — khaled
But by your own principle, if not having children is “preventing someone from experiencing pleasure” and that is bad, then it should be mandatory. So either having children is not preventing anyone from doing anything, or “preventing someone from experiencing pleasure” is not bad. There is no other way out. — khaled
Would you judge a murderer? Probably. So the reason you wouldn’t judge someone’s choice to have kids has to be that you don’t consider it a moral issue. I would ask why. Does it not result in harm? Why would it not be a moral issue? — khaled
What about malicious genetic engineering? Would you judge someone who genetically engineers their child to be blind? Probably. But why is THAT a moral issue but birth itself isn’t? — khaled
False. You literally just argued a paragraph ago that not having children is a denial of pleasure. Which means that having children causes pleasure (as well as harm). Which is it? Make up your mind. — khaled
Because they don’t exist until you make them exist. So it can’t be that you’re doing it for them. — khaled
Yes but “The cons aren’t that bad” is not a pro. So idk why you’re framing it as if it is. — khaled
My point is that the animals are only suffering the abuse because people are paying for them to be factory farmed. Shouldn't we stop doing this? — Down The Rabbit Hole
Sure. And this doesn’t violate your principle. Because your principle isn’t “denying pleasure is bad”. That would lead to the PC scenario. Your principle is “Stopping people from seeking pleasure is bad”. Even if we were to propose potential happy beings, not having children is NOT in fact stopping even these beings from seeking pleasure, it is simply not providing it for them — khaled
Which is very weird if you consider not having children bad because it “stops someone from experiencing pleasure”. This shows that having children is not, in fact, stopping anyone from doing anything. — khaled
Agreed. Except having children makes THEM also have to deal with the problem as PART of all the suffering they’ll endure. So it’s a totally inacceptable solution. — khaled
No. Because they don’t exist. So this cannot possibly be for them. Making someone exist for the sake of that person is incoherent. Closest you’ll get is “So I can see my child happy” which is not actually for the child but for you. — khaled
No. Because again, the suffering you experience is incomparably small to that which you are planning to inflict to alleviate it. There is a much better solution to this feeling known as adoption. Or volunteering in child care. Or not being self loathing and stupid enough that you let societal expectations determine how you feel about yourself to this extent. Or or or or.... All of these inflict a lot less suffering and still solve the problem. — khaled
“It’s bad but it’s not that bad” isn’t actually a reason to do something at all. — khaled
The two cannot be disentangled for the purpose of morality, but if we're talking about selecting a moral course of action, then right and wrong must already apply to the selection process. — Echarmion
I didn’t. This doesn’t violate your principle though. I have to not stop you from seeking pleasure. Sure. But that does NOT mean I have to provide anybody pleasure. Not having children isn’t stopping anyone from seeking pleasure. So this principle has no bearing on the discussion — khaled
Point is that “risky acts” (risk causing both pleasure and pain) require consent or justification normally and neither is given in the case of birth. — khaled
So if you want a PS5 I have a moral duty to buy you a new PS5 as a complete stranger? — khaled
But even if we were to say people have a duty not to deny others pleasure, AN would not violate this (incredibly weird) duty. — khaled
If you have a child you cause harm, as the result will be the existence of a child and that child will be harmed. Notice how there is actually a person being harmed in this case. However, if you do not have a child, there will be no child to deny anything. So no violations. — khaled
Intentions are what determines your actions though. — Echarmion
I don't know for sure, but it's extremely likely considering that they have nerves and a brain, and they scream and cry, and show signs of trauma. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I'd argue that, insofar as "right" and "wrong" have a unique purpose, that purpose is to tell us how we should act. — Echarmion
No, memory is to retain information, that's completely different from passing on information. — Metaphysician Undercover
And if you think there's a chance it might work, it seems to me that it would be wrong. — Echarmion
Ah. "I cannot swim so will not swim but intend to swim." To me that's erroneous. An intention to me is an intent to act. I think that's typical. — Kenosha Kid