Dylan deserved the Nobel for his poetry. — Bitter Crank
So in the end when you boil down that person that you are to its bare minimum you realize that you are a combination of your parents, your experiences and your tastes that may also rely on your experiences.... — Filipe
Another thing this implies is that 'to know the meaning of the word 'function'', (to define it?) is not the same as being able to use the word meaningfully (although the latter is how one goes about learning the former, as you said). — StreetlightX
But if you think of "meaning" in this way, as something which is attributed to words, you would have to accept that we can use words without knowing the meaning of the words. How would we characterize this type of use then? The child gets some sort of message across to the parents, but we cannot call it "meaning", because the child doesn't know the meaning. What is the child doing? — Metaphysician Undercover
The OP on the other thread specifically addresses why things cannot have existed 'forever' in time. That leads to a model where something(s) have permanent existence outside of time. — Devans99
I believe that causality always forms a pyramid shape in time, which is suggestive of a start of time. — Devans99
Also, as Leibniz, Aquinas and others have said, infinite regresses are impossible - they must terminate in something concrete, permanent and uncaused - in my view that is only possible if the terminator to the regress is outside of time. — Devans99
Thing is, we do not really know. We hardly know much at all about how such things might work and its certainly could be discovered one way or another. The universe doesnt care about our models for how it works.
The fact that we do not know doesnt mean people can just make something up in place of that knowledge. (Not that you did that). — DingoJones
What I mean is that everything in time seems to need a temporal start. Could a matter particle exist in time if it never started existing? — Devans99
I believe that everything in spacetime at a micro level can trace its cause back to the Big Bang — Devans99
Can we not treat 'reason' and 'cause' as synonyms when it comes to cosmological arguments? — Devans99
To have no cause is to have nothing logically/temporally preceding which seems only possible if the thing being considered is outside of time... which I admit is a challenging concept... but I cannot see how anything could exist without a minimum of one 'brute fact' and it seems they have to be timeless. — Devans99
I imagine it's actually both ways at once — fdrake
everything must have a reason. — Devans99
Anyway, just wanted to write something up about the story and draw out a couple of possibly interesting implications. — StreetlightX
Mattering is like meaning
— T Clark
yes they are similar. It also extends to the concept of there being a reason for our existence. The existence of the universe irrespective of human existence demonstrates our irrelevance.
We matter to me
— T Clark
is fair to say and correct. Beyond ourselves however, looking from the outside in, in the broader scheme of all the universe, we do not have claim to any significance. Therefore the concept of our importance internally is negated by the broader concept of our insignificance. — SimonSays
The case accommodating an existence of God is not accounted for here. — SimonSays
the human perspective has actually been used to describe humans. It is saying that humans and all that they value, is in fact, insignificant or irrelevant with respect to the broader universe of which we are a part. The prior and continued existence of the universe irrespective of our existence is evidence to this. As mentioned earlier, our value we ascribe is negated by the overall case of our irrelevance. — SimonSays
Okay, but you take some back with you, or bring a doctor to sterilize. With their consent after you've convince them, naturally. No reason to not start things unethically. — Marchesk
Do you convince them to not have kids knowing what's in store for the human race? — Marchesk
Epistemology is the theory of knowledge, starting from the idea that knowledge is a justified belief (JtB). Hence, epistemology is a collection of standard justification methods, each of which generates an epistemic domain:
Mathematics is justified by proving it axiomatically (Bourbaki).
Science is justified by testing it experimentally (Popper).
History is justified by corroborating what has been witnessed. — alcontali
I can keep going, but I won't. You get the picture. Antinatalism prevents suffering for all, and forcing people into the world. No ONE loses out by not being born, but EVERYONE loses in some way by being born. My inaction to create someone hurts, literally NO ONE. Someone else's action to birth someone, always creates some harm, and if we believe that being deprived is a negative state, there is constant suffering there too. — schopenhauer1
Therefore we can say that universe exists whether humans exist or not. Another way to say this is :
It doesn’t matter if we exist or not, the universe will still exist.
It doesn’t matter if we exist or not.
We don’t matter. — SimonSays
Lots of people have their children taken off them after they are born because they are unfit parents. There is not just one scenario where people intervene in reproduction. — Andrew4Handel
But, that doesn't give him the right to say that the unborn fetus should not live! — Wallows
The unborn aren't suffering. Those born are either suffering, will suffer, or have the potential to suffer. Every human struggles, suffers, ages and dies. You can call this psychological projection, but as a human I have some stake on the claim of what it's like to be one. — Inyenzi
But, your position is inherently based on the subjective experience of suffering or strife, which you try to rationalize into an objective brute fact about existence. Is this at least correct? — Wallows
Your options are... be beholden to the forces of this behemoth technological economic giant and get by with the six or so "goods" to overlook the cirucular productive forces that we are forced into, or do the following- kill yourself, become a part of the underclass (homeless), become some sort of monk/hermit. — schopenhauer1
Despite his bitter protestations, I'm bringing in Bitter Crank because I think he might shed some light on how we are circular forces of production.. He will shrink away from total pessimism on this.. but I think he has some wise insights on the whole shebang. — schopenhauer1
There is absolutely no reason to have children
We all have to confront our own death.
In my opinion creating children is malicious. It is like if you were dying but started a fire to kill lot of other people rather than confront your own death and see what happens. Instead you left trails of continuing destruction (the random propagation of your genes) as an act of defiance.
We know for a fact we, you and all your children , grandchildren, and great grand children are going to die. For what conceivable reason?
There is no real immortality in leaving behind partial replicas of your genes to eventual go extinct.
In a sense I feel cowardly for not dying and seeing what life was about.
But the inevitability of death means you just have to sit and wait for the inevitable and creating children is not a pastime that would ameliorate this. — Andrew4Handel
Antinatalism in my opinion is also an enlightened view on the true nature and connotations of creating life. — Andrew4Handel
There are lots of things that should or could deter a parent from having a child. Are you seriously claiming anyone anywhere in any circumstances is somehow entitled to have a child. — Andrew4Handel
Here we need to ask ourselves how did philosophy arise? Was it that some ancient folks starting taking words out of context? Or was it because there is a loose fit between language and the world, leading to all sorts of interesting puzzles? If it's the latter, then the problem is ordinary language, not philosophy. — Marchesk
I think that the fact that we cannot consent to be brought into existence creates a real and serious problem. — Andrew4Handel
I disagree. I think humour can be gentle.
Submissive or cooperative ?
I am trying to think of examples of approaches to humour which are cooperative. Morreall suggests this belongs more in the female sphere. Hmmm...is this a natural division ? — Amity
So yea if you love your job and your kids love their job, giving a job to everyone seems like the solution. But when you look at all the people who hate their job and all the negative consequences that has, more jobs doesn't solve the underlying problem. — leo
I've grown strawberries in my garden--they weren't worth the trouble. Raspberries -- much easier, because they just take over and rule. The soil on my lot is either poor or way too shady. I know how to grow vegetables and corn, but one needs a large garden, decent soil, and little shade to grow a significant amount of food for a family. Plus, I'm getting a little old to undertake urban agriculture. — Bitter Crank
I think just those two measures would eventually improve the lives of many people. In the current system there are plenty of bullshit jobs and jobs that make the lives of others worse, which induce huge inefficiencies, so I don't think giving a job to everyone would improve things that much. Able-bodied people rather ought to be given the opportunity to work for themselves, to build their house, grow their food, take care of their health, that work would not be effort wasted. — leo
Very Funny,. You guys kill me. You act as if you had a choice. Ha Ha Ha. For a fun little change, take a sec and think of the most profound thing you could do and imagine doing it. Why aren't you then? I am interested to know. Perhaps life just is. The least, most, best, only thing to have. Change it, i dare ya. — Franklin Crook
Where is this link? I clicked on the schopenhaur1 and found a huge plethora of discussions.Please excuse i am a new member and may not be the best at navigating here. Otherwise i am intrigued to even think there is a realistic counter argument to my satement. — Franklin Crook
Yeah well its the best we got. Life is. — Franklin Crook
salvific — Bitter Crank
AHH, and here is the major conceit. This is EXACTLY what I can say about the decision to create a new child. — schopenhauer1
People are born everyday and they will one day die and cause grief to those they left behind. Life is full of suffering that they did not consent to. Leaders are full of greed and aggression and need more people for tax dollars and soldiers. There are diseases, parasites, germs, blood-sucking insects, and animals that bite and kill and eat each other. Even humans are usually selfish and indifferent to the suffering of others except in extreme cases such as an emergency or a natural disaster. Every second is a second closer to death and eventually everyone is killed by life (no immortals yet, as far as we know).
Is it even ethical to have children and bring them to the suffering of life in the world without them being able to consent to it? Why do human beings ignore that the world is full of pain and suffering and try to walk around happy, indifferent to the suffering and even creating more suffering sometimes? — empathy
