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  • POLL: Why is the murder rate in the United States almost 5 times that of the United Kingdom?


    Not to sound facetious, but the primary reason is probably that the United States is far more violent than the United Kingdom...the answer you are looking for is "culture" (amongst other things). It is most likely that our culture in America leads to an allowance and appreciation of more violence than is typically seen in United Kingdom.chiknsld

    Ultimately you are right, as even if "gun laws" are the difference, it is culture that has lead to the difference in gun laws.
  • POLL: Why is the murder rate in the United States almost 5 times that of the United Kingdom?


    I have property in one of the roughest parts of the UK. It's like a different world.

    Would imagine it would be much worse if guns were legal?
  • Is perfection possible?


    I suspect we have insufficient information and brainpower to make the correct decisions consistently.
  • What is intelligence? A.K.A. The definition of intelligence


    Do you think you're any closer to an answer to your question?
  • Free will, no free will, hybrid will?


    Man can do what he wills, but he cannot will what he wills.
  • All things wrong with antinatalism


    I've missed your thought experiments. Remember the Willy Wonka one? :grin:
  • What is intelligence? A.K.A. The definition of intelligence


    For example - a girl is 17 years old. Her brother is twice her age. When the girl is 23 years old, what will be the age of the boy?Down The Rabbit Hole

    He was 34 when she was 17. If she is 23 now then six years have past. I'll let someone else do the math.Average

    I'm not sure why anyone would use this as some kind of sign of intelligence.Average

    The math is a trick sending you in the wrong direction. All you need to know is that if she's 23 and he's twice her age, he'll be 46.

    It's this ability to piece things together that is the essence of intelligence.
  • What is intelligence? A.K.A. The definition of intelligence


    Training is still required. Very intelligent people are not likely to mentally reinvent the wheel and everything that followed. Even if they could, it would take entirely too much time. A 19th century genius cannot open a 21st century computer and instantly make sense of it.Bitter Crank

    Knowledge and intelligence are often conflated. People would disbelieve that anyone from the middle-ages could be as intelligent as we are today.
  • What is intelligence? A.K.A. The definition of intelligence


    The correct answer to what? What do you mean by "correct"? What do you mean by "answer"? without some kind of context, even if only hypothetical, I can't really understand you. Can you provide an example? Please forgive me if my questions comes across as pedantic.Average

    It would have to be an objectively correct answer. For example - a girl is 17 years old. Her brother is twice her age. When the girl is 23 years old, what will be the age of the boy?
  • What is intelligence? A.K.A. The definition of intelligence


    Unless I'm mistaken it would then be impossible for any intelligent person to be unable to "determine the correct answer" because this is by definition the very essence of intelligence. Please correct me if I've misunderstood your position or the relevant information.Average

    It's the ability to work things out or determine the correct answer. This ability can be possessed from a low to high degree.
  • What is intelligence? A.K.A. The definition of intelligence


    Would you mind explaining to me what you mean by "work things out"?Average

    Determine the correct answer.
  • What is intelligence? A.K.A. The definition of intelligence


    But what is intelligence?Average

    Words have many definitions. This is why statutes have a definition section (at least here in Blighty).

    Is this your definition of intelligence?Average

    Effectively. This is more or less what IQ tests do; test our "ability to work things out".
  • What is intelligence? A.K.A. The definition of intelligence


    There are a multitude of measures of intelligence; which is why IQ tests are not dispositive.

    One of my favourite measures would be to the effect of "the ability to work things out".
  • Faith and Reason: An objection to Anthony Flew "The Presumption of Atheism"


    So I mean atheism as a positive claim.ZzzoneiroCosm

    That's how they use the word in academic works apparently. Causing lots of debate over the correct definition.
  • Faith and Reason: An objection to Anthony Flew "The Presumption of Atheism"


    Flew put his faith in his own powers of argumentation, and they proved somewhat treacherous in the end.unenlightened

    Maybe I'm just cynical, but I suspect his late father being a minister may have influenced his change of heart. It is kind of poetic that the "most notorious atheist" finally found his deeply religious father was right all along.



    The word "atheism" can be substituted for the word "theism".ZzzoneiroCosm

    Does absence of belief entail a burden of proof?
  • An objection to the Teleological Argument: Other forms of life


    Further, this is not an objection towards God's existence because perhaps souls can prove that. Instead, this is an objection to the premise that fine-tuning is probable under theism; hence the fine-tuning argument is unsound.lish

    You pre-empted my primary objection. In defeating the fine-tuning argument as evidence for God's existence, your argument would provide evidence for God's existence (souls).

    I agree with @Cuthbert. While it may not be likely that God would create a universe fine-tuned for the existence of material life, it doesn't mean they haven't.
  • Experience Machine


    However, I have a different opinion on the definition of the experience machine. According to the definition, people who plug in into the machine can and only can experience pleasure.Howard

    Conclusion: Experience machines cannot exist.Howard

    You mean your version of the experience machine cannot exist?

    Still, I think there are many examples of pleasures that are not countering a negative experience. Sex seems like an obvious one.
  • Is the World Cruel?


    The other DNA based organisms don't have nerves and brains which are responsible for the transfer and experience of suffering. In any event, more plants are fed to the animals you eat than you would eat directly.

    At least you're feeling guilty about it. Most people go straight to rationalisation.
  • Is Nietzsche theory of effect over intention valid or does intention truly matter


    In Nietzsche view the effect outweighs the intention. For example, you see a shady guy walking around and decide to drop an anvil on their head cartoon style, your intention was to hurt them but the effect was that no one robbed. (For this say they were a known robber that had been at large) Should you be punished for the intention or rewarded for the outcome?CallMeDirac

    A lot of UK criminal offences require there to be intent. It needs to be punished as a deterrent.
  • Against Benatar's axiological asymmetry


    "Neutral" state of affairs might be better than bad ones (such as harm), but they are also worse than good ones (such as happiness). In light of this, I do think that if it can be good to prevent harms, it can also be bad to prevent potential joys.DA671

    This makes sense to me. If we use "good" to mean better than the alternative, and "bad" to mean worse than the alternative, the axiological asymmetry must fail.
  • Against Benatar's axiological asymmetry


    I think whether you accept the axiological asymmetry depends on whether you judge the morality of an action by its consequences.

    If you judge non-existence by its consequences, it is neutral - no good or bad experienced. If not, your intuition could tell you that the absence of harm is a good, but the absence of benefit is not bad.
  • Against Benatar's axiological asymmetry


    I am not denying it would be good if no one was experiencing pain. The point is that it would be good for someone, namely the person whose valuing of something constitutively determines that it has moral value.Bartricks

    Agreed. As you've said, moral rights and wrongs only exist in minds.

    Benatar is assuming that there can be moral value in the absence of any and all valuers. And that makes no sense.Bartricks

    Is he not just proposing an argument and stimulating people's intuitions to gain support for it, just as we would? It is not clear that he is saying the AAA is objectively true.
  • Against Benatar's axiological asymmetry


    es. The point, though, is that it would be good for someone.
    Or are you asking if absence of pain would be good even if no one exists? In that case, no - for the reasons given in the OP.
    Bartricks

    It feels right to say that non-existence is neither good or bad; it is neutral. However, if everyone stopped reproducing, it feels acceptable to say "it is good there will be no more people to experience pain".
  • Against Benatar's axiological asymmetry


    Absent pain is indeed good, but it is always good for someone, just as pleasure is good when it is good for someone.Bartricks

    You could say "it is good there is no one experiencing the pain"?
  • POLL: Why is the murder rate in the United States almost 5 times that of the United Kingdom?


    If memory serves, I heard that a background check must be done when buying in any state, and you cannot buy if you are a felon, domestic abuser, or mentally unstable? I guess this is what's called a federal law - it cannot be ignored by the states?
  • Antinatalism and the harmfulness of death


    Your OP says even those with a bad life are compelled to avoid death, and we would even saw off our arm to do soDown The Rabbit Hole

    No it doesn't. Sheesh. It says that we have 'reason to' avoid death. Reason to. Reason to. Reason to. Reason to. Not 'will'. Reason to. Not 'will'. Not 'desire to'. Not 'fear'. Reason to.Bartricks

    And does that reason not compel us to avoid death? Your wording in the OP is "bids us".

    I replied pointing out that this is because we are hardwired to do soDown The Rabbit Hole

    Yeah, irrelevant. False. And irrelevant.Bartricks

    Do you believe in evolution? It's basic science that our genes have been naturally selected to avoid things that kill us.

    you then responded to others and me that it is "intuitive" and "self-evident" that we have reason to avoid death - I reiterated that it feels intuitive and self evident because of our hardwiring.Down The Rabbit Hole

    Again, false and irrelevant. It's called the genetic fallacy- the fallacy of thinking that if a belief or impression has a cause, then that automatically discredits the belief or impression. It works for any goddamn belief or impression of anything at all - so it's a really dumb argument. You keep making it. Draw the inference.Bartricks

    No, we've been over this; focus! It only undermines beliefs that have no reasoning apart from feeling self-evidently true.

    THus, the reasonable conclusion is that death is a portal to hell.Bartricks

    This self-evident truth is starting to look more like religious faith.
  • Truth Utility vs. White Lies


    I think truth-telling is overrated. Sam Harris seems to disagree: "In Lying, best-selling author and neuroscientist Sam Harris argues that we can radically simplify our lives and improve society by merely telling the truth in situations where others often lie. He focuses on "white" lies—those lies we tell for the purpose of sparing people discomfort—for these are the lies that most often tempt us. And they tend to be the only lies that good people tell while imagining that they are being good in the process".
  • Antinatalism and the harmfulness of death


    Your OP says even those with a bad life are compelled to avoid death, and we would even saw off our arm to do so - I replied pointing out that this is because we are hardwired to do so, and that our hardwiring cannot be trusted in light of the fact it brought tortured souls here in the first place - you then responded to others and me that it is "intuitive" and "self-evident" that we have reason to avoid death - I reiterated that it feels intuitive and self evident because of our hardwiring.

    I still have issue with your premises as set out on page 5:

    1. If we have reason to avoid death under virtually all circumstances, including circumstances in which our lives are already sub optimal in terms of their happiness to misery balance (up to a certain limit), the best explanation of this is that death harms us and harms us by permanently altering our condition for the worse.Bartricks

    Let's cut out the middle bit, to make it easier for me to accept: "If we have reason to avoid death under virtually all circumstances, the best explanation is that death harms us and harms us by permanently altering our condition for the worse".

    As you have indicated that death would be best for those in agony, the "we" would only be the majority of people. Therefore death would only harm and permanently alter the condition of the majority of people for the worse.

    2. We have reason to avoid death under virtually all circumstances etc.Bartricks

    The majority of people would have reason to avoid death under virtually all circumstances.

    3. Therefore, death harms us by permanently altering our condition for the worseBartricks

    Death would harm the majority of people by permanently altering their condition for the worse.

    I think you are going to struggle to get your argument to work for me, as I would only see death as instrumentally bad, and you clearly believe it to be intrinsically bad.
  • Antinatalism and the harmfulness of death


    I take it you are attempting to challenge 1 by arguing that as we can give an evolutionary story about how we might have come to 'believe'that we have reason to avoid dying, we do not in fact have reason to avoid dying.Bartricks

    No, I think there are reasons to avoid dying. I am arguing against trusting our feeling that it is self-evidently true that we should avoid dying - this feeling is at least as likely to be evolutionary programming as anything meaningful.

    So your argument is actually - we have no reason to believe or do anything. As well as being obviously indefensible and itself unbelievable, it applies to any argument for anything. So, it is silly. You haven't engaged with my argument so much as rejected the whole project of arguing for anything. If that's what you are reduced to doing, then my argument is very strong.Bartricks

    Only stuff we believe to be self-evidently true is untrustworthy. Our urge to reproduce is a good example - except you didn't fall for that one.
  • Antinatalism and the harmfulness of death
    @Bartricks

    It's not controversial that we are evolutionarily hardwired to avoid death.

    This is why it seems self-evidently reasonable to avoid it.
  • POLL: Why is the murder rate in the United States almost 5 times that of the United Kingdom?


    My view is that there are far too many guns of all kinds in the USA. However, they are here now -- at least 1 per person, averaging out the total supply, and there isn't any acceptable way to round them up.Bitter Crank

    What do you think outlawing guns (like the UK does) would do to the US murder rate?
  • POLL: Why is the murder rate in the United States almost 5 times that of the United Kingdom?


    And yet no one I know has ever known a person who was murdered, much less who was shot. What do you make of that? 55 years in this crime ridden city, and never even been pickpocketed.Hanover

    I'm guessing you're in one of the safest areas on Atlanta's crime map?

    https://s3.amazonaws.com/crime-maps-aws.neighborhoodscout.com/atlanta-ga-crime-map.png
  • Antinatalism and the harmfulness of death


    It's just sad you're allowing your DNA to control your beliefs. Especially considering that it's responsible for reproduction, the greatest con of all time.

    In any event, doesn't your premise assume the conclusion? The premise that it is self-evidently reasonable to avoid death, assumes the conclusion that death is worse.
  • Antinatalism and the harmfulness of death
    @Bartricks

    No, I'm not getting it. Why is it reasonable to avoid death (save to avoid missing out on a good life and causing grief to our loved ones)?

    The reason we avoid death is because of our selfish genes, same reason we reproduce.
  • Antinatalism and the harmfulness of death


    No I don't think so. Our DNA wouldn't care about our miserable life thought, all it cares about is spreading.
  • Antinatalism and the harmfulness of death


    Do you think you have reason to avoid death?Bartricks

    Yes, to avoid missing out on a good life, and to avoid causing grief to our loved ones.

    Your point about the after-life potentially being worse is something I've gave serious thought about before. I see it as an equal possibility to the alternatives.
  • Antinatalism and the harmfulness of death


    It's our DNA that compels us to desperately avoid death. And how can we trust our DNA when it's what's compelling us to drag poor souls into existence?
  • POLL: Why is the murder rate in the United States almost 5 times that of the United Kingdom?


    It may surprise some, but a majority of Americans do not own guns.

    About 40% of Americans say they or someone in their household owns a gun, and 22% of individuals (about 72 million people) report owning a gun, according to surveys from Pew and Harvard and Northeastern. This figure has declined over time, down from 51% of gun-owning households in 1978. Gun purchases, however, have hit historic highs in recent years and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
    Bitter Crank

    On the contrary, 40% of households with guns is surprisingly high to me. From American movies, I would guess guns are rampant in the South, but uncommon in California and middle class area.

Down The Rabbit Hole

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