Objectively, universally. — Dan
The compression is actually allowed to lose a lot -- or even most -- of the information contained in physical reality. — Tarskian
Don’t you mean because the world is perfectly non-ethical? — Fire Ologist
For sure, there are many types of unpleasantness, and not every one is pain. "Unpleasant" is the wider concept. So not all unpleasantness is pain, but all pain involves unpleasantness. — Metaphysician Undercover
because one cannot have pain without unpleasantness — Metaphysician Undercover
unpleasantness does not imply pain — Metaphysician Undercover
"Inheres" means existing within something, as an essential property. — Metaphysician Undercover
so pain does not inhere within the definition of unpleasantness. — Metaphysician Undercover
Have you not researched those two aspects yet? — Metaphysician Undercover
If every red is a percept then it makes no sense to speak substantially about red percepts. The equivocation becomes more clear if you compare, "The red pen," to, "The red percept." If we follow your lead and reduce each statement consistently, then the first renders, — Leontiskos
We don't teach children what colors are by sharing are experiences of mental percepts of color — Richard B
You'll need to let me know what this has to do with AN first (i can save the time: It does not have more than an aesthetic resemblance to the issues AN wants to deal with). — AmadeusD
yes, that's right, but antinatalists don't confuse the issue:
No humans. Not not playgrounds. Let the people who exist use hte playground, for reasons your point out that would make the "no playgrounds" conclusion stupid as heck. — AmadeusD
I am conceptually in line with AN entirely (including the above prescriptive thinking and hte delineation between living and potential persons — AmadeusD
It's not relevant to me whether someone claims they have a good life individually - the argument is about lives to come. Those who are currently living aren't relevant, — AmadeusD
There are clearly not. There are potential victims. — AmadeusD
(this one I've picked, because it clearly shows me saying something stupid, but still attests to your error.If these people were not having children, and increasing the sheer number of sufferers on the planet, I don't think this argument would any weight as one's delusion becomes one's reality internally. — AmadeusD
ANists hysterically confuse 'preventing possible lives' with 'preventing (and reducing) harm to / suffering of actual lives'. — 180 Proof
If you have an argument against that argument — apokrisis
But once you declare no line can be drawn, no balance of interests can exist, then that becomes reason eating itself. — apokrisis
So does your AN charter need to add the clause of no sex at all as that is putting you at risk for breaking the faith? Do you need to go out and get sterilised because you could always get drunk one night or duped into performing a service for some cunning natalist? — apokrisis
The risks might be diminishing, but even a vasectomy fails 1 in 10,000 times. At some point do you not eventually get a pass on this? — apokrisis
Does even the AN extremist accept that imperatives have their pragmatic limits? — apokrisis
We can get back to my commonsense position that what matters in regard to approaching reproduction ethically is not whether the prospective parents can have the baby sign off on the whole exercise in advance, but that the parents are wholeheartedly engaged in making it a turn of as a positive choice. — apokrisis
One can have a productive ethical debate where there are two complementary imperatives in play – like risks and rewards — apokrisis
But if you set up your ethics on the side of a slippery slope fallacy, then why would you expect that to be useful or persuasive? — apokrisis
But that is just your failure to understand my position. — apokrisis
My core principle is that there is always a dialectical balance in anything that could matter. A trade-off. And trade-offs ought to be optimised in a win-win fashion. That is the answer that is worth seeking. My approach leads me to pragmatism. We do the best we can by reasoning. We should always expect a complementary balance to exist in nature. Complementary balances is after all how nature can even exist. — apokrisis
really have the distinctive property that they do appear to have. =/= They are red. — Banno
If you would read what I posted — TonesInDeepFreeze
It could have been better written. — apokrisis
Well who gives a fuck when you put it like that. — apokrisis
Which is another way AN harms itself as a reasonable ethical system. — Fire Ologist
If the goal of ethics is to eliminate ethics — Fire Ologist
we could just ignore any pangs of morality now instead — Fire Ologist
using scales of ethics and motality to help decide one’s way forward for sake of eliminating ethics is a bit like using math to show how numbers can’t exist (or in this case shouldn’t exist). — Fire Ologist
recognizing for problems — apokrisis
Is a more apt description. — AmadeusD
Yet you keep falling into the same trap of asserting you know how the body/brain works while at the same time asserting that we cannot trust our senses. — Harry Hindu
How do I know that you read what you read about the body/brain accurately when you depend on your eyes to see the words? How do we know that some mad scientist didn't plant these ideas in your head, or that you didn't hallucinate the experience of reading "facts" about bodies and brains? — Harry Hindu
Suffice to accept this part of it, at least LOL.So I 100% take that objection, — AmadeusD
Just because someone can change the time on the clock to report the wrong time does not mean that clocks are useless in telling time — Harry Hindu
In other words, we can determine the validity of what one sense is informing us by using other senses, observing over time and using reason. — Harry Hindu
Huh. I think that's a very strange thing to say. Unpleasantness is exactly what "pain" indicates to me. It refers to a wide range of unpleasant feelings, just like the dictionary states. What does "pain" mean to you? Does it simply mean the sensation of touch? Are all touches painful to you, or do you have a way to distinguish a painful feeling from a not painful feeling? — Metaphysician Undercover
It would take a great deal of benevolence to make up for the bilge he gets paid for spewing out into the public discourse. — Vera Mont
some who understand the fascist relationship with economics might not agree with you — Athena
However, someone as good-looking as your avatar doesn't have to know everything — Athena
As someone on the autism spectrum, the question arises for me of whether in an afterlife I would be autistic.
If not, then it doesn't seem like it would be me in the afterlife.
If so, and for eternity, I expect I'd think the afterlife kind of sucks. — wonderer1
Once you get into a mindset oflookingrecognizing for problems — apokrisis
projection and non sequitur — 180 Proof
Seen some of his videos, gods help me! — Vera Mont
Aren't we all? Isn't that the purpose of this present endeavour? — Vera Mont
The choice between whether 1.one person loses their life or five lose their sight is morally important because it leads to consequences which are 2.good and/or bad. They are good and/or bad due to the gain and/or loss of 3.freedom (by which I mean ability of persons to understand and make 4. their own choices) involved. — Dan
It isn't because the choice itself is morally valuable that we should care which option is picked, it is because of the consequences. — Dan
(your point is these posts were an exchange between yourself and RussellA - unfortunately for me, it was also a couple of other posters, not just you two. My point was distancing my reply from the personal aspect you're tied to).was in response to about eight posts — AmadeusD
But as it stood, it was you making a snarky put down of something or other. So, a form of dismissiveness. It is disingenious to toss out snark but pretend it's not. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It is disingenious to toss out snark but pretend it's not. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You haven't addressed the specifics of my argument about it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But it's dishonest to pretend that one hasn't been sarcastic and to pretend that not even is it reasonable that another took you as sarcastic — TonesInDeepFreeze
You ought not put strikethrough across my words within a quote like that.
I said "naturally" and I did not strike it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I can only laugh.Oh, is that what you meant to convey? You have a curious way of communicating, I'll give you that. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I outline what I (still) recognise as a distasteful approach, but I very much appreciate your clarification here. Genuinely. Thank you. — AmadeusD
so I revert to the above appreciation. — AmadeusD
the decision of which to save has a great deal of moral content/weight/import because it has consequences for the ability of persons to understand and make their own choices. It isn't because the choice itself is morally valuable that we should care which option is picked, it is because of the consequences. — Dan
clearly indicated at the time. — TonesInDeepFreeze
ou let out a fart of snark that would naturally be understood to be directed at me. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And especially so since the poster you had been previously faulting was me — TonesInDeepFreeze
naturallycounter-attacking and defending. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Can we leave the guy alone now? It seems like he was just trying to be honest. — Baden
OK, mate. I now understand why you always type and posy with such anger. Living in a country that you don't like is screwed, and maybe you are frustrated every time. Reading your posts, it is more an issue regarding your attitude than the existence of NZ. — javi2541997
It isn't. You complained about the public transport in NZ. I agree the public services of every country have pros and cons, and no one is perfect. — javi2541997
Again, don't be ungrateful, mate. — javi2541997
Just because it is a country that cares for people and doesn't allow you to use excessively the car, doesn't mean it is the "worst" country in the world. — javi2541997
Only developed and rich nations. :lol: I will not see the crank trying to live in Andalucía, Cuba, Venezuela, or Morocco. Nah, everything is messed up in NZ but no way I would raise my kids in Seville. — javi2541997
No, no. You can't. Hating the country where you live is dumb. — javi2541997
Yessir, and I the same. I outline what I (still) recognise as a distasteful approach, but I very much appreciate your clarification here. Genuinely. Thank you.I exercise my prerogative to respond only to what I am motivated to respond to — TonesInDeepFreeze
asking someone for information and then receiving it but without at least posting that the information was received and understood (or not understood, thus requiring elaboration) is also a kind of dismissiveness. — TonesInDeepFreeze
if one's God is not the supernatural being of most Christians' belief, can a person still be a Christian? — tim wood
Ah, but you do wish to comment on me personally after all. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I haven't tried to dismiss you. But you haven't interlocutorated much anyway. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Did you enjoy McWhorter's book? — Leontiskos
Care to shoulder that burden? — creativesoul
This is on part with the way that our culture treats science as an omnipotent and inscrutable god, such that the word Science may as well always be capitalized. — Leontiskos
It does not follow that no pain is located in limbs. — creativesoul
Hallucinations of red pens never include red pens — creativesoul
This poor argument is at the bottom of so much confusion on TPF. — Leontiskos
The pain is in the limb, not the brain. — creativesoul
despite no longer having a physical extremity located where the pain seems to be coming from — creativesoul
Oh, and there are no colorless rainbows, nor colorless visible spectrums. — creativesoul