s not police restraint and eventual imprisonment not a violent reprisal clearly stated in law? — Isaac
I'd like to think so too. So the crux of the matter isn't anything to do with legal property, it's to do with the fairness of each person having their needs met. we'd allow the starving man that loaf, regardless of the means by which he acquired it, regardless of his legal rights to it, regardless of the fact that another has a claim on it...rather we'd allow him it entirely on the grounds that he should have it, that it would be inhuman to deny him it.
So how are taxes different, in essence? — Isaac
In a world where people would not pay taxes unless forced by threat of violence to do so, I can't see how those same people would refrain from just driving away in your car unless threat of violence prevented them. what is it about your car which makes it sacrosanct in the minds of the same people who would let children starve for want of a few pounds on their tax bill? — Isaac
If you posit a world where people care as little as possible about the welfare of others unless forced by threat of violence to do more, I don't see ownership being anything other than a free-for-all with the strongest winning. — Isaac
In short, for the egoist who would like not to be an egoist, he abases himself - combats his egoism -, but at the same time abases himself only for the sake of "being exalted", and therefore of gratifying his egoism. Because he would like to cease to be an egoist, he looks about in heaven and earth for higher beings to serve and sacrifice himself to; but, however much he shakes and disciplines himself, in the end he does all for his own sake. — Gus Lamarch
So why does the question "why?" get raised with regards to such cherry-picking, as you stated in the quote I cited? — Isaac
This is why I noted that this should be discussed without attitudes of moral superiority — Tzeentch
You appear to be raising the property of consistency above the property of causing harm. — Isaac
There is surely some ethical reason to mitigate your impact though, right? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Some political movements considered left-leaning have. Some political movements considered right-leaning have used the state toward their ends as well. — Pfhorrest
The original left-right axis, which recognized [...] that you can't attain liberty without equality — Pfhorrest
“Leftism” is not a form of statism. — Pfhorrest
Both left and right have abused the state, but the original left-right divide had the state on the side of the right. — Pfhorrest
There are plenty of people who think that equality is the natural way of things in a free society, and inequality only arises through the exercise of authority. — Pfhorrest
How can a man that wishes for evil and does good, therefore doing good by error, be a good man? — Matei
We can have a very good idea what it might be, humans are not radically different from one another in fundamental preferences. — Isaac
Making decisions for others (making decisions that will affect future others - I still don't agree with your incoherent wording), is something that humanity has been doing in this context for several million years and overall happiness ratings for the people who have later been affected by these decisions have been consistently quite high. — Isaac
Then we have no basis on which to make any decisions at all, since all lack millions upon millions of theoretical data points which are impossible to know. — Isaac
Presuming I cannot possibly access that person's judgement I have nothing else to go on. — Isaac
No it isn't, because asking that other person whether they'd like a suit is almost always possible and never logically incoherent. — Isaac
That is not the information I'm referring to. I really don't want to have to walk you through what has already been written. Just read it again more carefully. The data point in question is not about the rusk of harm in general (which is the only rusk I've spoken about considering). It about the rusk of consent violation or displeasure over the matter of existence. — Isaac
Whether that information is unknown or unknowable is irrelevant, because the basis (or lack thereof) for our decision remains the same. — Tzeentch
The benefit. Same as any other risk. — Isaac
No. It's not that there's no way of knowing. It's not a data point which exists but is not 'knowable'. The data point doesn't even exist. — Isaac
The benefit. Same as the justification for any risk. Why would you think this one any different? — Isaac
I'm curious why you think this is a special case actually. I cannot think of many cases where we take risks with others' wellbeing without permission. — khaled
What we cannot coherently do is wonder if they'd prefer to exist or not because nothing which has that choice is capable if forming an opinion on the matter. — Isaac
What justification could you possibly have to drive to the store while being unable to foresee the consequences and unable to verify in advance whether anyone wants to take the risk of sharing the road today with you? — Echarmion
There is no someone. — Isaac
The justification is... being able to foresee the consequences (life is really good - love, sunsets, adventure etc) — Isaac
we can't possibly check in advance whether they want these things, — Isaac
The parents don't go around thinking "my child wants to live, therefore I am going to create it". That's not a decision that actually happens. — Echarmion
Noone gets to decide whether they want to live in the first place, — Echarmion
There is no such thing as a good life. — Echarmion
If you answered it, I must've missed it. — Tzeentch
Apparently you have. — Echarmion
What justifies the act of forcing an individual to experience life without knowing whether they want to or not? — Tzeentch
And isn't it great that the view you have actively argued and defended in this thread is the one "just asking the hard questions" that the other side just "cannot answer". — Echarmion
Presumably, the only people still reading are the 6 regular posters, and they won't be fooled by airy declarations of socratic ideals. — Echarmion
So, to clarify, you don't think the anti-natalist position is true in an intersubjective sense, that it should convince people? You just like it for entirely personal reasons? — Echarmion
