Again, see this is what I was telling you in the other thread. Every time you come up with something like this as a way to avoid discussion and explaining your beliefs/positions. So it's getting annoying to interact with you because you simply never engage in discussion.I was gonna reply to something else, but I feared I might trigger you. — Heister Eggcart
I don't know - most men from what I see are attracted to women who are perceived, by society, to be worth being with. It's not really a rational affair. If that type of body is perceived as worth having, then they will be attracted by that. If you look through history, physical features that were found to be attractive have changed, many many times, and it's mostly a function of the prevailing culture. Now the prevailing culture is materialism - hence our society may be telling us that the best bodies are those that give the best children.If a womans pelvis shape is too narrow, then the likelihood of the baby's head fitting through the birth canal is much lower and the likelihood of the mother dying is much higher. — aequilibrium
I very much doubt that women are - in their majority - attracted to strong assertive men. If that was true, Vladimir Putin would have all the women in the world head and heels over him. Young girls would be day-dreaming about being in bed with Putin. He's quite possibly the most assertive, and strongest leader there is in the world at the moment. And yet this is very very far from the truth. Most women would hate being with a man like Vladimir Putin - that's why he doesn't have a wife. In fact, I have noticed quite the opposite. Most women - there are exceptions of course - tend to prefer average men or if not, people like rock stars, musicians, artists, and so forth rather than the strong, bold, assertive leader. Instead look at Brad Pitt - fucking Brad Pitt - is that guy the strong, assertive man? >:O No, he's just a joker who plays pretend for a living. And yet most women day-dream to be in bed with him. Putin could probably order Brad Pitt arrested and thrown in the river - he can ensure the survival of his children over Pitt's. And yet Pitt gets the women >:OThe reason why women are attracted to strong assertive men, is because this is the character trait that is the most likely to result in the baby having enough resources to maintain a healthy childhood. — aequilibrium
You know what BC...Eugenics isn't about what "you" want, it's about what the authorities have decreed. Eugenics is a plan for improvement which has nothing to do with your personal preferences. Of necessity, it has been, is, or would be decreed and enforced by centralized authority with enough power to coerce "you" into breeding or not breeding as directed. — Bitter Crank
If I know the severe genetic defect is certain, then yes I will want to avoid it. But if it's just a possibility with nothing to suggest it's actually going to happen, then I would leave it up to fate, not for me to decide.But you would want to avoid severe genetic defects that might upend your family's future well being, right? So you don't really mean what you just said. — Nils Loc
not for me to decide. — Agustino
What does the fact that I would be deciding have to do with whether or not I need to have a child?But you would in fact be deciding, but you don't need to have a child. — Heister Eggcart
What's so bad about suffering? It's part of life, I fully acknowledge that the child will suffer, that's unavoidable. But life is worth living, at least for me, despite the possibility - certainty - of suffering. Sure there is suffering in life, but why get fixated on it? Why not focus on the undying spirit in man? Man learns from his suffering about his own greatness - about his own spirit. The fires of the world can burn the flesh, but not the spirit.If you don't have a child, then they won't suffer. If you choose to procreate, and the child wonders why it is suffering, are you blameless? Is it merely God's will that the child exists to suffer because you didn't need to have the child in the first place? — Heister Eggcart
What's so bad about suffering? — Agustino
It's part of life, I fully acknowledge that the child will suffer — Agustino
that's unavoidable. — Agustino
But life is worth living, at least for me, despite the possibility - certainty - of suffering. — Agustino
The fires of the world can burn the flesh, but not the spirit. — Agustino
I mean, what's so bad about suffering that makes all of life not worth having? Would you choose not to attend a great dinner just because you'll have a headache if you attend?Did you just ask me this? Really? — Heister Eggcart
So... that's like preventing a village from the uncertain possibility of getting flooded by not building it in the first place. But this is a trick of language - you say "the suffering is avoided" - and I ask you, who is avoiding the suffering? The child can't be avoiding anything, because only beings who are alive can avoid. So the whole assertion that "X is avoiding suffering" in the circumstance where "X doesn't exist" is nonsense.No, it's not unavoidable. Guess what, Agustino? If you don't have the child, the child won't suffer, thus it's avoided suffering, :o — Heister Eggcart
Not necessarily, but he should at least have the chance of agreeing. Why are you so sure he won't agree?So, because you think life is worth living, your child will also agree, amirite? — Heister Eggcart
But that's purely hypothetical.None of this matters were you and I and your potential child not to exist. — Heister Eggcart
I mean, what's so bad about suffering that makes all of life not worth having? Would you choose not to attend a great dinner just because you'll have a headache if you attend? — Agustino
So... that's like preventing a village from the uncertain possibility of getting flooded by not building it in the first place. But this is a trick of language — Agustino
The child can't be avoiding anything, because only beings who are alive can avoid. So the whole assertion that "X is avoiding suffering" in the circumstance where "X doesn't exist" is nonsense. — Agustino
Not necessarily, but he should at least have the chance of agreeing. Why are you so sure he won't agree? — Agustino
But that's purely hypothetical. — Agustino
Our disagreement revolves around this. How is it possible for something that doesn't exist to avoid, passively? Do you say non-existent pink elephants are avoiding the hungry lions? Do you say nonexistant thiefs are avoiding jail? To me, because I'm a follower of the Great Ludwig Wittgenstein (who is listed up there as my favorite philosopher, just as I am listed as your favorite :P ) - meaning always occurs in a context. In this case, for the word avoid to have any meaning, it must occur in the context of existence. If I tell you that non-existent doors avoid being closed, you'll tell me I'm fucking nuts, and I need to see the shrink. And this says something about the meaning of my words - namely that you'll treat my sentence as having no meaning, because it doesn't!X is avoiding everything, which necessarily includes suffering. Nonexistence is passive avoidance, not active. — Heister Eggcart
But who decides that he shouldn't? Isn't THAT also me? There's no sitting on the fence. One has to risk, one has to make the jump. Both positions entail risks. One the one hand you decide for the child that he shouldn't have the choice - you never ask him. On the other hand I decide he should have the choice - I haven't asked him either. That's the nature of life - this is inescapable.Why should he? Who decides that he should? Oh yeah, you, not him. Your potential child also has to decide whether he wants the choice of choosing whether to be or not to be, so how might it do that, logically? — Heister Eggcart
How is it possible for something that doesn't exist to avoid, passively? — Agustino
But who decides that he shouldn't? Isn't THAT also me? — Agustino
Eugenics isn't about what "you" want, it's about what the authorities have decreed. — Bitter Crank
In other words, we should all listen to the black people's music, they got the shit right. Fuck the police (and the Nazis)! >:OI think if we work with your definition (forced breeding practices and the like), this is a simple question, with NAZI Germany offering sufficient empirical evidence of its horrors. — Hanover
we should all listen to the black people's music, they got the shit right — Agustino
This is a tautology. Tautologies are empty of meaning, they don't say anything about their subject matter, except that they don't say anything. What you're saying is like me telling youIt is in the nature of opposites to passively avoid their antitheses. Because nonexistence does not exist, nonexistence passively avoids being what it isn't. — Heister Eggcart
It doesn't need to choose existence - but maybe it should have the option to exist. Who is it to say that I should choose not to have a child instead of choose to have one? Both are risks. Maybe I am depriving the child of something great. Maybe I'm sending him to suffer. Who knows? None of us - thus we live in fear and trembling.Your unborn child already doesn't exist. It doesn't need to choose whether it wants to exist because it only knows nonexistence. You're not choosing it's nonexistence, you only choose whether to keep it there. — Heister Eggcart
Interesting black folk music! I like it!Have you read the signs, Agustino? — Heister Eggcart
This is a tautology. — Agustino
It doesn't need to choose existence - but maybe it should have the option to exist. — Agustino
Who is it to say that I should choose not to have a child instead of choose to have one? — Agustino
Both are risks — Agustino
Maybe I am depriving the child of something great. — Agustino
Maybe I'm sending him to suffer. — Agustino
Who knows? None of us — Agustino
thus we live in fear and trembling.
No, facts are not tautologies, simply because facts represent things which could be otherwise. Nonexistence couldn't possibly be existence, and thus it can't be a fact.No, it's just a fact of the matter. — Heister Eggcart
Possibly.Maybe, perhaps, idunnowhynotsure? Really? — Heister Eggcart
Yes I can see that much, but I don't understand why you consider your option superior. I for one don't consider your option inferior, but I simply think you don't have anymore justification than I do.Well, I am, in this discussion. And you should, too. — Heister Eggcart
Because who knows whether the child should or shouldn't exist?How is not having a child a risk? The child doesn't exist. It cares not for whether it may exist or not because it necessarily can't care. — Heister Eggcart
Why do you think it doesn't warrant one to will another into existence?This is completely secondary. Greatness, love, happiness, whatever else doesn't warrant one to will another into existence through procreation. — Heister Eggcart
I'm not backing down, I'm acknowledging your position as possible, but not justified.Maybe? Why are you backing down? You acknowledged that suffering is a truth, there's no ands, ifs, or buts about it. If you procreate, your child will suffer. Period. End of story. — Heister Eggcart
Yes I actually believe I have. I've explained to you that in no way can you say the child will avoid suffering if you don't have him. And thus the whole justification you had to say that your position is superior to mine is gone. I'm not trying to say my position is justified and yours isn't - I'm saying that NEITHER yours nor mine is justified.So, fuck a woman and make a child? You've not shown me why I'm wrong, so c'mon, Agustino. Let's go, bro. — Heister Eggcart
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