Nonexistence couldn't possibly be existence — Agustino
Possibly. — Agustino
Because who knows whether the child should or shouldn't exist? — Agustino
Why do you think it doesn't warrant one to will another into existence? — Agustino
I've explained to you that in no way can you say the child will avoid suffering if you don't have him. — Agustino
This is incoherent. If something redeems existence, say Love, then it follows that existence isn't ultimately an evil, because it can be redeemed. But if existence can be redeemed, and is not ultimately an evil, then your whole antinatalist position falls apart, because you can no longer claim that life is necessarily a tragedy, and thus birth is necessarily to be avoided if possible.Because it does not follow that what redeems existence necessarily redeems nonexistence. Love may make life worth living, but only because I am, because I exist. Were I not to exist, which is to suffer, then I would have no need of love, as there would be no suffering to define love's antithesis. — Heister Eggcart
"Eugenics" as a term has been used to describe societally enforced gene pools as well as things as simple as prenatal care. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugenics . I 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
Willow, it's time for us two to each open our calendars, and make note of this great day when we finally agreed on something!The trouble is it's misleading. You make it sound like the child has acted to avoid suffering while also living. In truth, it's not that the child avoided suffering, but that a suffering child was prevented by denying them existence.
What you are saying here is more an excuse to deny the responsibility for this act. If love makes life worth living, then we ought to give thus child existence so they can experience. Non-existence cannot be used to deny others what they deserve. It's a path which lets the powerful get away with anything and then calls it moral-- "That poor man, he doesn't exist with money or resources, so no-one needs to help him out." The absence of moral outcome cannot be used to deny a moral outcome someone else deserves. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I think we can use the term to apply to designer babies in a Capitalist setting, even though as you say it is speculative sci-fi at the moment. The term is possibly too shadowed by its history and should maybe be abandoned to your definition. — Nils Loc
You've seen the film, GATTACA, I'm sure, where citizens are discriminated against on the basis of whether they've undergone pre-birth genetic enhancement. — Nils Loc
The trouble is it's misleading. You make it sound like the child has acted to avoid suffering while also living — TheWillowOfDarkness
In truth, it's not that the child avoided suffering, but that a suffering child was prevented by denying them existence.
What you are saying here is more an excuse to deny the responsibility for this act. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If love makes life worth living, then we ought to give thus child existence so they can experience. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Non-existence cannot be used to deny others what they deserve. — TheWillowOfDarkness
It's a path which lets the powerful get away with anything and then calls it moral-- "That poor man, he doesn't exist with money or resources, so no-one needs to help him out." The absence of moral outcome cannot be used to deny a moral outcome someone else deserves.
No doubt an anti-natalist postion is possible — TheWillowOfDarkness
I don't assign a negative value to birth, so I'm not an antinatalist. — Heister Eggcart
Nope. Me, myself, and I think life is worth living because of love. The child I may bring into existence may not agree. — Heister Eggcart
You've essentially just said that non-existing entities deserve to exist. Okay, why do you say that? If every unborn child deserves to exist, then I should expect to see you with lots and lots and lots and lots of kids running around...no? Why not? — Heister Eggcart
*grabs popcorn*Anyhoo, a new challenger has approached, so perhaps let me argue with them, then maybe you'll understand better what I'm trying to say, if read at a distance. — Heister Eggcart
Without a negative value to birth, it makes no sense to deny potential children existence, for any reason. To argue someone ought not exist becasue of the suffering which will occur during their life is to place a negative value on their birth. — TheWillowOfDarkness
What if they were to agree though? How can you make the decision to deny them that opportunity? This is why you are assigning a negative value to their birth. On the off change they won't find life worth living, you decide they will not be at all. What justifies this decision on your part? — TheWillowOfDarkness
Certainly, not the fact they don't care because they aren't alive yet. — TheWillowOfDarkness
That's just a naturalistic fallacy that someone failing to care what you do makes it okay.
This is what I mean about denying your responsibility. You try to pass off your denial of life to the child as if it was an act without significance to what happens in the world.
The point is made on the idea that love redeems a life of suffering. If that is true, without qualification (e.g. without a negative value assumed to birth, limitation to your own experience), then the non-existence of a child is no reason to deny them a life containing love. Their suffering soul be fine because love would be their to make life worth living anyway. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Also, this is lazy rhetoric. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If I held the above position, I wouldn't necessarily have acted morally myself. Even if we assume I meet other criteria which might be critical to having a child (e.g. that I have a willing partner), I might have failed to meet this standard of having children. You cannot expect such an ethical argument to be false just because someone hasn't lived up to it. That's a category error-- the confusion of how someone acts with the significance of a moral position.
"Hypocrisy" is a logical fallacy. Just because someone doesn't do what they say people ought to, it doesn't mean the moral argument they are making is wrong. If a serial killer tells you not to kill people at random, their argument is still right, even if they might be constantly violating that ethical precept constantly. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Without a negative value to birth, it makes no sense to deny potential children existence, for any reason. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I wouldn't say there's anything wrong with eugenics as long as everyone participating in it is doing do voluntarily, per their own goals with it. — Terrapin Station
Do you believe consciousness to be an inherent bad or is it just bad the way consciousness interacts with the other attributes of humanity?Our consciousness [means we should go extinct] — Heister Eggcart
Actually the way I, OP, used it, it could also mean a cultural attitude and thinking or saying otherwise shows that you haven't actually read the OP properly.Just to keep people on track here... 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
Actually the way I, OP, used it, it could also mean a cultural attitude and thinking or saying otherwise shows that you haven't actually read the OP properly. — Ovaloid
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