Why are you so evangelical about this, schop1? Why isn't enough that you refuse – for moral reasons or not – to breed? — 180 Proof
It isn't "justified". It is, however, like most complex dynamic systems self-justifying/reproducing. — 180 Proof
Well, there's the old time "Be fruitful and multiply" rationalization (ideology) ... — 180 Proof
Because mass cognitive dissonance would ensue ... and lambs would lay down with lions! — 180 Proof
Another point of view? Sure. Won't be popular, though, never has been whenever and wherever its been practiced and promoted. We're ecologically-embedded embodied animals with millions of years of homeostatic and procreative hardwiring that a few millennia of antinatal ratiocination cannot undo or override in the vast majority of homo sapiens. — 180 Proof
And then what? You think the world will change?I want to understand the origins of this group-think, deconstruct it, show it bare for what it is, and expose the harmful political assumptions of perpetuating this package. — schopenhauer1
Can't there be another point of view? — schopenhauer1
But unlike eliminating waste or eating, procreation is never such an immediate need, and so the motivations are much more complex and culturally based. — schopenhauer1
Why does this package seem justified to perpetuate onto more people born into the world? — schopenhauer1
I wish it could be another point of view but in this era no... Remember that this world literally gave up on social basics as you said: ethics, equality, moral, etc... pursuing one goal: make the most ton of money you can doesn’t matter the rest.
You said we can think about it and change it through rationalism/ improving our criteria. Nevertheless, this depends a lot where you come from. Imagine you were born in El Salvador or Eritrea. What chances do you have to change the circumstances? I guess zero. Because your environment makes it really hard (violence, drugs, injustices, etc...) so... the first and second packages are from rich countries.
If it can be another point of view we have to the travel the “developed countries” and see what happens... but they are wasting money in social networks and fancy cars. — javi2541997
Procreation (the whole rigamarole of conception, pregnancy, and birth, feeding, diaper changes, etc.) isn't an immediate need. For women it's kind of a pain. But sex is an immediate need. Heterosexual sex, however much aimed at short-term gratification, leads to conception with enough frequency to achieve a growing population. — Bitter Crank
Is a growing population a problem? Until quite recently, it was not. In 1700 there were about .6B people. In 1800 the world population was about 1B. A century later it was 1.6B. Today it is 7.8B. Something (technology? better public health? more food? strong economy?) enabled population to more than double twice in 100 years. Culture hasn't kept up. Lots of people do not see a problem in 10 billion people converging with global warming. More fools they.
We are stuck with a large population, barring savage and draconian measures; a horrific epidemic (much worse than anything we have seen so far); or, my guess, agricultural collapse. No individual solutions will help, given the immensely unlikely possibility that 8 billion people will voluntarily refrain from reproductive sex. — Bitter Crank
Well, there is this "way of the world", the way things work. The higher-order self-questioning that leads to voluntary non-reproduction isn't very common among the world's people. There's nothing wrong with everybody; they are just doing what people do -- getting through their day. That is the world's way, from microbes on up. — Bitter Crank
You will probably argue that high rates of grim death were actually an excellent reason to promote antinatalism. Collective thinking, habits, patterns, and so forth -- culture -- was no where close to finding your reasoning palatable (like in the medieval or Roman period when perhaps 25% to 33% of the area population died off from epidemics). — Bitter Crank
So my premises are on why we create ANY socio-economic-cultural arrangements — schopenhauer1
Because those who didn't create them died out. And the ones that are left were the ones that felt the need to create such arrangements. So their children will also probably feel the same need due to either genetics or culture or both (probably both). — khaled
If you're asking for why, that's why. If you're asking for justification: That would require the belief that the project is worth continuing somehow. Or the belief that not continuing the project is somehow harmful. — khaled
"Wait, if I do not like doing this, why would I want this to be a way of life for other people?" — schopenhauer1
the belief that the project is worth continuing somehow. Or the belief that not continuing the project is somehow harmful. Among a slew of other justifications(orders from God and such) — khaled
That this way of life needs (somehow) to take place? — schopenhauer1
And if this is a political choice, what is wrong with the contrarian view of this? — schopenhauer1
Why is one praised be default? — schopenhauer1
Because it is intuitive and the majority believe it. — khaled
But that's it, the plot/s escape/s me now. 'The story' – a cautionary tale about one-size-fits-all "cure all" that, in a chaotic universe, even when the plan succeeds very likely breeds unintended, unforeseen, consequences further down stream – got way too grand and deep for my (less-than-monomaniacal) attention-span at the time and so I went back to mostly very short (not quite "micro") fictions where I'm apparently still (permanently?) stuck.As an unforeseen consequence of a (universal) cancer vaccine that induced immunity through the germline without apparent need for a booster – some gonzo madscience genemodding nanotech I'd posited back then (couple of decades before CRISPR) – after a remarkably successful global vaccination campaign in the mid-21st century, the human species became completely cancer-free AND completely sterile within a generation or two ...
... and a fraction of those in the immunized generation who had advanced cancers when they received the vaccine survived with their cancers as well as their aging processes "in remission" effectively became immortal (until their cancers randomly returned eventually killing them) ...
... most of these immortals were solitary or came together in small groups mostly hidden from the sterilized and despairing masses of soon to be extinct humanity, some seeking a "cure" for this genetic sterility, some seeking a way to predict and prevent or survive the recurring immortal-killing tumors (NB: living in micrograv with higher than earth-normal background rads was "the answer" but ...), some leading or just joining mass-suicide or decadent dionysian cults or Mad Max-like roving gangs among the decaying, ravaged cities of the collapsing late 21st global civilization, and some were seeking some form of "tech-singularity" ... — All Will Be Forgotten_an unwritten epic mess!
Anyway, my point bringing up this "aborted novel" is, I guess, to point out that speculation about how to, for whatever reason, deliberately engineer human extinction will set off global conflagration of violent suffering one the panic sets-in of mass recognition of the inescapable loss of personal-generational futures, of the use (and abuse) of histories, of the consolations of soteriological faiths, of the relevance of scientific knowledge and discovery, etc. PD James et al have had it right: when looking hard enough at 'antinatalism' as an existential prospect, the very structure of human rationality, not merely our species biology, for better and worse, is an "immortality project" (Becker) manifest through natal hope. We are a tragic species either way – antinatality' solves nothing – which, my friends, is genuinely pessimistic. — 180 Proof
But we all know that this is not cut-and-dry. Certainly one if one really wanted to, can refrain from sex for the rest of their life. It isn't as enjoyable as far as pleasure, but it is possible. — schopenhauer1
Roller coasters are also fun for many people — schopenhauer1
introspecting... they should. They have the capabilities to self-reflect on an existential level, why wouldn't they? — schopenhauer1
... we can self-reflect on any given task, condition, state of affairs we are in AND we can aggregate and self-reflect on "EXISTENCE" as a whole. Why would we not question this practice of simply continuing this arrangement of (and I know I repeat..) — schopenhauer1
We can evaluate what we are doing in these social structures, and come to conclusions that we do not like doing these things while we are doing them. — schopenhauer1
There are preferences here that are being willed into existence for human existence to do the whole socio-economic-cultural thing. That THIS arrangement is good. We should like it. — schopenhauer1
Antinatalists need Meet-Up groups; lodges, clubs, fraternities and sororities, associations, foundations. Bowling clubs, marching bands, nudist beaches, roller-coasters, coffee shops, bars, brothels, and bookstores. You all have got to BUILD THE SOCIAL MOVEMENT. Fucking will it into existence, dammit. — Bitter Crank
Two reasons: 1, the pain of continuing along as we have been is less than the possible pain of deviating from the path. 2. Analysis Paralysis. It's real: Examine a problem from enough different angles and one often finds there is no superior arrangement towards which one should move. — Bitter Crank
Why is a movement against perpetuating the package of social structure and negative evaluation of human activities needed to survive condemned off the bat — schopenhauer1
Self-reflection. We can evaluate what we are doing in these social structures, and come to conclusions that we do not like doing these things while we are doing them. — schopenhauer1
If you like bowling does that mean everyone should like bowling? If you like the whole "project" of the socio-cultural-economic enterprise of human existence, why must then others be pressed into this? — schopenhauer1
Well, it is not always a given that changes to undermine the stats quo are going to be good. It is always possible that you will make things worse. And people do not agree about ways forward. — Tom Storm
I would want a much better understanding of whether this claim is true and in what ways. Not everyone can evaluate. Some people lack insight. Some are rewarded as much as they are penalized. Some do not experience harm even if it is present. — Tom Storm
What is being made worse by making the political statement that one should not perpetuate the socio-economic-cultural project? Why is this necessary to perpetuate? — schopenhauer1
he fact is, we as humans can evaluate something as negative while we are doing those things. We don't just "exist" but we know we like or don't like something as we are doing it. Why would we want to foist an existence where one not only has to survive, but can evaluate a negative value to this very act of having to survive? — schopenhauer1
I don't understand the sentence. — Tom Storm
Well, the antinatalist foists nothing on no one. Their political statement of "NO" to life, creates no forced dealing with participating and being forced to deal with the social-economic-cultural superstructure.
The procreation sympathizers do indeed foist their view on others, whether they can evaluate it negative or not. Their solution is these people better get with the program that they think is "good" or kill themselves. — schopenhauer1
Not sure this issue resonates with me vey much. I am simply making the point that your presuppositions here may not be recognizable to everyone. — Tom Storm
If I were to say to you that you should not foist your view on others by not procreating other people who will have to take on the human enterprise who may not find this good, what would you say? I used an example of bowling for example. Just because I like bowling, should all of humanity bowl now? Why is the whole human project of having to exist and follow the structures of society be any different? — schopenhauer1
the antinatalist does not force anything on anyone, the procreationist sympathizer does. — schopenhauer1
But unlike eliminating waste or eating, procreation is never such an immediate need, and so the motivations are much more complex and culturally based. — schopenhauer1
So we live in a society.. this big superstructure.. basically we participate in it as a species to survive, get more comfortable, find entertainment. I'll just call it the "human enterprise". Why should we procreate more people and perpetuate this project? More to the point, if people could be born that don't just "live" but can evaluate that they don't like living, why would we put people into that situation where they can evaluate the very thing they need to survive as negative? — schopenhauer1
Damn, that's the best antinatalist call to action I've seen. I completely agree with you. I actually have an idea for the name of these groups as something like "Communities of Catharsis". In these groups one can bitch, moan, and gripe all one wants without any remonstrations to stop complaining and "get with the program". Rather, one unburdens oneself and is allowed to see their fellow humans as fellow-sufferers. — schopenhauer1
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