You could argue the antinatalist forces people to not procreate. Most schools of thought don’t see procreation as an unjustified imposition. For instance: you would be forcing christians to go directly against their beliefs, as they’re told to have children.
We force things on people all the time if they’re justified. For instance education. So just because a position doesn’t force anything on anyone doesn’t make it better right off the bat. Not having kids go to school is definitely worse than having them go to school.
Or you could argue that the antinatalist also forces things on people. If you choose not to have children, then the people the children would have helped are worse off. You could argue that’s as much an imposition as having the child itself would be. — khaled
Is this so obvious? I agree that sex is mediated, but so are the others. Eat spaghetti with your hands. Take a shit and omit the wipe. Things will not go well for you. Before long, it doesn't even occur to you to eat spaghetti with your hands when you're alone. — norm
This has maybe served the community in some roundabout way, brave warriors and shamans perhaps. But mostly we are along for ride, cameras jammed into neckholes with the illusion of 'free will.' — norm
FWIW, I sympathize with anti-natalism. If we truly want to be innocent, unstained lambs, then we should not be at all, for we are worse than lions. There's a short story about a sect who takes it upon to destroy all life on earth, not only human life, because they fear than any residue will climb its way back up the evolutionary ladder back to a recognition of its absurd guilt. Actually that was the short story. I haven't fleshed it out. Why bother? [Nothing is funnier than unhappiness and futility.] — norm
To some degree I think this already exists. Seinfeld loves to talk about how annoying everything is, ad he's ridiculously wealthy. But even without the wealth, to be able to talk with a friend about the horrors of life and make jokes about it is such a relief that life actually becomes pleasant for awhile. Kafka was a comedian. Dostoevsky was a comedian. The best clowns have tears in their eyes. — norm
Not trying to rehash. Just pointing out that you have an assumption that I don’t think many share behind what you’re saying. It’s not objectively the case that ANs have a moral high ground because they don’t impose, since there are plenty of situations where we find imposing fine, heck, the right thing to do. And there are plenty of ways in which the non ANs are also striving not to impose. — khaled
Yes I am well aware of your argument. What do you want me to say to you that would make us both come away feeling this was a productive conversation? You know we disagree, so shall we take another thousand pages to go over this argument? Are you saying this so your record is noted on the books? What would you like me to do with the information you provide me? Do you think that this has convinced me of your case? I only say this to you in particular because we have done this before. — schopenhauer1
can you at least think of an argument I might give in the hypothetical thousand pages that would try to counter what you are saying, and frame it in a respectable way? — schopenhauer1
Not one that I’d find convincing. If I could think of an argument that could convince me to change my mind I would, well, change my mind! But I can’t so I don’t. And anyways that’s your job. You’re the one starting a new thread with the same old arguments. So expect to get the same old replies. — khaled
I am interested in moving the conversation into different territories not rehashing it. — schopenhauer1
Why does this package seem justified to perpetuate onto more people born into the world? — schopenhauer1
Your passive-aggressive comments aren't appreciated. — schopenhauer1
I just don't get why pick the same fight? — schopenhauer1
unless you yourself can find a way past yourself, and no that is not my job that is yours. — schopenhauer1
to respect the fact that we have argued this same thing before, and to honor the fact that a new thread does not wipe away previous conversations, can you at least think of an argument I might give in the hypothetical thousand pages that would try to counter what you are saying, and frame it in a respectable way? — schopenhauer1
What we can focus on maybe to keep it more elevated (and not zero-sum) is see if whether keeping this structure going, is whether it is a political decision and why this political decision is seen as good, necessary, and cannot be criticized. — schopenhauer1
whether it is a political decision and why this political decision is seen as good, necessary, and cannot be criticized. — schopenhauer1
You started the thread! If you make the same arguments of course I'm going to give the same reply! — khaled
So if I disagree with you it is my job to find a way to agree with you? C'mon now. — khaled
My answer: I don't care about evaluations of the structure as a whole, I only care about specific people. If you can't show me someone who gets harmed then I couldn't care less what "structures" are "harmed" — khaled
My answer: If you mean a decision taken by looking at aggregates, not necessarily. You can have children because of the specific people they are likely to help. I'm not sure exactly if you would count that as "aggregate" or political but then again I'm not sure we're using the terms the same way. — khaled
My answer: Evolutionary reasons. And it's not so much "cannot be criticized" as "You will be shunned if you criticize it". Which is the case for any popular belief. — khaled
If you think there's something new here then you gotta tell me what it is because I'm not seeing it. And I'm not trying to be rude, I just genuinely don't see how this is a new angle. — khaled
I mean political as in there is some sort of agenda one wants to enact for other people in the world — schopenhauer1
Yes, how can this be changed? — schopenhauer1
This shouldn't be any different just because it seems more intractable from our current vantage point. — schopenhauer1
My hunch is that the preference for continuing this socio-eco-cultural structure is more of a cultural reinforcement.. group-think rather than anything inbuilt. — schopenhauer1
I do not deny people have some weird irrational fear of universe-retribution for eschewing the universe that has been so "benevolently" bestowed upon them. — schopenhauer1
If you don't see it as a new angle, are you then writing in this thread to put me in my place and tell me how it is? — schopenhauer1
How does it really harm you if I want to post about this? — schopenhauer1
Rather, the superstructure itself involves tasks which can be negatively evaluated as stated in OP — schopenhauer1
even though it seems to be diminished into more of a lifestyle choice or just a preference? — schopenhauer1
Why is a movement against perpetuating the package of social structure and negative evaluation of human activities needed to survive condemned off the bat, but the perpetuation of this package is condoned and praised? Can't there be another point of view?
Having agendas isn’t inherently bad. It depends on the agenda. — khaled
Changing that belief results in no society. — khaled
Highly doubt it. All animals reproduce. And none of them have culture except us. I think it’s more reasonable to assume then to assume it’s not culture. Or at least not purely culture.
Another reason it’s not purely culture: If it was purely cultural we wouldn’t have gotten off the ground. You need thousands of people, a couple generations, and a couple decades at least before you get culture. How do you reckon we got all that sorted if culture is what tells people to have kids? — khaled
Maybe a part of it. But not a large part. All animals reproduce. None of them fear universe-retribution while doing it I’d wager. — khaled
You argue the same thing. I respond the same way. You accuse me of rehashing. If anyone is rehashing it’s you. — khaled
If you don’t want to hear the same response, don’t write the same argument. I’m responding to anything you write. Old or not. I don’t see what’s unfair or combative about that. If you don’t want me to respond at all, you shouldn’t have started a thread. — khaled
Not in my experience. When I told people “Having kids is wrong” they reacted very differently to when others told them “I don’t want to have kids”. I think people do understand it’s a stance. Just they think it’s invalid. And repulsive. — khaled
No. It's that the twin aspects of path of least effort (dumbing minds) and path of least action (humping bodies) have predominated @1000:1 ratio (at least) for hundreds of millennia.My question to you then is why do the people who want to perpetuate this "way of life" get to make the rules and the contrarians are the ones to go fuck off and commit suicide if they don't like it? Might makes right, right? — schopenhauer1
Whether or not it's "good" ..., pro-natality is, as it's always been, more profitable for "political-economic-cultural" elites than not.Why is the default that getting to perpetuate the political-economic-cultural (what we do now) on yet more people is somehow "good" for them and for the universe?
Apparently because there literally isn't a viable alternate (re: fossil record).Why is this just default?
I'd say "You're entitled to that opinion".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? — schopenhauer1
"The sun shone, having no alternative, on the nothing new." ~Samuel Beckett... to be able to talk with a friend about the horrors of life and make jokes about it is such a relief that life actually becomes pleasant for awhile. Kafka was a comedian. Dostoevsky was a comedian. The best clowns have tears in their eyes. — norm
There is nothing self-justifying of the agenda of life itself. — schopenhauer1
but the implications for us the living as we hash this political yay/nay out. — schopenhauer1
Procreation is caught up in so many things.. relationships, marriage, tribal relations. It is symbolic as much as it is some physical thing. There is a social dance, there is expectations, etc. It isn't akin to a bowel movement, breathing, the palmer reflex, the suckling reflex, etc. It is learned in development. — schopenhauer1
The debate of whether to have a society at all is even more fundamental and shouldn't be assumed that the answer is a resounding YES — schopenhauer1
I think the simple reason this movement is condemned is that it is ugly. To look upon and preach that the world as an imposition, escapable only by suicide and self-sterilization, is itself a negative human activity, and many don’t like believing or participating in it. We can’t paint dog shit on a canvas and expect people to condone and praise it. — NOS4A2
No. It's that the twin aspects of path of least effort (dumbing minds) and path of least action (humping bodies) have predominated 1000:1 ratio (at least) for hundreds of millennia. — 180 Proof
Whether or not it's "good" ..., pro-natality is, as it's always been, most profitable for "political-economic-cultural" elites than not. — 180 Proof
I'd say "You're entitled to that opinion". — 180 Proof
Or of the agenda of AN. There is nothing self justifying of any agenda. — khaled
It won’t be hashed out because the nays will die out much faster than the yays — khaled
Sure there is a whole lot of cultural accessory around it. But it is still an instinct. This doesn’t address my argument as to why. — khaled
Sure. But at any given point in history the answer will always be yes. — khaled
But AN constantly must be on the defensive (as we speak actually), and yet the other side does not — schopenhauer1
it seems like there's no justification necessary for the other side because we are so used to it being the given. — schopenhauer1
What was your argument then? — schopenhauer1
Highly doubt it. All animals reproduce. And none of them have culture except us. I think it’s more reasonable to assume then to assume it’s not culture. Or at least not purely culture.
Another reason it’s not purely culture: If it was purely cultural we wouldn’t have gotten off the ground. You need thousands of people, a couple generations, and a couple decades at least before you get culture. How do you reckon we got all that sorted if culture is what tells people to have kids? — khaled
Sure, but that's because AN thinking wasn't even on the radar in any significant way. — schopenhauer1
"The sun shone, having no alternative, on the nothing new." ~Samuel Beckett — 180 Proof
Yes, Seinfeld and the like is a sort of catharsis. But the comedy makes more palatable. — schopenhauer1
It is hard to laugh during a root canal, no doubt. I suppose I'm saying that 'spiritual' pain is sometimes contaminated by a wicked pleasure (and the reverse.) — norm
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