Apart from the relatively small group of people who have found themselves forced by external circumstances not to have children, antinatalist views are reserved for the privileged who can afford not to have children.Granted. But to be fair, have people ever really been presented with antinatalist arguments? Only people on philosophy forums and niche groups probably. So it really hasn't been tested either. — schopenhauer1
I don't think this is weird at all. Why would it be weird?There's a weird thing where not only does the argument have to be good, but the presentation of the argument must be convincing to really make people do something from it. It is a combination of ethos, pathos, and logos.
If you don't envy them, then what do you do? Fear them?Are you asking if I envy animals their thoughtless way of life, or people who don't think about procreation in political terms (e.g. creating more laborers who can evaluate their laboring as negative)?
If the latter, I don't envy them. /.../ — schopenhauer1
The pronatalists are posing a threat to your survival, doubly so: 1. to your person (which is endangered by pollution, socio-economic collapse, etc. posed by (over)population); 2. to your idea of what life on Earth should be like.This is more refined in that it is less obvious. It is about our very ability to understand what we are doing as we are doing it, and seeing it as negative, but still knowing we have to do it to survive.
Apart from the relatively small group of people who have found themselves forced by external circumstances not to have children, antinatalist views are reserved for the privileged who can afford not to have children. — baker
It's hard to live with a pessimistic outlook on life if one actually has to work for a living. In contrast, pessimism is the luxury that the privileged can afford. Such as those living off trust funds. — baker
I was just stating that you need a combination of the three with political arguments. The pure logic of it doesn't seem to usually affect people.I don't think this is weird at all. Why would it be weird? — baker
Do you want to be like religious people who rattle down their doctrine and demand people to just believe it?? — baker
Read again.It's hard to live with a pessimistic outlook on life if one actually has to work for a living. In contrast, pessimism is the luxury that the privileged can afford. Such as those living off trust funds.
— baker
Are you saying antinatalists don't have to work? — schopenhauer1
*sigh*Did you pull this statistic out of your ass or is your head stuck up there?
If you'd read them, they would.Either way, your statements make no sense.
Many people need to have children, in order to produce laborers to help them and to provide a measure of security for when they are unable to work.Why would non-privileged people not be able to NOT have children?
Sure. Why on earth should it??I was just stating that you need a combination of the three with political arguments. The pure logic of it doesn't seem to usually affect people.
It's hard to live with a pessimistic outlook on life if one actually has to work for a living. In contrast, pessimism is the luxury that the privileged can afford. Such as those living off trust funds. — baker
Many people need to have children, in order to produce laborers to help them and to provide a measure of security for when they are unable to work. — baker
Further, in order to endure the hardship of the daily grind, one needs to have a measure of optimism, needs to believe that it's all worth it somehow, that it all somehow makes sense. — baker
Many people find this meaning and this optimism in having children: they work hard in order to provide for their children; their children make their hard work seem worthwhile. In contrast, working hard in an effort to pay for one's hedonistic pursuits is seen as empty, worthless, decadent by some (many, if not most?) people. — baker
It's hard to live with a pessimistic outlook on life if one actually has to work for a living. In contrast, pessimism is the luxury that the privileged can afford. Such as those living off trust funds.
— baker
Again, makes no sense. (and I really want to add fuckn before sense. You have to explain this as it is not evident by just you stating this as fact. — schopenhauer1
Have you ever consistently made an effort to have a pessimistic attitude to life, yet were able to dilligently get up every morning and do your work well? — baker
when a parent decides to procreate a new child, they are also becoming a witting (or mostly unwitting) participant in keeping that society/state's structure perpetuating and maintained. They become the literal bearers of their country's/state's progeny and duplication. — schopenhauer1
I've known a number of parents who are hoping their child becomes an iconoclast who will help bring down the state's structure. Don't underestimate the revolutionary projects of some would be parents. — Tom Storm
Most likely they will contribute to the economy in some way, even if they write some "revolutionary" blogposts and social media posts :D. — schopenhauer1
For sure, but they may do more than play around on social media - they might work in politics, in unions, in activism, in medical care, in civil rights law, in drug law reform, in a range of subversive activities. — Tom Storm
Not sure how "subversive" that is. It is contributing, just in a different way and would make the country stronger in the long-run. Don't see how that contradicts the point. — schopenhauer1
I'm not contradicting your point, I am contributing to your point, just not in full support.
What do you think you are trying to achieve in general terms? — Tom Storm
I am saying that by procreating people, you are willing (or unwitting) participants in perpetuating your socio-economic-cultural institutions (including governments, etc.). — 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? — 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? — schopenhauer1
People see having children as a way to escape from the system. For many people having a child recalibrates who they are and rebuilds the world. — Tom Storm
Here's the thing: What's in it for the antinatalists??Antinatalists want to stop this "pressing" of more laborers.. even if people don't think about their procreation in those terms, they are doing it, so advocacy to get more awareness of this. The parents are voting "YES MORE LABORERS!" (even if unwittingly). The antinatlists are saying, stop. — schopenhauer1
What do antinatalists get or hope to get if other people stop producing children? — baker
Less people who suffer and forced into X system that can be negatively evaluated. If one cares about the ethic, then one advocates strongly for it. There's also a justice thing.. Unjust to bring more laborers, suffering, extend the superstructure because you want it. — schopenhauer1
I'm curious why this matters so much to you. Do you feel you were thrown into the world (apologies to Heidegger) and that this is unfair and has lead to suffering? — Tom Storm
And, what do you think? — schopenhauer1
People being born doesn't really concern me. I am more interested in behavior once they are here. — Tom Storm
t concerns me that people want to see behaviors and thus create people to see them carried out. A bizarre political move. But it is political as it is one person affecting another, and it deals with the superstructure. I am very concerned people want to see X from another person because they have a vision that just needs to happen for the other person. — schopenhauer1
Human beings are behavior. — Tom Storm
Why is this a good thing to do to someone else? — schopenhauer1
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