However, if there is a right to not suffer, there definitely should be one to be happy (and the truth is that both of them are intimately connected). — DA671
An act is an imposition if it violates someone's freedom, which also seems to imply that non-existent beings are in some free state. But if purposely ignoring that is the best option, then creating positives can also be a gift and constantly mentioning deprivations/hurt is nothing more than suggesting an unjustifiable double standard. — DA671
Actual people do have rights. But that doesn't mean that there is any value in trying to preserve these rights when the person who would have those rights does not exist. However, if there is a right to not suffer, there definitely should be one to be happy (and the truth is that both of them are intimately connected). — DA671
Except that rights begin with creation, which is why they are not violated by it. Deciding on behalf of another person is bad for an actual individual, not the air. — DA671
You, as an antinatalist, want to prevent suffering but this suffering exists only as a potential for a possible person. It is only fair/consistent that you also concede that a possible person has the potential for happiness, oui? — Agent Smith
The act is not a harm unless it negatively impacts an individual. — DA671
Ethics is also about doing good. Happiness cannot be sacrificed on the altar of unremitting pessimism. — DA671
optimistic extremist — DA671
everything does not revolve around the negatives. — DA671
Did you know that the first Matrix was designed to be a perfect human world? Where none suffered, where everyone would be happy. It was a disaster. No one would accept the program. Entire crops were lost[...] — Agent Smith :cool:
We need 'em like a chimney sweep needs a shower. — Agent Smith
And being born is not making a previously happy person cry by frustrating their desire to not exist. — DA671
Hence, there is no obligation to never procreate. — DA671
it can also be a benefit — DA671
It is my argument and there has been no successful demonstration of its falsity. — DA671
I wanted to pick schopenhauer1's brain on how, given the givens, a minimum amount of suffering is necessary (leprotic/diabetic neuropathy related maladies) for survival or, in more colloquial terms, to stay outta trouble. Transhumanists disagree of course and I feel there's merit in such a position - we could, if we work in earnest, find ways of decoupling danger from pain. It's just that in my humble opinion, nature (evolution) has already experimented with that and it was a disastrous failure - those who didn't feel pain were genetic dead ends and failed to pass down their superpower superweakness to the next generation. In a sense, life rejected happiness or, inversely, life welcomed, with open arms I might add, pain. — Agent Smith
Then, I explained that if it can be paternalistic to create life, creation can also be an act of beneficence that gives a good. — DA671
However, non-existent beings are not in a positive state of affairs, which is why one should definitely focus on the opportunities as well as the risks. — DA671
My hypothetical pessimistic outlook does not justify me trying to prevent the manifestation of a better state of affairs for a sentient being who is not in a position to ask for the positives themselves. — DA671
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