Quote from: Fuddy Duddy II on January 06, 2016, 02:22:06 AMPeople who can reconcile with meat-eating AT ALL, IN ANY CAPACITY WHATSOEVEROptimists."Realists," or anyone that doesn't identify as a pessimist; doesn't admit that realism and pessimism are basically the same.Any chance you could give me a rundown of anti-natalism? It sounds like something I'd be opposed to on an axiomatic level so it'd be best if I heard about it from someone I can readily ask questions.Also if you're up for it, could you go into more depth about the quotes above? These also aren't opinions I understand.
People who can reconcile with meat-eating AT ALL, IN ANY CAPACITY WHATSOEVEROptimists."Realists," or anyone that doesn't identify as a pessimist; doesn't admit that realism and pessimism are basically the same.
You make the world sound so horrible, but I had a pretty good life. It can't be so bad, then, can it?
You talk about suffering as though it's unmitigable, but without the bad, there can be no good. Couldn't it be arguing that our suffering ultimately makes us better people in the end?
But why would you want the human race to go extinct?
Does this mean you're okay with abortion?
What if I want to be a father/mother?
What if I want my bloodline to continue?
How is having a child selfish? I think you're selfish for trying to take away my rights/take away the child's right to life!
Why do we need consent from something that doesn't exist yet? We can't do that.
If someone isn't happy with their life, why don't they just kill themselves?
Quote from: Fuddy Duddy II on January 06, 2016, 02:22:06 AMPeople who can reconcile with meat-eating AT ALL, IN ANY CAPACITY WHATSOEVEROptimists."Realists," or anyone that doesn't identify as a pessimist; doesn't admit that realism and pessimism are basically the same.Also if you're up for it, could you go into more depth about the quotes above? These also aren't opinions I understand.
no one cares
Quote from: Kupoop on January 07, 2016, 10:24:46 AMno one cares"Answering Cadenza's question"Is your name Cadenza?No?Then get the fuck out if you don't care.
When does the number of descendents someone will have outweigh the negative results of murdering them before they can reproduce?
Anti-natalists believe that human beings have no such right, and as such, the creation of life--in any form--is a moral crime of the highest order, and we have a moral imperative to "cease & desist," as it were, and go extinct.To the common man, that very idea will likely seem ludicrous, and this is understandable. We are biologically hardwired to want to survive. But that notion in our minds is just that--a biologically-constructed hardwiring. Not a rationally-constructed hardwiring--not a hardwiring constructed out of reason--but a biological hardwiring.
"If children were brought into the world by an act of pure reason alone, would the human race continue to exist? Would not a man rather have so much sympathy with the coming generation as to spare it the burden of existence, or at any rate not take it upon himself to impose that burden upon it in cold blood?"- Arthur Schopenhauer (father of anti-natalism), 1851
The fact is, life is an imposition--none of us asked to be here, and none of us would ask to be here, if we were granted the ability to just sit and ponder it. We live in a world of hatred, violence, poverty, and neglect. Everything is imperfect. There is absolutely no logical reason any of us would want to be on this planet--and yet, we force well over 100 million people into the world every single year. People who didn't want it, people who didn't ask for it--but we gave it to them anyway, because of this silly, selfish notion in our heads that having children is a-okay.I'm afraid your personal experience with life is not sufficient evidence for life's purported virtue. Your life makes up less than 0.000000001% (that is not an exaggeration) of all the people who have ever lived. You simply cannot prove that, based on your personal life experience, that your child would have as "good" of a life as yours.
A truly "good" life is a life free of all pain, suffering, and discomfort. Negative sensation is brought to its absolute minimum, and positive sensation is racked up to its absolute maximum. That's a good life. None of us have had that.Nobody should want to live in a universe where you must endure any level of adversity, or any degree of negative sensation, simply to "grow" as a person.That is a fundamentally broken design.
It's not necessarily that we want the human race to go extinct. Extinction is merely the byproduct of not having reproduced after a few decades.This is where the arguments start getting very irrational and emotionally-charged.Wanting to have a kid to extend your bloodline is axiomatically selfish. You are willing to risk it all--maybe your kid will have cancer. Maybe your kid will have two heads. Maybe your kid will have harlequin ichthyosis. You're willing to risk all of that just so you can stick your hand up and say, "I extended my bloodline." Why? What did you accomplish?As for me being selfish, that's just silly. I'm the only one who's accounting for the fact that children have absolutely no say in their birth, and that should probably give you a little bit of pause.
The first one being that the belief system is utterly a futile goal and a hypocrtical one at that, to a shade. In the roughly 400,000 years or so of us being a species there has never been a single uniting cause or ideology that's been held in the hearts and minds of every single person.Which, in order to work, in theory, anti-natalism needs 100% from people.
The second, of course, being the idea of unborn lifeforms having no consent on the matter. When it comes down to things, simply put, we have NO IDEA what, if anything exists after we're dead, or before we're born. I don't really like to make bets on anything so unknown.But I think it's rather stupid to take any stance on such a massive unkown factor that nobody has any real solid grounds to argue anything for or against.
But, ultimately, my time ends at some point, somewhere. And, if we're taking the current standard of universal mathematics into account, then eventually, all life will supposedly end on its own.No man made intervention required.
I enjoyed reading that summary. I've got a few questions on the fringe;If all life isn't worth living, how do you propose teaching this philosophy to other animals who strictly follow the hardwiring?(Without infringing on an animal's free will or doing so inhumanely).
Also, given that the end result is extinction, why deal with "lesser" problems such as sexism, animal cruelty, etc? Why attempt a utopia if the only apparent utopia is simply not existing at all?
Quote from: Pysgnirish on January 07, 2016, 12:26:10 PMI enjoyed reading that summary. I've got a few questions on the fringe;If all life isn't worth living, how do you propose teaching this philosophy to other animals who strictly follow the hardwiring?(Without infringing on an animal's free will or doing so inhumanely).Fruit asked me the same question a couple weeks ago, and it's a great question to ask, and not one that I have a wonderfully developed answer for. Obviously, going out in the wild and manually sterilizing every animal in existence would be a ridiculously futile endeavor.We'd have to come up with something like the suppression field from Half-Life 2. Not sure how that works--some form of electromagnetic radiation that's strong enough to kill sperm cells on contact, maybe? I dunno.QuoteAlso, given that the end result is extinction, why deal with "lesser" problems such as sexism, animal cruelty, etc? Why attempt a utopia if the only apparent utopia is simply not existing at all?Simple enough. An anti-natalist must come to terms with the fact that his ideas are vastly unpopular. People are going to be having children for many, many, many years from now. We're not going to make any real dents in the birthrate any time soon.So, knowing that, it would be in the anti-natalist's best interest to do his part in making the world a better and more comfortable place to live in for all those inevitable sentient beings.I mean, if we manage to get rid of hunger, poverty, and everything else that makes the world fucking suck, maybe procreation could be justifiable after all. But that's a tall, tall order.That's the idea, though. We're not attempting a "utopia"--we're just trying to make the world suck less. The whole reason we're anti-natalists is because the world sucks so much--so why not do something about it?