Are you going to refute this logic any time soon, or are you just going to keep repeating it for no reason?
WHY SHOULD PEOPLE WANT TO PREVENT BAD THINGSthis is """""""philosophy"""""""
No. It's why should preventing things be imperative.
it's not just that pain is "bad"--it's that no pain, or pleasure, are better sensations
if you establish the existence of sensations that are demonstrably better or worse than each other, then we have an imperative to seek out the better sensations--because they are better
You have to establish a goal or purpose before you can say they are better. "Better" implies it works towards something more effectively. Obviously in this case the goal is to minimize pain and maximize pleasure. Well hmm if you just pretend that that's a given then this whole things seems so obvious doesn't it?
Well the point is for you to posit why that those are the criteria of what makes "better" in ways that exist independent of the fact that things that feel pain avoid it. Because that's the very nature of pain, it's a response pattern that naturally developed in life because avoiding damage propagates genes well. Nothing about these observations produce the need to prevent pain.
What makes a thing bad?
Quote from: Verbatim on April 19, 2016, 01:02:07 AMQuote from: Jeremiah Johnson on April 19, 2016, 12:58:08 AMWhat makes a thing bad?a distinct lack of good that goes beyond the neutrale.g.something that causes pain, suffering, discomfort, or displeasure--a negative sensation that you do not want and did not ask forBut what makes a thing GOOD?
Quote from: Jeremiah Johnson on April 19, 2016, 12:58:08 AMWhat makes a thing bad?a distinct lack of good that goes beyond the neutrale.g.something that causes pain, suffering, discomfort, or displeasure--a negative sensation that you do not want and did not ask for
Quote from: eggsalad on April 19, 2016, 12:36:36 AMYou have to establish a goal or purpose before you can say they are better. "Better" implies it works towards something more effectively. Obviously in this case the goal is to minimize pain and maximize pleasure. Well hmm if you just pretend that that's a given then this whole things seems so obvious doesn't it?why yes, it doesQuoteWell the point is for you to posit why that those are the criteria of what makes "better" in ways that exist independent of the fact that things that feel pain avoid it. Because that's the very nature of pain, it's a response pattern that naturally developed in life because avoiding damage propagates genes well. Nothing about these observations produce the need to prevent pain.apart from the fact that it tends to make things more difficult for us?pain makes us less productive, it hinders progress, and it deters us from performing necessary tasks, depending on the form and severity of the painit lowers your quality of life--and if your quality of life is low, you will be less likely to contribute anything of value to your societythese effects are not absolute and they do vary, but generally speaking, everyone's lives would be better if they never had to deal with painand if you're one of them "pain is a learning tool" types, anti-natalism is the solution to that one--it is better to be unborn than be alive in a world full of pain, suffering, and stupid nihilists
in a universe without meaning, you have to create your ownand the one you create should benefit everyone in the world--not just yourselfbecause everyone is playing the same game as you are
You're assuming that what matters to life matters objectively.
Quote from: Verbatim on April 19, 2016, 09:18:45 AMin a universe without meaning, you have to create your ownand the one you create should benefit everyone in the world--not just yourselfbecause everyone is playing the same game as you areyou don't have to, it just feels better to.
Because life is the only thing that matters. Without us, the universe really does have no meaning.
Wrong. It feels like fucking shit, actually.Do you know how awesome it would be if nothing mattered? So much weight would be off of my shoulders.I'd really like it to be true, but it's not.
What if I told you objectivity doesn't matter?
What objectively matters to the universe has no bearing on what objectively matters to life on earth.
Objectivity deals with parameters. I don't know what objectivity means? No, you don't.
How do you think this holds up when we look at life through a deterministic lens or just generally any perspective without free-will?
tbh all i hear is a theist saying they'd rape and murder without god being present
I'd say you don't know what it means lmao
ayyy
k
but not in vainin the scenario i illustrated, the cancer patient's sacrifice was certainly not in vainit was for (perhaps) the greatest of all causesdoes that not matter to you
QuoteIf you were told we could have eternal world peace and happiness if 100 people were forced to stay alive and be in constant excruciating pain eternally, then I don't give a shit what you say.see, that's a different kind of thing, thoughlike, completelyyou're talking about suffering and pleasure, there--and obviously, as an anti-natalist, do you think i'd have 100 people suffer the worst pain possible forever just to have a perfect society of people who feel constant orgasmic pleasure every day? noit's important to make the scenario about life and death--not pleasure and sufferingi wouldn't keep a one rat alive to have a perfect society
If you were told we could have eternal world peace and happiness if 100 people were forced to stay alive and be in constant excruciating pain eternally, then I don't give a shit what you say.
So in your mind, the ends justify the means. Since there was a good result, the fact that the cancer patient was forced into self-sacrifice means nothing to you?
If you supercede that wish and kill them anyway, you're murdering someone.
You're not giving people cancer if you choose not to murder him
Then what's the difference? In one scenario you're forcibly making a nonconsenting person die, in the other scenario you're forcibly making a nonconsenting person get tortured.
People die every day, from cancer to getting murdered on the street. People will always die, just like animals will always die. The only thing that makes these septillions of deaths worth anything is us moving forward as a species. And the only thing that distinguishes us as a species is our morality. No one, no matter the situation, should be forced to kill themselves or be executed. Being born in and of itself is an unfair, cruel event, and it's our duty to ensure that every human life on this planet gets all the same rights and privileges. Fairness, consent, and equality are all.
You bring up the killing Hitler example, but if Hitler allowed himself to be taken prisoner, it would be morally wrong to kill him. Executions in general are wrong. If cancer was somehow held accountable for its actions, then it would be wrong. But the person who "has" to kill themselves didn't cause cancer, and they didn't ask for this hypothetical to be placed on them.
All the human lives lost to reach this point in history mean NOTHING if we're going to trample over and ignore the rights every human is born with.
and allowing tens of millions of people to suffer and die to let one live for two months is "fairness" to youyou've yet to demonstrate how indirectly causing suffering isn't as bad as directly causing iti do not understand why you draw this line
QuoteYou bring up the killing Hitler example, but if Hitler allowed himself to be taken prisoner, it would be morally wrong to kill him. Executions in general are wrong. If cancer was somehow held accountable for its actions, then it would be wrong. But the person who "has" to kill themselves didn't cause cancer, and they didn't ask for this hypothetical to be placed on them. why does that matter
QuoteAll the human lives lost to reach this point in history mean NOTHING if we're going to trample over and ignore the rights every human is born with.you place too much value over rightsthere are more important things than rights
the one true God is Doctor Doom and we should all be worshiping him.