Immortality and become the ultimate supervillain
Quote from: Korra on October 23, 2015, 05:45:53 PMQuote from: Avant le Présent on October 23, 2015, 05:40:49 PMCoLbie Smulders is too masculine for me.You're putting the RETARDED FRENCH L INTO HER WONDERFUL FUCKING NAME YOU FROG EATING, NON-BATHING, SURRENDERING, KOJIMA SHILLING, VERBY DICK SUCKING, NIGGER!Holy fucking shit I'm dead>frog eating>verby dick sucking
Quote from: Avant le Présent on October 23, 2015, 05:40:49 PMCoLbie Smulders is too masculine for me.You're putting the RETARDED FRENCH L INTO HER WONDERFUL FUCKING NAME YOU FROG EATING, NON-BATHING, SURRENDERING, KOJIMA SHILLING, VERBY DICK SUCKING, NIGGER!
CoLbie Smulders is too masculine for me.
Wanting genetic survival is as egotistical as you can get.
Quote from: eggsalad on October 24, 2015, 09:15:46 AMWanting genetic survival is as egotistical as you can get.Not really, unless your reasoning behind it is egotistical. But wanting children is not egotistical at it's base.
Quote from: Nexus on October 24, 2015, 09:49:30 AMQuote from: eggsalad on October 24, 2015, 09:15:46 AMWanting genetic survival is as egotistical as you can get.Not really, unless your reasoning behind it is egotistical. But wanting children is not egotistical at it's base.99% of people's reasoning is pretty egotistical, though. I can't think of a non-egotistical reason to have children."muh bloodline""muh genes""muh fatherhood""muh legacy"
But people can want to have children for the sake of being able to raise someone with a higher quality of life than they had. In fact that is such a common reason that I'd say most people who thoughtfully have kids do it in part with that in mind. They find happiness in life, and they believe they have the tools to give their children even happier lives than they had.
Quote from: Tsirist on October 24, 2015, 11:14:31 AMBut people can want to have children for the sake of being able to raise someone with a higher quality of life than they had. In fact that is such a common reason that I'd say most people who thoughtfully have kids do it in part with that in mind. They find happiness in life, and they believe they have the tools to give their children even happier lives than they had.Which would be noble if having kids was mandatory, which it isn't. Like, if we had no other choice but to have kids, that would be a good mindset.
From your anti-egoism standpoint it seems to me that not having children is the egotistical thing to do, as it removes the people being born into the planet, inflating the value of those who remain, as well as eliminating a great deal of potential happiness.
When you have children, it isn't just for your own entertainment, even if you want it to be; almost all people find happiness in life as well, so regardless of your intentions, I don't think it really pans out as a purely self-serving action.
An individual's intent may be selfish, but again, aren't everyone's intentions always just that?
The potential for great suffering nearly precludes the potential for great happiness. Everyone who considers themselves intelligent knows this. Life is too much of a gamble to allow anyone to experience it. It's the opposite of selfish.
Quote from: Verbatim on October 24, 2015, 11:32:45 AMThe potential for great suffering nearly precludes the potential for great happiness. Everyone who considers themselves intelligent knows this. Life is too much of a gamble to allow anyone to experience it. It's the opposite of selfish.What about a child born into a wealthy and caring family, a child that is very much likely to have a great life? Surely a high chance of a good life is better then no life at all.
Quote from: Incan on October 24, 2015, 11:36:43 AMQuote from: Verbatim on October 24, 2015, 11:32:45 AMThe potential for great suffering nearly precludes the potential for great happiness. Everyone who considers themselves intelligent knows this. Life is too much of a gamble to allow anyone to experience it. It's the opposite of selfish.What about a child born into a wealthy and caring family, a child that is very much likely to have a great life? Surely a high chance of a good life is better then no life at all.No life at all is always better.A "high chance" of a good life isn't good enough. It has to be a 100% chance of a perfect life for there to be no moral quandaries.
The potential for great suffering nearly precludes the potential for great happiness. Everyone who considers themselves intelligent knows this. Life is too much of a gamble to allow anyone to experience it. It's the opposite of selfish.But it is, though.Some things are more selfish than others.
It nearly precludes it? So in other words, it doesn't?
The intelligence remark wasn't necessary, thanks.
Quote from: Tsirist on October 24, 2015, 11:42:51 AMIt nearly precludes it? So in other words, it doesn't?Are you retarded?"Nearly precludes"--meaning, there is an extremely low chance of a life that contains no pain or suffering.In other words, the only acceptable way to live.Quote from: Tsirist on October 24, 2015, 11:42:51 AMThe intelligence remark wasn't necessary, thanks.You're unintelligent.
How about we keep reproducing then?
Our world continues to improve.
We may one day reach that 100% chance and that perfect life, whatever that means for you.
We all endure pain, Verb, yet most of us are happy. How does pain preclude happiness in that sense at all?
I know you like to say that no life ends up with a hypothetical +1, but I can't see it like that. For if there is no good, then there being no pain doesn't factor in, and this goes the other way, if there's no pain then nothing is truly good. Therefore, to me, not existing is a 0. Joy on it's own is useless without knowing pain, and pain is useless without knowing joy.