i wonder what y’all have to say about this

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    212 days ago

    Shame the comic doesn’t explore that.

    But also, its weird to claim babies are “dragged into existence” since there’s no way to establish who wants to be here.

    If we’re going to entertain non-existent people who don’t want to exist, we are obligated to consider non-existent people who do want to exist.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      512 days ago

      If we’re going to entertain non-existent people who don’t want to exist, we are obligated to consider non-existent people who do want to exist.

      People who are happy to be alive does not “pay” for bringing someone unhappy into existence. In fact if you really think that you can justify all sorts of morally reprehensible things.

      But that isn’t precisely my point.

      Let me repeat: No one consents to being born. You cannot ask someone ahead of time if they’d like to be born. Any person born owes absolutely nothing to their parents and almost nothing to everyone else other than basic respect. Until of course they themselves give birth, and then they owe an infinite and unpayable debt to their children.

      Even if your child is perfectly content being alive throughout their life, they did not choose to be here. You brought them here and thus you still owe them a debt.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        112 days ago

        People who are happy to be alive does not “pay” for bringing someone unhappy into existence.

        How are you evaluating happiness absent existence? Hell, how are you evaluating happiness, period?

        Even if your child is perfectly content being alive throughout their life, they did not choose to be here.

        How do you reach that conclusion? We’re all just bits of matter, assembled in various shapes and configurations.

        He was here before he was born as matter. He’ll be here after he’s dead as matter. All life has given him is senses to perceive his surroundings and agency to affect them.

        Are you arguing a given child would be better off inert? Are blindness, deafness, and paralysis virtues?

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          111 days ago

          How do you reach that conclusion? We’re all just bits of matter, assembled in various shapes and configurations.

          Because… inert matter doesn’t make decisions…

          How are you evaluating happiness absent existence? Hell, how are you evaluating happiness, period?

          As long as you accept the premise that some people are happy and some people are unhappy, I don’t think measuring it for precision matters.

          Are you arguing a given child would be better off inert? Are blindness, deafness, and paralysis virtues?

          They wouldn’t be a child if they were never born to begin with.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            111 days ago

            Because… inert matter doesn’t make decisions…

            Why is that good?

            As long as you accept the premise that some people are happy and some people are unhappy, I don’t think measuring it for precision matters.

            The claim is that people who experience unhappiness shouldn’t exist. Why would I accept a precisionless “unhappy” on these terms?

            They wouldn’t be a child if they were never born to begin with.

            They would still exist as something. Children don’t appear ex nihilio.

            Your argument isn’t for non-existence. It is for non-sentience.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              19 days ago

              Sorry for the late response, I only have access to this account at work.

              Why is that good?

              Its in opposition to bad. Its better as a result.

              The claim is that people who experience unhappiness shouldn’t exist.

              The claim is that unhappy people are not morally compensated by there being happy people.

              Why would I accept a precisionless “unhappy” on these terms?

              Because precision measurement of the amount of it doesn’t matter. If you know what unhappiness is that’s all you need.

              They would still exist as something. Children don’t appear ex nihilio.

              Like, the atoms that would eventually come to make up their body exist? I legitimately don’t understand what you are trying to say. Do you believe in souls or something?

              Your argument isn’t for non-existence. It is for non-sentience.

              Sure? If you don’t exist you aren’t sentient, because you need to exist for that.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                19 days ago

                Its in opposition to bad. Its better as a result.

                Well, that’s just, like, your opinion, man.

                The claim is that unhappy people are not morally compensated by there being happy people.

                If the only thing you care about is the volume of dopamine bouncing around your brain, eliminating all the dopamine (via non-existence) would presumably only maximize unhappiness.

                If you know what unhappiness is that’s all you need.

                Depriving people of their existence because you refuse to believe they can be happy on their own terms isn’t liberating, it is patronizing. Denying existence to whole swaths of people on the grounds that you can’t conceive of them being happy is outright genocidal. Anti-natalism on these terms fundamentally just Yimby Eugenics

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  19 days ago

                  If the only thing you care about is the volume of dopamine bouncing around your brain, eliminating all the dopamine (via non-existence) would presumably only maximize unhappiness.

                  If we’re talking about the chemistry of the brain, you also need to keep in mind the chemistry of unhappiness and pain. Cortisol, GABA, substance P, and CGRP. Technically, dopamine is not strictly a “happiness” chemical. It is also used for pain signals.

                  So non-existence would also remove those, thus reducing unhappiness.

                  Depriving people of their existence because you refuse to believe they can be happy on their own terms isn’t liberating, it is patronizing.

                  I never brought up liberation. Further, I do not believe in free will.

                  Denying existence to whole swaths of people on the grounds that you can’t conceive of them being happy is outright genocidal. Anti-natalism on these terms fundamentally just Yimby Eugenics

                  This is stepping into virtue ethics, and virtue ethics are nonsense. What you think of my personal moral worth isn’t what I’m interested in discussing.

                  • @[email protected]
                    link
                    fedilink
                    English
                    19 days ago

                    If we’re talking about the chemistry of the brain, you also need to keep in mind the chemistry of unhappiness and pain.

                    Unhappiness and pain are tools the brain uses in order to avoid conditions the body finds intolerable. Taking away the sensation does not eliminate the harm. It only eliminates the ability to recognize its source.

                    So non-existence would also remove those

                    All non-existence does is eliminate agency. It does nothing to eliminate sources of harm.

                    I never brought up liberation.

                    You have, repeatedly. Liberation from pain. Liberation from emotion. Liberation from understanding.

                    This is stepping into virtue ethics, and virtue ethics are nonsense.

                    Thanks for proving my point.

                    What you think of my personal moral worth isn’t what I’m interested in discussing.

                    You’re arguing the personal moral worth of others. You could engage in a modicum of self-reflection.