Submitted by BernardJOrtcutt t3_10v7bci in philosophy
Joe_Fart t1_j7gufc2 wrote
Reply to comment by SvetlanaButosky in /r/philosophy Open Discussion Thread | February 06, 2023 by BernardJOrtcutt
It is not convincing and even though I cannot find any phil survey about this, I would say a brutal majority of philosopher would dismiss it independently on their moral theory preferences (virtue ethics, consenquentialsts, deontologists, other)
SvetlanaButosky t1_j7n2k3r wrote
Well, virtue ethics and deontology are kinda arbitrary so not that great at refuting or supporting such a claim either way.
But I do agree the consequentialist and even positive utilitarian would have much better counter arguments based on the quantity and quality of current existence.
Joe_Fart t1_j7omeqa wrote
They are arbitrary but good luck to someone who would like to pick as his virtue or a rule to annihilate everything and then try to justify it by dialectics or with the God or the system in case of deontology. That is why the most of ethic theorisrs would just dismiss this idea as absolute non-sense.
Of course the positive utilitarists are the closest one in sense of similar approach or reasoning so they arguments would be the most comprehensible for negative utilitarists or promortalists.
SvetlanaButosky t1_j7potp3 wrote
I agree, Antinatalism, Pro mortalism and Negative utilitarianism have become dogmatic beliefs more than rational arguments.
Their underlying premises dont inform their conclusions about existence.
"Life has some suck in it so we must end all life" is not a convincing argument for most people, lol.
Life having some suck simply doesnt lead to we must end all life, not without some really dogmatic glue to stick them both together.
Joe_Fart t1_j7puz6g wrote
Yeah, I totally agree. Even if they are logically consistent with their reasoning, not many people will agree with their premises and conclusion. Hopefully it will stay on the ground of bad philosophy.
However there is some interesting challanges like repugnant conclusion for a future philosophers to solve. Hopefully, there wont be so many negative utilitarists. We need more Nietszches not more Schopenhauers.
SvetlanaButosky t1_j7szadd wrote
>repugnant conclusion
I dont think this is as big an issue as some people exaggerated, I mean once you have a good benchmark of what is decent living, you will not lower it dramatically just to accommodate more people, that's ridiculous, people just dont live like this. Humans prefer quality way more over quantity, this is why the birthrate is dropping despite increasing quality of life.
Its a bizarre philosophical thought experiment that assumes people will behave like calculative AI. lol
Joe_Fart t1_j7tw6cp wrote
I mean people may prefer quality over quantity in our developed world, but it is not a case for some developing countries. There is some shift or realization point where the curve changes. Anyway it is funny that you mention AI cause for a discussion like this we can just feed the chatgpt with request for an answer and the n pretend its us who wrote it. The discussion on internet will never be the same, I enjoyed this.
SvetlanaButosky t1_j7w2gbd wrote
I tried ChatGPT with antinatalism, it gave me very crappy generic answers.
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