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Old 01-29-2002, 06:38 PM   #31
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Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
<strong>thanks tron, for telling me what (not) to do instead of giving me a answer.


Jeebus--- what would you do if your kids ever look you in the eye and say that they wish you had never had them? What would you tell them then?

(edited to delete a confusing N)

[ January 29, 2002: Message edited by: jess ]</strong>

Sometimes a question is asked that you cannot answer. I'd likely say, after a LONG pause, "I'm sorry, but I tried my best to make life worthwhile for you. My failure as a father must weigh heavily upon you.
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Old 01-29-2002, 06:42 PM   #32
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Originally posted by 99Percent:
<strong>Jess: You want a clear cut cold answer as to why to have children? Because we feel good about life and feel that our children will too. If you don't feel good about your own life and think your children will feel unfortunate too, well then don't have children. Nobody is forcing you.</strong>
Actually the real reason most people do is because thats life for them. They grow up, get married, have children, rear them .....
We're conditioned to.

As survival machines for our genes, this is hardly surprising
And genes are selfish after all .

I dont think we can overcome instincts in such a short time frame. Given thousands and thousands of years maybe ... in a few hundred years - no way !

- Sivakami.
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Old 01-29-2002, 07:07 PM   #33
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jess:
Quote:
And you have answered my question by basically saying that the best reason to have kids would be the most selfish.
Well, every reason for having children will be selfish, in that all reasons are selfish. Beyond that, I said that having children under the conditions you specified would be considered quite selfish by most people.

Quote:
So, the new human's ideas or wants are minimal to the gains the parent makes.
If the decision is to be justified, then yes. However, as I have already pointed out, that would not be the case for me, and as as result I would not consider the case justified.

Quote:
But if your children did view the world the way I stated, would you still feel justified? The answer to the hypothetical 'I wish you hadn't had me' would be a 'well, I got a kick out of it'?
I would have a few responses:

1)It did not seem likely when I made the decision that they would hold that opinion.

2)I am not sure they actually hold that opinion.

3)They may not hold that opinion in the future.

[ January 30, 2002: Message edited by: tronvillain ]</p>
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Old 01-30-2002, 01:25 PM   #34
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Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
I am wondering if there are any unslefish reasons to have children (biological, not adoption).
You want a reason which appeals to yourself, yet isn't selfish? I suppose the only alternatives would be to have children for their own sake, or for one's partner, or for society, etc.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
The best I can do is the 'only stupid people are breeding' line--- smart ones need to breed to protect human evolution from backsliding...
I guess that would be for humanity's sake. If you have a child and raise them well, would you think they would most likely be more benevolent than harmful to humanity?
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Old 01-30-2002, 02:33 PM   #35
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I suppose the reason you are looking for is for the child's sake, rather than humanity.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
y'see, I feel that the amount and the quality of happiness this world has to offer is way to small to warrant living in it.
Why haven't you ended your life?

I find your attitude soothing, refreshing. I like a woman who can appreciate being cynical and realistic, when things suck for her. I like someone I can bitch at, who wouldn't act like I am "mistaken" or think they can talk me out of it with lies. What ever happened to self-pity, people? It makes for a nice passionate knot in the belly that helps digest the food.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
If all we do is end up dead, why bother bringing new life into it?
Temporary pleasure. Compared to eternity it is nothing, but it is infinitely more compared to nothing. If you are a hedonist and by your assessment your pain outweighs your pleasure, all you have is the hope of pleasure (you asked for non-immediate). By "pleasure" I would include love, friendship, catharsis, peacefulness etc-- the word pleasure and these words, do not quite bring about the feeling/experience, so it is difficult to represent such experiences with words.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
I am sick of the 'sorry I had no shoes until I saw a man who had no feet' shit. Why the hell can't we both have shoes? Why must I compare myself with what is worse and not what is better? Compared to some, my life is a living hell. Why can't I demand a better life for all? (other than the simple fact that it won't happen?)
I say we acquire all the pleasure we can and then bitch about it. That would suck!
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
For some reason, to me, the cycle of pain despair ageing and death is just not a good thing to condemn someone else into. I see no reason to perpetuate it.
It would give them the choice of whether or not to live, so long there are high places one could leap from, or a gun one could obtain, or a Jack Kavorkian.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
All the happiness and joy I have had, none of it is worth the loss of a peaceful non existence.
How would you know death were non-existence, let alone peaceful? I don't think peace is quite so pleasurable if one were not existing. Regardless, maybe we are aware when we are "unconscious" we just are not recording memory. Maybe we experience death as disintegration and it is hell before and after our lives and the best it gets is this little fraction of life. hehe

I think you are being much too optimistic. Punish yourself with exercise or read some Nietzsche or something. Sit someplace with bad posture for a while. Eat spicy foods before bed, so you will have nightmares. That will teach you.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
great! I can sit here and suffer for the sake of it! Whoopee! To what end? For what reason? Why should I care to live to 90 if there is no difference than if I had died at 9?
The difference would be 81 years, to you. Whether that is 81 years worse or better is another question.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
I am not some desperate depressed person needing a anti-suicide talk--- I am merely trying to justify bringing a person into this world.
What suicidal person needs stress or annoyances from people telling them to just feel different? Well some of them may like the attention but only cause they are desperate and needy.

How would you know you were not depressed compared to others without feeling what they feel? Your arguments do seem as much to conclude that you would want to kill yourself.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
WHY? Give me a reason. Give me a reason that makes it worth it to bring a child who--- subjectively--- may hate this world more than I do into this world. Or worse, who may make others already here do the same.

That simple 'aw, to see him giggle is the BEST FEELING EVER' will not cut it. I came here for real, cold, hard answers.
You seem to think this is a philosophical problem. Maybe you are just a person with a biology making you depressed. You seem to be a hedonist, so the only reason which would possibly work for you, is that the child be happy, correct? Would it be impossible for an unhappy parent to have a happy child? I would think you may increase your likelihood if you made the child from genes of happier people. You said "no adoption" but you didn't rule out artificial insemination. Of course, your own genes may work fine when combined with someone else's and the wheels of chance.

Maybe Prozac, or St John's Wart could make you happy. Maybe the only solution to providing happiness is genetic engineering.

Are you claiming to have a rational reason to be unhappy?
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Old 01-31-2002, 02:28 PM   #36
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Quote:
Sivakami said:

I dont think we can overcome instincts in such a short time frame. Given thousands and thousands of years maybe ... in a few hundred years - no way !
And what is the purpose of overcoming instinct? What would you predict to be the destiny of mankind should we overcome instinct?

How do we know that we are not acting by instinct in excercising our ability to think and rationalize the world? A desire for truth - or rather, better understanding, seems to have been pretty motivational in most societies and manifested in the context of religious and scientific endeavours.

Our faculties of reason and logic give us the ability to rationalize the world but do not appear to give us the reasons as to why we should employ them in doing so - which is interesting!

To quote Einstein:

Quote:
"The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift."
As I've said, there may be no 'reason' to go on living and so to promote reason above instinct as though instinct is something to be 'overcome' seems a very dangerous thing to do, especially if reason and logic rely on it.
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Old 02-02-2002, 04:44 AM   #37
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Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
We are not instinctual creatures--- not really, not anymore. We really should rationalize our actions.
Yes. This is tricky though, because happiness may not be caused by a "reason", it may be a simple matter of chemistry, in one way. The question is, "What are a certain person's odds of having a happy child, and how could she/he increase the chances". IOW, the rational answer depends on whatever funkiness HAPPENS TO MAKE a person feel happy or sad. So we need to first consider what causes happiness, in order to answer this.

You seem to think happiness would be caused by knowing one will go to heaven. That is only true if one's anticipation of such a thing brings them pleasure. It may bring them a longing they really suffer from, but think is pleasure. Heaven offers the same sorts of pleasure the world offers, just more of it.

I could give other examples, but my point is that discovering what causes a pleasure is sort of a science or trial-and-error. It is unknown whether there be an intrinsically pleasurable "thing", that makes (or should make) every rational person happy/pleased. Pleasure is rather a subjective experience we feel for unknown reasons. There is no reason why the "reasons" you seem to say you feel bad about, would/should necessarily make a person feel bad. Maybe it is something else making you feel that way, or something else, which causes the "reasons" make you feel bad. If the "reasons" don’t make you feel bad, then they don't seem to be valid reasons, because they are claiming they would/should make every rational person feel bad.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
Having kids because 'it's an experience!' just reeks, to me. No matter how I view the world.
Yeah that sorta reeks to me, except in the sense that if one has an experience this implies they have some hope of having a better experience. I would rather be born into a life with initial suffering, rather than to not exist, because then I would have the hope of changing that experience and finding pleasure.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
(Well, not true. If there were no chance of a person having his/her heart ripped out and destroyed, then maybe I would think it was possible.)
What if the chance of that happening is just much less than the chance of it not happening? Would you rather be born in a world with no danger, or not be born? The fact that you choose to live, suggests the later.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
I am not asking 'hey, should I have kids?'--- although you and tron have both told me not to (gee, thanks). I am merely asking if there is a better reason than 'hey, it's just a cool thing to do!'
But whether or not a reason is a valid reason, is going to depend on how *you* expect the child to feel. You seem to form your beliefs of how the child would feel based on how you feel. So that is why the answers you are getting are directed specifically to you, because these reasons are not necessarily going to mean anything to anyone who isn't caused to feel bad from the reasons you are giving for why a (rational) person would/should feel bad.
Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
I guess I just think too much. If I didn't, then 'it feels good--- don't worry, be happy--- they will be too!' would have been enough.
Thinking seems to be more for the future pleasure than the present, but it also seems to have some pleasure in it. Do you write these posts to suffer?

[ February 02, 2002: Message edited by: hedonologist ]</p>
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Old 02-02-2002, 05:10 PM   #38
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Quote:
Originally posted by jess:
We are not instinctual creatures--- not really, not anymore. We really should rationalize our actions.
I would disagree with the the starting assumptions of your statement, however, this is a truth statement to which I simply ask 'why'? Why should we rationalize our actions?

Man's sense of the divine is an instinct which is argued to have no rational basis. So why should our instinct to reproduce have one?

Quote:
Hedonologist said:

Yes. This is tricky though, because happiness may not be caused by a "reason", it may be a simple matter of chemistry, in one way.
What do you mean by 'a simple matter of chemistry'? The chemical processes at work in the brain?

You seem to be suggesting that if happiness is 'just' chemistry then 'reason' must be a combination of chemistry plus 'something else'.

What is that something else to which you seem to be eluding?

Quote:
More..

I could give other examples, but my point is that discovering what causes a pleasure is sort of a science or trial-and-error.
Pleasure is caused by the brain isn't it?

Couldn't we simply say that pleasure is subjective and idiosyncratic?

Secondly, must the cause be based around 'reason', couldn't it simply be based around 'instinct' - or something else?

Quote:
More..

It is unknown whether there be an intrinsically pleasurable "thing", that makes (or should make) every rational person happy/pleased.
An intrinsically pleasureable thing would suggest a form of rationally based hedonistic truth principle.

I think we would still struggle to argue that the 'thing' is pleasureable in and of itself. It would seem more accurate to say that (should such a 'thing' exist) that the subjective responses of individuals to this objective event are known to be similar.

Quote:
Pleasure is rather a subjective experience we feel for unknown reasons.
Every experience is subjective.

I am also interested by the term 'unknown reasons'. This almost suggests that 'reasons' are entities which exist independently to the human mind and which the human mind has yet to discover and of course represent a statement of faith. They represent a hope for the 'not yet seen' or not yet perceived.

It also suggests that there must be a reason (even if undiscovered) for every human action.

We can seek to rationalize human behaviour but wouldn't it be fallacious to suggest that all human behaviour is based upon reason?

The moment a rationale is created for an action, if that rationale is then argued to be the only legitimate base for that action (which was formerly carried out not on the basis of this reason) couldn't it be argued that rationalists are guilty of plagiarism?

Quote:
More..

Yeah that sorta reeks to me, except in the sense that if one has an experience this implies they have some hope of having a better experience. I would rather be born into a life with initial suffering, rather than to not exist, because then I would have the hope of changing that experience and finding pleasure.
This argues for hedonism. The main purpose of life is to seek pleasure, or rather, to discover what gives you pleasure and pursue it.

[ February 02, 2002: Message edited by: E_muse ]</p>
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Old 02-02-2002, 11:09 PM   #39
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Quote:
Originally posted by E_muse
What do you mean by 'a simple matter of chemistry'? The chemical processes at work in the brain?

You seem to be suggesting that if happiness is 'just' chemistry then 'reason' must be a combination of chemistry plus 'something else'.
I don't know what you mean. The alternative to happiness being caused by chemistry, would be that there are certain facts about the world which, when we know them, inevitably make anyone suffer if they are intelligent enough to "understand" them, etc.
Quote:
Originally posted by E_muse
Pleasure is caused by the brain isn't it?
I didn't say that, but seeing how certain stimuli causes a memory (eg pleasure) which seems to be the same as the last memory of that stimuli, suggests that brain states are the variable as far as what causes the pleasure, in those cases.
Quote:
Originally posted by E_muse
Couldn't we simply say that pleasure is subjective and idiosyncratic?
I'm not sure what you mean. Would that mean that knowing certain facts must make us unhappy?
Quote:
Originally posted by E_muse
Secondly, must the cause be based around 'reason', couldn't it simply be based around 'instinct' - or something else?
The cause of the pleasure? If so, yes. Anything could be based on instinct, for that matter.
Quote:
Originally posted by E_muse
I think we would still struggle to argue that the 'thing' is pleasureable in and of itself. It would seem more accurate to say that (should such a 'thing' exist) that the subjective responses of individuals to this objective event are known to be similar.
yes
Quote:
Originally posted by E_muse
I am also interested by the term 'unknown reasons'. This almost suggests that 'reasons' are entities which exist independently to the human mind and which the human mind has yet to discover and of course represent a statement of faith. They represent a hope for the 'not yet seen' or not yet perceived.

It also suggests that there must be a reason (even if undiscovered) for every human action.

We can seek to rationalize human behaviour but wouldn't it be fallacious to suggest that all human behaviour is based upon reason?
You mean that all human behavior has a cause? I would have faith that it did, for the purpose of discovering a cause if one could be found. It doesn't matter to my point, AFAIK.
Quote:
Originally posted by E_muse
The moment a rationale is created for an action, if that rationale is then argued to be the only legitimate base for that action (which was formerly carried out not on the basis of this reason) couldn't it be argued that rationalists are guilty of plagiarism?
What would make a different base illegitimate, in the argument? I don't know what you mean by legitimate. You might give an example.
Quote:
Originally posted by E_muse
This argues for hedonism. The main purpose of life is to seek pleasure, or rather, to discover what gives you pleasure and pursue it.
I don't speak for the "main purpose of life", nor do I know what this would mean. I was talking in terms of a preference for pleasure, Jess and I seemed to share.
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Old 02-03-2002, 03:22 AM   #40
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Greetings Hedonologist, thank you for your reply.

Quote:
I said:

You seem to be suggesting that if happiness is 'just' chemistry then 'reason' must be a combination of chemistry plus 'something else'.


You replied:

I don't know what you mean. The alternative to happiness being caused by chemistry, would be that there are certain facts about the world which, when we know them, inevitably make anyone suffer if they are intelligent enough to "understand" them, etc.
O.K, I shall try and elaborate a little. You originally said:

Quote:
Yes. This is tricky though, because happiness may not be caused by a "reason", it may be a simple matter of chemistry, in one way.
You've suggested that happiness may simply be the result of a chemical process and not caused by a 'reason'.

From your comment I would make the inference that 'reason' must be something more than a simple chemical process I would also have to ask whether any chemical process going on inside a person can be described as simple.

As all thoughts, ideas and experiences relate to the chemical processing of the brain, how can reason be something more than chemical?

Quote:
I said:

Pleasure is caused by the brain isn't it?


You replied:

I didn't say that, but seeing how certain stimuli causes a memory (eg pleasure) which seems to be the same as the last memory of that stimuli, suggests that brain states are the variable as far as what causes the pleasure, in those cases.
1. Objective = existing independently of a mind.
2. subjective = dependent upon the existence of a mind.

Pleasure is something experienced by an individual and as with all experience must fall into category two and be purely subjective.

It seems common sense to me.

Put a brick in a fire and it will not suffer. Put a person in a fire and they will. What is the difference. The brain!

Quote:
I said:

Couldn't we simply say that pleasure is subjective and idiosyncratic?



You replied:

I'm not sure what you mean. Would that mean that knowing certain facts must make us unhappy?
Anthing but! A definition of idiosyncratic:

Quote:
[i]A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.
A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.
An unusual individual reaction to food or a drug.[i]
I've already detailed the meaning of subjective.

Quote:
I said:

Secondly, must the cause be based around 'reason', couldn't it simply be based around 'instinct' - or something else?[/b]

You replied:

The cause of the pleasure? If so, yes. Anything could be based on instinct, for that matter.
You've already aruged that pleasure may be simply chemical.

What is reason then? Both pleasurable feelings and the ability to reason exist within human beings. If one is 'simply chemical', what is the other?

Quote:
I said:

I am also interested by the term 'unknown reasons'. This almost suggests that 'reasons' are entities which exist independently to the human mind and which the human mind has yet to discover and of course represent a statement of faith. They represent a hope for the 'not yet seen' or not yet perceived.
It also suggests that there must be a reason (even if undiscovered) for every human action.

We can seek to rationalize human behaviour but wouldn't it be fallacious to suggest that all human behaviour is based upon reason?


You replied:

You mean that all human behavior has a cause? I would have faith that it did, for the purpose of discovering a cause if one could be found. It doesn't matter to my point, AFAIK.
That human behaviour has a cause I have no doubt and I wouldn't consider it a matter of faith.

What I am saying is that the 'reason' for certain human behaviours might not themselves be based upon 'reason'. We must look beyond reason when seeking to explain human experience.

Quote:
I said:

The moment a rationale is created for an action, if that rationale is then argued to be the only legitimate base for that action (which was formerly carried out not on the basis of this reason) couldn't it be argued that rationalists are guilty of plagiarism?


You replied:

What would make a different base illegitimate, in the argument? I don't know what you mean by legitimate. You might give an example.
I'm thinking very generally at the moment.

I would suggest that secularism has the ideal that all human behaviour must be based upon our ability to reason.

Jess himself said:

Quote:
We are not instinctual creatures--- not really, not anymore. We really should rationalize our actions.
Of course, rationalizing our actions might lead us to the conclusion that not all human actions are based on reason including the implementation of or faculties of logic and reason themselves.

Sivakami posted:

Quote:
I dont think we can overcome instincts in such a short time frame. Given thousands and thousands of years maybe ... in a few hundred years - no way !
It would seem to me, from these two comments, that the secular humanist ideal is to be governed by reason rather than instinct or instead of instinct.

However, if certain commendable behaviours have been born out of something other than pure reason (religious instinct for example), then to make pure reason the only legitimate basis for this behaviour seems a form of plagiarism to me.

Pure reason hasn't been the basis for certain behaviours in the past and so why should it be made the basis for them in the future.

The same is true with regard to having children. Reason obviously hasn't dictated our ability to do this in the past, so why should we insist that it must now?

Quote:
I said:

This argues for hedonism. The main purpose of life is to seek pleasure, or rather, to discover what gives you pleasure and pursue it.


I don't speak for the "main purpose of life", nor do I know what this would mean. I was talking in terms of a preference for pleasure, Jess and I seemed to share.
O.K, but pleasure seeking for its own sake is hedonsim.
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