• Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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    4 months ago

    The question is perhaps abstract and difficult to answer, but it’s perfectly valid.

    I say that it’s actually impossible to answer, except in the most extreme cases.

    My point is that the child at no point enters into the question of consent.

    That is because the question was about rights, not consent. The child can’t consent, because existence is a presupposition to consent. That’s why that anti-natalist gotcha doesn’t make sense. It doesn’t follow the rules of formal logic. It’s like a paradox, but formulated as a question.

    The only way to have a “right” is for the people around you to agree that you have them.

    In what way is that different to negotiation?

    I think maybe that’s more morality than “rights,” but I’m not sure how clear the distinction is between them.

    As I don’t really give much of a crap about the whole concept of rights, I’d say: forget about the distinction.

    I am claiming that birth is a violation of consent. Conception is meaningless to me unless it comes to fruition and bears a conscious being.

    But birth is a natural result of conception.

    Can you describe the paradox?

    As I said above: Existence is a presupposition to consent. The premise violates formal logic.

    • naught@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      I say that it’s actually impossible to answer, except in the most extreme cases.

      It’s certainly impossible to answer in a single broad stroke for everyone, but that doesn’t mean it’s not useful or relevant to think about.

      That is because the question was about rights, not consent.

      If that’s so, then we’re talking past one another. My point is that in my ethical framework, having a child is wrong. They are incapable of consenting as you point out, which is part of why I view it as wrong.

      Existence is a presupposition to consent.

      Why? The child surely exists before, during, and after its birth. Can’t it be that the unborn human is incapable of consent rather than creating a paradox? I understand the chicken-and-egg problem you are describing, but I think it’s incomplete. As a fully functioning human being now, if I look back at my birth, did I consent? Did I exist yet? I think I can say simply, “No, I did not consent to being born.” Whether you ascribe a negative, positive, or neutral value to this is up to you. In my opinion, it’s immoral.

      In what way is that different to negotiation?

      It isn’t. I don’t think we disagree on this

      But birth is a natural result of conception.

      Yes, however isn’t this logic used to argue against abortion? I’d argue that a person becomes a full “person” at birth, which is perhaps arbitrary, but we have to define that point somewhere. Regardless of when we say a person “exists”, they still cannot consent regardless.

      That all said, is anti-natalism completely correct for everyone? I don’t know. I’m sure our species going extinct would create lots of suffering for the dwindling population. Maybe on average, humans do not regret their existence. Does that mean it’s moral to make more conscious beings who are capable of feeling that regret?