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Benatar's argument seems more likely to serve as a warning than as a serious philosophical statement. It demonstrates what Chesterton said, that those modern-day intellectuals who propose to liberate humanity with their supposedly rational analysis of existence and the human condition end up wallowing in despair. Better to avoid them. Benatar is a fine example of why so much of the humanities and social sciences realm has made itself utterly irrelevant to the great majority of the human race.
Has anyone here read it?
NO it sounds a bit depressing and by definitiomn pessimistic. I dont thing one can meke an a priori judgement aboput life, or generalise too much. Mine has been horrific at times and I have been suicidal, but I am enjoying being me at the moment. Just as we strive individually for better quality of life, I am part of human histroy. So even if I sink below the surface at times, I still believe my efforts and endurances, not to mention escapology skills, will help to generate better futures somehow as we face being and the value of it intelligently. We can be craftsmen, philosophical sculptors, and the clay is not all that bad. You know now I have been told that I can represent good example to people, whereas in the past I have been a terror. I am not utopian but I believe that if society takes secular ethics seriously than things can improve. After all its aim is generating a good life, so therefore it ought to make life itself benign if the project is successful. Dont look back to the night before life, but forwards to the dawns to come.
"Liberty" is always limited, always constrained. Equality, except in mathematics, is always approximate. Ignorance is relative, and although nearly half of all people are of below average intelligence, nearly half of all people are above average in that department.The majority of the human race are ignorant morons who don't respect liberty and equality, so I don't see why I should really care what they think.
"Liberty" is always limited, always constrained.
Equality, except in mathematics, is always approximate.
Ignorance is relative, and although nearly half of all people are of below average intelligence, nearly half of all people are above average in that department.
And if you don't pay attention to what they think, they are very likely to make you very, very sorry. After all, a moron can kill you just as dead as a genius.
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If I had world enough and time, I'd read every book out there. (Except for the really offensive and disgusting ones, that is.) John Milton supposedly did that, but the number of books was slightly lower in his time. I have to make choices about what books to read, and based on the review I linked to, Benatar's book is too loopy to be worth my time.Yes, his conclusions are counterintuitive, unsettling, maybe disturbing even. However, he makes a pretty strong case for them as his arguments are carefully constructed, even more so since he starts from widely held and agreed upon premises.
Now, everyone is perfectly entitled to reject a philosophy for basically the reason that it rubs them the wrong way or is incompatible with their feelings or creeds (although, to be honest, I´d expect a little more on a philosophy forum). There was a reason why I asked "Has anyone read it?" instead of "Give me your general outlook on life".![]()
Of course you are free to judge books you haven´t read.If I had world enough and time, I'd read every book out there. (Except for the really offensive and disgusting ones, that is.) John Milton supposedly did that, but the number of books was slightly lower in his time. I have to make choices about what books to read, and based on the review I linked to, Benatar's book is too loopy to be worth my time.
I do not reject Benatar's argument because of feelings or because it rubs me the wrong way. I reject it because I don't find it a sound argument. "Pleasure missed out on by the nonexistent doesnt count as a harm. Yet suffering avoided counts as a good, even when the recipient is a nonexistent one." This, to be, is a bit of pseudo-intellectual flim-flam. Suppose I lived in unending bliss, except that for a brief moment I stub my toe and it hurts. Should I have been eliminated before I was even born, just so that the stubbing of my toe could be avoided? If not, then Benatar's argument falls apart.
Has anyone here read it?
The majority of the human race are ignorant morons who don't respect liberty and equality, so I don't see why I should really care what they think.
I haven't read it, and all I know about it comes from this review in The New Yorker. The reviewer summarizes Benatar's argument thusly:
Benatars case rests on a critical but, in his view, unappreciated asymmetry. Consider two couples, the As and the Bs. The As are young, healthy, and rich. If they had children, they could give them the best of everythingschools, clothes, electronic gaming devices. Even so, we would not say that the As have a moral obligation to reproduce.It sounds rather goofy to me. The notion that one can prove humanity shouldn't exist based on a bit of clever logical trickery doesn't convince because it just can't be taken seriously. As Chesterton says in Orthodoxy, life is good, and mentally healthy people affirm the value of life even while acknowledging the existence of suffering. Any creed that leads one to the conclusion that humanity should be wiped out can be dismissed based on that.
The Bs are just as young and rich. But both have a genetic disease, and, were they to have a child together, that child would suffer terribly. We would say, using Benatars logic, that the Bs have an ethical obligation not to procreate.
The case of the As and the Bs shows that we regard pleasure and pain differently. Pleasure missed out on by the nonexistent doesnt count as a harm. Yet suffering avoided counts as a good, even when the recipient is a nonexistent one.
And what holds for the As and the Bs is basically true for everyone. Even the best of all possible lives consists of a mixture of pleasure and pain. Had the pleasure been forgonethat is, had the life never been createdno one would have been the worse for it. But the world is worse off because of the suffering brought needlessly into it.
One of the implications of my argument is that a life filled with good and containing only the most minute quantity of bada life of utter bliss adulterated only by the pain of a single pin-prickis worse than no life at all, Benatar writes.
Benatar's argument seems more likely to serve as a warning than as a serious philosophical statement. It demonstrates what Chesterton said, that those modern-day intellectuals who propose to liberate humanity with their supposedly rational analysis of existence and the human condition end up wallowing in despair. Better to avoid them. Benatar is a fine example of why so much of the humanities and social sciences realm has made itself utterly irrelevant to the great majority of the human race.
Elioenai26 said:I think it quite ironic how people can even entertain the idea of whether or not it would be better for them to never have existed. The irony is not so easily comprehended I guess.
I guess that´s why Benatar´s book is not a complaint about his own life but a philosophical consideration.I think it quite ironic how people can even entertain the idea of whether or not it would be better for them to never have existed. The irony is not so easily comprehended I guess.
Benatar's argument is, to put it nicely, horrible.
He compares life, to non-life, and even goes one step further to say that non-existence would be better than a certain type of existence.
Well, the two are not even comparable. Non-life or non-existence is nothing. It is no-thing. It is not anything. It is the barest of all concepts that the mind can entertain, I mean just think about it! Think about "no-thing".......
What comes to mind? LOL, nothing!
Life, even the most bitterest and harshest life is still life. Nothing is nothing and nothing plus nothing is nothing and nothing minus nothing is nothing. He is trying to make a point, but it is just.........well, for the lack of a better word..................... nothing............
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You mean he could have prevented coming into existence? Can you tell me about the method?It seems to me that if he really believed his thesis he would be dead.
“One of the implications of my argument is that a life filled with good and containing only the most minute quantity of bad—a life of utter bliss adulterated only by the pain of a single pin-prick—is worse than no life at all,” Benatar writes.