Antinatalism is theoretically correct

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@Critical-Tim
Moreover, it is possible for a person to meet progression often, and even if not often, still occasionally, and even if occasionally, it means that negativity is not always a predecessor of positivity. Your claim is that negativity is always a predecessor of positivity and above you say what if a person makes no progression that is a form of negativity. I would agree it is a form of negativity to make no progression, but I would also say what if they do make progression and therefore negativity is not always a predecessor of positivity. Therefore, I can prove that negativity is not always a predecessor of positivity.
We agree that "it is a form of negativity to make no progression". Having not achieved any progress always comes before achieving progress. Achieving progress is not guaranteed, but entering a state of having yet achieved progress is. Therefore, negativity is always a predecessor of positivity.
This would be true; however, you make one mistake. Making no progression is only a negative if you put effort into it. An individual who puts no effort into something will make no progress and so no progress is always a predecessor of progress but it's not negative if you didn't put effort into nothing. On the contrary if an individual puts effort into progress there is quite a chance that they will make progress. Therefore, it is possible to experience positivity without the predecessor of negativity.
I don't think it's possible to put absolutely no effort into progression towards goals. Even momentarily thinking about the goal is a tiny slither of effort. Even if it were possible for progress to be made without any effort, you're not going to make it through life without putting any effort in. Keep in mind that this is different from the colloquial 'I put no effort in', of which actually means very little effort.

Your "contrary" ignores the state before any progress can be made, wherein no progress is made but progress is wanted (a state with negative affect). It can sometimes be experienced very quickly and not be potent at all, but the negative affect beforehand is still there.
I don't agree that where progress is wanted denotes a negative or dislike of your current position but rather a draw towards something better than you have currently.
I think arguing that both desirous and bored states produce negative affect is the best argument I've got for you. I've done that at more length in earlier posts.

However, I do agree that the even finite amount of effort put into conceiving an idea or desire for something is an amount of effort. Therefore, I agree it is impossible to put no effort into a desire of yours as you had to conceive your desire.
This effort should produce a tiny amount of negative affect.

Meanwhile, the negative feeling of work with no progress is dependent on what the individual feels they should have achieved by the work they put into it. For instance, if a person put an hour of shoveling into digging a hole and the progress is less than they expected, they will feel disappointed, while if they made more progress than they expected they will be impressed and glad for the accomplishment.
This is all fine.

Therefore, if a person feels the work put into conceiving an idea should get no progress towards the goal than there will be no negative effect, while if they believe the effort of conception should be rewarded by progress towards an idea then they will feel disappointed. I'm trying to demonstrate how negative effect from lack of accomplishment towards a goal is dependent on the person's mentality of what they believe they deserve or should have received rather than their actual accomplishment, progress, or effort put into the goal.
Work naturally produces negative affect in itself through the physical exertion and desire. Both of those exists regardless of the mentality the person has. 

I was going to say that working with no expectation of progress isn't a real thing, but I guess people tinker and play around with things sometimes, and I guess that qualifies as work.
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@Critical-Tim
Being that it is not certain that one can say a child's life could be overall positive or negative, it is not definitely a right or wrong choice for any parent to have or not have a child. 
Would you be okay with someone taking your money (without your permission) and gambling with it in a casino?
It would depend if the alternative was having no money ever by never existing. If I had the chance to exist with the money or not exist at all I would say go ahead and do it.

Even now you are asking my consent to be brought into existence. Therefore, the best thing we can do is make the assumption of what the individual would want.
Okay, let's assume that you did have the chance to exist, and that this money was placed in a trust fund for you to eventually use (i.e. it's effectively yours). Once you're born and 18 years old, is there any question as to whether you'd be okay with someone taking and using this money to gamble in a casino?

Obviously, the potential human wouldn't be okay (once they exist) with you using their money to gamble in a casino (you're more than likely going to lose and you didn't get their consent). So, it's obvious that a potential human, once they're born, wouldn't be okay with you gambling with their quality of existence (if life is, overall, a net negative in terms of instances of negative affect *and* the total value of those instances. You also didn't get their consent).
This is a different example as it uses an individual who is already born, and you are gambling with the money so I'm not sure whether my example or your example correlates to the example of bringing someone's life into existence. However, if the money was given to me, I suppose I would not want the money to be gambled but I would also keep in mind that this was not rightfully my money to begin with rather it was a gift. It's wrong to take a gift back once you have given it, But I still don't see a clear relation between your example and bringing someone into existence.

Nonetheless we are still basing it upon the child's consent and by never bringing that child into existence they don't have much to say against being brought into existence. Therefore, the child can say nothing until it has existed about its will to be non-existent.
It is a different example, but it's about a person yet to be born (who we can guess will be born), and that's the reason I changed it (it's more similar than my original example because it talks about someone yet to be born, rather than someone already born).

The analogy here is that, without the future person's permission, you're gambling with his/her money (analogous to his/her quality of life).

Money gifted to you is your money, otherwise it's a loan. There's no expectation for the money to be paid back. Analogously, your quality of life is your own, and in both scenarios this analogy sets up, both are gambled with without consent.

We know that the child can't currently say anything, but are we assuming that any future person would be okay with having their money gambled with like that, all without their permission? Similarly, if life is overall a negative experience, are we assuming that any future person would be okay with having their quality of life gambled with like that, all without their permission?

I suppose it all comes down to whether life is more negative than positive.
I still think the unconsented imposition of life is still an issue, unless life is guaranteed to be enjoyable for everyone.
There's always a risk that you condemn someone to a truly horrible experience, totally without any consent.
Of course, whether life is more negative than positive will severely affect the impact of the lack-of-consent argument, but it's still a moral dilemma that has some inherent weight. 
I do acknowledge that there are certain people whose lives are going to be more negative than positive and that by continuing life we are imposing the negativity that can be viewed as torture on those few individuals which are nonetheless innocent human beings. Though I'm not certain it justifies taking away the people who are alive today who could have had families and loved ones and imposing upon them a lonesome ending to existence without their consent. Ultimately, I recognize the continuation of human existence as an immoral act but also the act of removing humanity from existence and I'm not sure which one if either justifies the other.
That's actually quite a tough point to address, partly because I haven't thought of it before.

I think depriving of current people of procreation isn't immoral because bringing people into existence would be considered immoral. Another way of saying it is this: it's not moral to experience pleasure at the expense of others.
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@Critical-Tim

I would like to focus on your proof about life being more negative than positive. As I understand it, the view of the world is subjective and varying among the individual and therefore we have no definitive answer for whether life is more negative or positive.
It's subjective but it varies within a range. For example, we don't have people who experience a continual dopamine hit throughout their entire lives -- that's not within the range.

I think there is a definitive answer out there, but I don't think we currently have the tools necessary to determine the exact amount. Albeit, I think we can estimate to a good degree roughly how much the average person experiences negative affect versus positive affect. I suppose 1b could be fleshed out to include other estimate proofs, such as the worst negatives being more impactful than the best positives, and maybe a more detailed estimate of the qualitative affect experienced by the average life. It's why I labelled the thread "antinatalism is theoretically correct" -- there's a really good chance the stance is correct.
I agree that positive and negative feelings vary within a range and between all individuals. However, I don't believe that there is a definitive answer because that would imply there is an Exact answer that applies to everyone and being the subjective nature of the question that implies it varies between individuals. Ultimately, I recognize that it varies within a range and that there is a threshold that most or all individuals would consider positive or negative, but I also recognize the subjective nature implies there is no standard or exact amount of positivity and negativity within a person's life. For instance, the mentality of an individual effect however small a portion of their life and if you have two individuals that lived in exact same life in parallel universes down to the exact same person, they would have accumulated different levels of positive and negative feeling by the end of their lives.
I agree that we don't have a definitive answer as of now.

I think it's possible to have an accurate estimate based on a whole bunch of averages, though. I think David Benatar makes this argument with his work (I haven't read that part thoroughly). His argument might be potent enough to get anti-natalism over the line, despite not having an exact answer. It goes beyond the scope of the thread because I'm only arguing as to whether anti-natalism is theoretically correct, rather than correct.

I do wonder how much a positive mentality helps with life, and to what extent is it genetically determined. I think you're right in saying that's an important thing to consider.
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@Critical-Tim
I was hungry, but it wasn't quite negative, I would do it again if we had such a delicious big meal to have for dinner.
If hunger produced positive affect, we wouldn't be urged to eat when we enter it.

It's fine to say that you weren't starving, and therefore the negative affect wasn't that bad, but everyone wants to escape hunger.

What I'm trying to say is that it is our hunger that allows us to enjoy food. Therefore, I don't believe that hunger itself is a negative but rather the absence of food which is a basic necessity of life. As I've said before anything below the basic necessity of life is considered negative having the basic necessities of life is neutral and having an abundance or surplus of the basic necessities of life is a positive and those very dependent on an individual's perspective.
I'm not basing my argument about whether something is "positive" or "negative". I'm talking about whether the affect (i.e. feelings, emotions, whatever you want to call it) is negative or positive. I'm talking specifically about affect because my argument is grounded in it (negative affect is bad; positive affect is good).
I don't believe that the feeling of hunger itself is negative or positive, rather it just is. Hunger can be used for good such as enjoying a delicious Thanksgiving dinner and hunger can be used for evil such as starving captives of war.
I don't think anyone on the planet enjoys being hungry, particularly at greatest starvation depths. The good is only coming in satisfying the hunger, not in the presence of it.

I really think that hunger producing negative affect is axiomatic. I think you could make better counterarguments to my claims that boredom and desire are negative.

The same could be said for a hammer, a hammer could be used to murder someone, or a hammer could be used to build a house. I don't believe the hammer is good or evil but rather just is and can be used for both ways.
Having a hammer isn't by default unenjoyable like hunger, so I don't think this analogy lines up.
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@Critical-Tim
On the other hand, not having anything does not continue to make us have less and less in the sense that our stomach would, this is why it is not an accurate depiction.
It does continue to make us have "less and less" because failing to have goals complete is inherently negative (brings negative affect that ranges from slight annoyance, to irritation, to frustration, to depression), even if to a far lesser degree than being hungry or thirsty. People aren't in a neutral state when they fail to attain their goal of making it into Harvard. People aren't in a neutral state when after several years, their investments on the stock market fail to rise at all (assuming their goal is to make money).
This would depend on the person's perspective. Personally, I would be disappointed if I had invested my life savings into the stock market and it had not risen after many years. However, given the current situation with the stock market I would be glad if my stocks hadn't risen at all, as long as they didn't go down, I'd be glad. It depends on a person's perspective.
The specific time in the market doesn't matter, so let's blow that out to a full market cycle (7-10 years), wherein you'd expect your portfolio to do better.
Let's just assume, for sake of argument, that there isn't a 7-10 year long Great Depression.
Would seeing that your portfolio hasn't changed value in 7-10 years (i.e. made no progress) bring any kind of negative affect?
At some point, your perspective gets engulfed by reality, regardless of how positive you try to be.
I don't believe a stagnant portfolio in our economy is an accurate reflection of a neutral state. This is because the only reason a portfolio is negative is caused by inflation. If the economy had no inflation, then a stagnant portfolio wouldn't be a negative. The negative is caused when the value of your portfolio goes down because of inflation, so stagnation isn't a negative, depreciation is negative.
The positivity/negativity isn't in reference to the portfolio itself; rather, it's referring to the affect in a person's reaction to stagnation/depreciation (whatever you want to call it). I don't think there's a chance in hell anyone wouldn't be experiencing negative affect if they checked their stock portfolio after 10 years, only to find it hasn't budged.
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@Critical-Tim
I believe that there are three states of being consisting of negative, neutral, and positive; It is quite similar to the laws of electrical engineering. A person moves from the negative to the neutral because they dislike the negative circumstance, they can also move from the neutral to the positive because they like the positive.
I think what you're saying about the moving from neutral to positive could be theoretically correct, it's just never correct in regards to goals. 
Relating to goals, if a person puts no work into their goal, I do not believe they should be disappointed they have not achieved it, but I also believe that they should not be glad they have not achieved it. This is because nothing has been put in, and nothing has been given, I consider this a neutral state. Would you agree?
No, because people don't make goals in order to not achieve them. People make goals in order to, in their eyes, improve their life. When people realize that they're not improving their lives, or when they experience real world repercussions for not achieving their goal, more negative affect is produced.
Being in a state with unfulfilled goals produces negative affect, however small it is.
I believe the negative experience from not improving one's life is mainly due to the expectation of the individual. For many individuals improving one's life has been indoctrinated since birth and therefore the negative experience is still due to the mental state or expectation of the individual.
I think it's safe to say that this "expectation" is a product of a human's desire. Thus, due to desire producing negative affect, and humans naturally desiring, it can be said that human life naturally produces negative affect.

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@Critical-Tim
An example would be having enough money to make a means of living in a decent house to that person's standards. A neutral state would be having the basic necessities of life which are subjective to the individual so keep that in mind.
I would even question whether there is a true neutral in this because once all the basic necessities are met, boredom and self-actualization become the problems.
It is definitely a possibility, but not a certainty. It would depend on the individual's mentality.
Is boredom not inherently producing negative affect, regardless of your mentality? 

As for self-actualization, that would be subject to the general 'negative affect before positive affect' argument a1 that I've argued, so I don't think I could provide anything else to this part.
I don't understand the intended question. Boredom is a state of mentality.
Is it uncomfortable to be in a state of boredom?

Some individuals when they realize their potential, they become ecstatic about the possibilities in how their life could now unfold. I don't find any negativity in this, and being positivity is often or even occasional to follow, negativity can be but isn't always a predecessor of positivity.
Yes, there's a lot of positive affect that can result from self-actualization.

I could try a different angle: would you agree that the greater the difficulty in the self-actualizing activity, the greater the positive affect your body rewards you with?
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@zedvictor4
We understand the definition of morality is the ability to determine what is good and what is bad. I subcategorize morality as being biological or conscious. Biological morality is something that you feel is right or wrong, conscious morality is something you believe is right or wrong based on logic and knowledge.

There may not be real categories of morality labeled this but for conversation I am categorizing the different types of morals as being biological or conscious.
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@Kaitlyn
They do not dislike what they have, they are glad to have the basic necessities of life including lack of hunger, fresh water, a roof over their head, etc. It is not that they are discontented that they have a house or that they dislike they have fresh water, it is that they are drawn to have more because it is a positive. Therefore, I don't believe having water is considered a negative state but rather a neutral one.
Initially, I think we can both agree that there is no dislike of what they have. 

I think where we disagree is that I believe people eventually become accustomed to what they have, and the 'new, shiny toy' luster wears off. That's when either boredom/new desire take hold and produce new negative affect.

Do you agree that boredom and desire produce negative affect?
Yes, I believe boredom does produce a negative effect, and that desire is capable of producing a negative effect.
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@Kaitlyn
If you were to put me in a field with pieces of gold and there were five gold bars around me and you said grab as many as I wanted, I would not feel negative if I only grabbed one, I would feel positive because I had more than I had previously. Similarly, I see another gold bar and I'm not satisfied with what I have because I would like to grab another. However, I still feel positive because I have a solid gold bar in my hands. What I'm trying to demonstrate is that by trying to achieve more it is not out of dislike of the current circumstance because it is negative but rather because what you could have is better than what you have now. A positive state is better than a neutral one therefore a person in a neutral state would strive for a positive one. I am not grabbing a second gold bar because I don't like the first one but rather because positive or more is better than less. Please let me know if this makes sense, I'm trying to clearly demonstrate how a circumstance may be neutral and that striving for something better does not make what you have a negative but rather that where you're going is better than where you're at.
The way I see it, there's an intermediary step:

See gold bar (negative affect in desire) --> Grab gold bar (positive affect in goal achievement) --> See another gold bar (negative affect in desire) etc.

I think the critical point of contention here is whether desire produces negative affect.

We might be able to see this clearer with an extreme example. If a person desired something their entire life, and they never attained what they desired, would that person remain in a neutral state? Would there be any negative affect involved in being unable to attain what they desired?
If they're alive to contemplate it, they may not feel negative because they believe they can obtain it. Only a person who no longer is alive would feel negative that they cannot obtain what they desire and being there no longer alive to contemplate their emotions they would not feel a negative effect. It is in this sense that a person is able to escape negative effect by it postponing it past the end of their life.

I still don't believe desire is a negative but rather the absence of a positive and that people are drawn towards the positive. This implicates that there is a positive, a neutral, and a negative state of being. I do understand your example and how you can use desire to create a negative effect but I do not agree that in the general sense desire is a negative.

I believe we have discussed this quite thoroughly and I understand your case quite clearly. I believe the distinction that is being made is that you view desire as negative and I view it as a potential and being that an emotion is subjective I believe it varies between individuals and so I cannot be certain that one of us is right and not the other. Ultimately, I believe our discussion on whether there is a neutral state or not has been quite educational and I would like to continue discussing more about the morality of continuing human existence knowing that certain individuals in life will have more negative lives than positive ones and therefore by continuing the human race we are imposing a sense of torture on innocent individuals.
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@Kaitlyn
Additionally, your argument requires negativity to always precede positivity. If you agreed with my argument, you would agree that people can move from a neutral state which is not dislikable but rather neutral as negative would be dislikable and they move from that neutral to a positive state in which the positive state they are drawn towards because it is a surplus and desirable more so than the absence of positive or negativity. It is evidence that positivity can exist without the predecessor of negativity. This disproves the foundation of the argument that there is always more negative in the world. This is not much of a new question, but it is another way of expressing the belief of the negative, neutral, and positive state of beings. Only once we have established that can we begin to answer the question of whether negativity always precedes positivity.
I'm agreeing which the specific part of your argument that argues, "that's not a positive they were given it with no effort or obstacles which is not an accomplishment which is not rewardable by joy or satisfaction". I'm not agreeing with your overall argument, especially the part that claims people can be a in a neutral state whilst having goals.
I understand now, I would like to focus on two aspects of the concept of anti-natalism.
Firstly, whether life has equal or greater negativity than positivity, and secondly, whether there is a neutral state of being aside from the negative and positive ones.
I'm not convinced that the total valence of negative affect outweighs the total valence of positive affect, in regards to all of humanity, but I think it's theoretically more possible than the inverse. My argument 1b could certainly be beefed up, but at least the argument is theoretically correct (hence the thread's title).

I don't know whether a neutral state ever exists for a human. Humans seem to be in a constant flux between desire and boredom. It appears that we're designed to be motivated, not satisfied.
Some people pursue lifelong goals from the beginning of their lives while others learn to do so down the road. By always striving for one's goal through progressing towards it using steppingstones of accomplishment you will never be in a state of boredom, because you never reach the finish line.
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@Kaitlyn
I'm not actually an anti-natalist, so I can't believe this. However, I think this would be a reasonable position for an anti-natalist to take, and if I were to become one, I'd take this position. 
Being you have such a firm grasp on the logistics of the concept, why wouldn't you be an anti-natalist?
I still don't agree all states are negative or positive, as I believe there is a negative state of being. But I do agree there are inevitably people whose lives are more negative than positive. Therefore, by continuing the species of human existence we willingly impose this on those individuals as a form of torturing the innocent.
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@Kaitlyn
Ultimately, it again proves that obstacles are not negative or positive but rather the individual subjectively determines whether or not the obstacle affects them negatively, neutrally, or positively. Therefore, the question of Anti-Natalism is a matter of subjective opinion, one individual may feel overall negative and therefore anti-natalism would be correct for that individual, while for another feels they can cope with life's challenges and therefore anti-natalism would be incorrect for that individual, there is no one size fits all.
You're just not thinking about the words you're typing.

For example, anyone who is raped in life experiences massive obstacles of (often life-long) trauma that is clearly severe negative affect. Nobody who is raped thinks, 'Great. This is an opportunity to overcome this obstacle and show that I have a mind of a conqueror'. It's just sheer nonsense to think that people who were raped don't have to experience negative affect.

You seem to think that any emotional reaction to events is purely a matter of choice, as if blowing a chunk out of someone's arm with a shotgun wouldn't immediately send them into shock. Total non-reality.
That would not be an obstacle but rather an evil, evil and tragedy are both different than obstacles. I believe I should draw the distinctions between them. An obstacle is something that is a challenge it usually is something that can be accomplished or overcome but it is sort of like a resistance to achieving one's goal.
Evil is something that is done by another with malevolence in the heart. It is not something that was meant to be but rather caused by another individual.
Tragedy is something that is or was inevitable by nature, it was caused by the universe and was not done so by one's will.

The tryouts to a sports event is an obstacle, so is the difficulty in obtaining the championship.
An individual that harms another before they go into that championship was not an obstacle but an evil.
The tsunami that wiped out their house while they were on vacation for the championship tryouts was a tragedy not an evil or an obstacle.
I think these examples are obstacles, and I'll show it's so with a definition:
Obstacle -- something that impedes progress or achievement Obstacle Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The emotional trauma involved in rape would impede progress/achievement in everyday life. Therefore, it should count as an obstacle (as well as a tragedy).
An individual harming others before a race was an obstacle because they prevented others from achievement in the event.
A tsunami wiping out their house is an obstacle because they'd no doubt what to progress with their lives after their event, and their wiped-out house impedes that.
Tragedies are typically unavoidable and negative, obstacles impede progress or achievement, I agree that certain things can be both tragedies and obstacles by meeting the criteria for each. I believe that a certain level of restraint towards progression is what makes progression valuable, and that the friction towards one's goals isn't negative. If everything in life could be given at the snap of a finger, life would inevitably become boredom. This is why I value restraint as an aspect of life that can provide value through accomplishments. 
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@Kaitlyn

I must agree that certain obstacles are less of a challenge to overcome and more of a tragedy of life. Such as your example of an infant dying from heart disease right after birth. However for most individuals this is not the case and I still believe that if the child and parents were unaware that this would happen the child would have wanted to take the chance of being the majority who don't get the disease and potentially if raised properly view life through a positive lens and therefore live a happy life.
It's possible that some people would want to take the chance, but we don't know for sure because there is no consent (my OP's argument 2). So, you're just gambling with someone's life without asking them first.

There's plenty of other horrible things that can go wrong in life, particularly towards the backend of life. Various cancers are quite common and often devastating. Chronic illnesses can pop up, too. It's not just dying from heart disease in infancy that is the only serious problem. The chances of you making it through life without something terrible happening can't be too high (and you're guaranteed to die at the end, too).

Also, unless you think that 100% of people would be fine taking this gamble, you're imposing this gamble on people without their consent *and* without thinking they would accept it -- that's morally problematic.
You mention 100% of people must be willing to accept it, what if 99% of people would have been grateful and experienced a good life. Are you to say that we are to deny those 99% of people the chance or human right to experience life? It's a give and take, you argue it's wrong to bring a person into existence if there is an even a small chance they will dislike it, but you don't mention about denying the many people who would have been grateful and glad to have it. How is this justifiable without their consent for the denial of life?
Do you think it's morally acceptable to torture 1% of people for the benefit of the 99%?

If yes, what about torturing 20%? Or 50%? Or 99%?

No, I don't, you point out exactly what I would like to address. I believe most would agree it is morally wrong to torture even just 1% without their consent. I also believe most people would agree it is morally wrong to deny people the benefits of life without their consent. I would like to discuss what we should do in order to handle this situation.

Are we to deny all people life because some people, however few, do not live an ideal life?
Are we to impose the inevitable tragedy upon that small percentage in order to benefit the majority?

I don't like either of these choices, and how does one choice trump the other?
It's not that these people, "do not live an ideal life." It's that it's torturous living it. If it was only them not living an ideal life, I think I would it's morally excusable. 

I don't think it would be moral to impose the inevitable tragedy on a few, hence I think that would affirm my anti-natalist sentiments. I made that choice because I think the avoidance of harm is far more valuable than experience of pleasure, and I showed this (to some extent) in my 1b argument from the OP.
Who determines which life is torturous and another non-ideal?
I could make a great argument that a person in the future living a better life than the best person today could consider it torturous.
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@Kaitlyn
I do see the moral problem of procreation, if some people are inevitably going to have more negative than positivity in their life and therefore by procreation, we are accepting the imposed negativity onto others however small the percentage nonetheless we are acting in a way we know will harm others by continuing the species. I do recognize this as a moral problem, while I also recognize the denial of life as a problem. I would like to discuss this further.
My stance is that I don't think we can accept the imposed negativity. 
I agree but I also don't believe it is justified against the denial of life. Ultimately, I believe that the continuation and deprivation of life is an immoral act, and I cannot easily identify one being more valid than the other.
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@Kaitlyn
It is certain that looking back from an adult standpoint of the infant they would be disappointed possibly even angry with the concept of life that they got the unlucky small percentage, but this is not the child or the parent's fault but rather a tragedy of life, And I believe the child again with a positive lens of life would have been willing to take the risk.
It is the parents' fault because they chose to bring the child into existence. We're not forced to have children. Parents are the ones imposing these risks on a future human.
Should I hold you morally accountable for going to work every day because you know that there is a chance someone could jump in front of your car you are aware that it's possible? You know it's a possibility, you know it's a small percentage, you still consistently do it every single day. How is this justifiable?
There's a clear difference in likelihood and imposition, but you know what?
It's not.
Let's bring a graceful end to human life so scenarios like this can't happen.
So, you don't believe it is right to kill but you do believe it is acceptable to discontinue the species. I find this idea quite interesting. It's not quite a genocide while at the same time it is the discontinuation of the species, it is truly a fascinating concept to think about.
Yes, it's certainly not something you'd stumble across in your day-to-day life.

It helps the argument get around a lot of nasty arguments involved planned genocide and things of that nature.

Anti-natalism is ultimately about reducing negative affect as much as humanly possible. That's why it avoids the whole genocide thing (because that would produce a whole bunch of seriously horrific negative affect).
It would only produce a seriously horrific negative effect if there was someone around to experience it.
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@Kaitlyn


I believe the resolution to the problem is to have genetic engineers continue the species and completely restrict unauthorized sex. This would limit only individuals who are sure to be intelligent and successful participants of society to be brought into existence, and they could be immune to almost every disease and illness, not to mention they would be almost perfectly designed so it would be impossible for any of them to die from a miscarriage.
I actually really like this idea lol :)

It is this way the species could continue while maintaining a less tragic existence for all individuals. Additionally, with advancing technology we could prevent even more deaths from natural disasters, and we could implement insurance covered by taxes that would ensure people don't lose their material assets due to tragedies. We could even engineer individuals so that everyone would be happy with their role in society.
Yep, sounds great!

Have you read Brave New World by Aldous Huxley?
No, but I've read the Cliff Notes:

-- I don't like the quasi-religious worship of Ford. I think humans need to evolve past religion
-- I like the idea of governments genetically testing people at birth to see which work would be suit them. It would prevent many lost souls
-- I think the hyper-conformist nature does have issues. I think it's quite Asian and a lot of the other races wouldn't go along with it. I also wouldn't like it if it was headed by a human, because that will 100% lead to corruption
-- I think the concept of happy pills (Soma) is generally a good idea, unless there is a genuine problem. Whilst not in the book, I'm very much a fan of things like wireheads or super drugs that boost moods, so long as the side-effects are negative (or too negative)

I'm not quite sure how I feel about this idea, regardless, it is the solution to the problem. What are your thoughts?
I think it would be a massive improvement for humanity. 
I agree it would be a massive improvement for humanity. I also agree that religion has its place in society and there was a time when it was needed but I also believe that in the future and as we progress in life that it is becoming less and less necessary as we better understand the world through science and need less of a mythological understanding of the world through metaphors and personified deities that represent ideas and concepts of the world as we have once used.

I agree that many people in the modern day would not like this hyper-conformist solution. I believe it is because of their attachment to their idea that they believe they are autonomous and unpredictable individuals who are capable of free will and not able to be contained. It would prove them incorrect, and they would very much dislike seeing this happen. I believe that Free Will is someone being free to do their Will. Therefore, if an individual's Will is restricted, they are free to do their Will and predictable at the same time. Ultimately, I believe this to be a reasonable solution and a futuristic society where everyone is happy with what they have and their lives are much more positive than negative as positivity is not based on the objective surroundings of the individual but rather how they feel which can be engineered through their genetic makeup.
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@Kaitlyn
Therefore, if a person feels the work put into conceiving an idea should get no progress towards the goal than there will be no negative effect, while if they believe the effort of conception should be rewarded by progress towards an idea then they will feel disappointed. I'm trying to demonstrate how negative effect from lack of accomplishment towards a goal is dependent on the person's mentality of what they believe they deserve or should have received rather than their actual accomplishment, progress, or effort put into the goal.
Work naturally produces negative affect in itself through the physical exertion and desire. Both of those exists regardless of the mentality the person has. 
I was going to say that working with no expectation of progress isn't a real thing, but I guess people tinker and play around with things sometimes, and I guess that qualifies as work.
I don't believe that physical exertion is a form of negative effect, this is because negative effects are experienced emotionally and not through physical effort. It is possible through physical means that a person feels negative, but it is not the effort or physical aspect of the situation that makes it a negative but rather the emotional aspect.
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@Kaitlyn
I do acknowledge that there are certain people whose lives are going to be more negative than positive and that by continuing life we are imposing the negativity that can be viewed as torture on those few individuals which are nonetheless innocent human beings. Though I'm not certain it justifies taking away the people who are alive today who could have had families and loved ones and imposing upon them a lonesome ending to existence without their consent. Ultimately, I recognize the continuation of human existence as an immoral act but also the act of removing humanity from existence and I'm not sure which one if either justifies the other.
That's actually quite a tough point to address, partly because I haven't thought of it before.

I think depriving of current people of procreation isn't immoral because bringing people into existence would be considered immoral. Another way of saying it is this: it's not moral to experience pleasure at the expense of others.
I agree, it's not moral to experience pleasure at the expense of others. Meanwhile, it is not the individuals who are going to suffer the fate of a lonesome ending that have imposed immoral acts onto others who will suffer, but rather their predecessors. Therefore, the individuals who will suffer a lonesome ending to existence will be paying the price of their predecessors imposed immoral acts. We also know that it is wrong to take an innocent human being who did not ask to exist to then suffer the consequences of a lonesome ending because of their predecessor in order to justify the immoral act caused by the predecessor. Ultimately, the act of enforcing anti natalism could be seen as an act of injustice as we are trying to rectify the immoral act of the predecessor by imposing a consequence on the innocent.
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@Kaitlyn
I was hungry, but it wasn't quite negative, I would do it again if we had such a delicious big meal to have for dinner.
If hunger produced positive affect, we wouldn't be urged to eat when we enter it.

It's fine to say that you weren't starving, and therefore the negative affect wasn't that bad, but everyone wants to escape hunger.

What I'm trying to say is that it is our hunger that allows us to enjoy food. Therefore, I don't believe that hunger itself is a negative but rather the absence of food which is a basic necessity of life. As I've said before anything below the basic necessity of life is considered negative having the basic necessities of life is neutral and having an abundance or surplus of the basic necessities of life is a positive and those very dependent on an individual's perspective.
I'm not basing my argument about whether something is "positive" or "negative". I'm talking about whether the affect (i.e. feelings, emotions, whatever you want to call it) is negative or positive. I'm talking specifically about affect because my argument is grounded in it (negative affect is bad; positive affect is good).
I don't believe that the feeling of hunger itself is negative or positive, rather it just is. Hunger can be used for good such as enjoying a delicious Thanksgiving dinner and hunger can be used for evil such as starving captives of war.
I don't think anyone on the planet enjoys being hungry, particularly at greatest starvation depths. The good is only coming in satisfying the hunger, not in the presence of it.

I really think that hunger producing negative affect is axiomatic. I think you could make better counterarguments to my claims that boredom and desire are negative.

The same could be said for a hammer, a hammer could be used to murder someone, or a hammer could be used to build a house. I don't believe the hammer is good or evil but rather just is and can be used for both ways.
Having a hammer isn't by default unenjoyable like hunger, so I don't think this analogy lines up.
I see the discrepancy you pointed out. I suppose it is more like a person being forced to use a hammer. They must choose between using the hammer to build or to destroy, they cannot avoid using it. Just because someone is forced to use the hammer does not make the hammer good or bad. In the same way, we are unwillingly made hungry by the absence of food, and we can use this both ways.
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@Kaitlyn
On the other hand, not having anything does not continue to make us have less and less in the sense that our stomach would, this is why it is not an accurate depiction.
It does continue to make us have "less and less" because failing to have goals complete is inherently negative (brings negative affect that ranges from slight annoyance, to irritation, to frustration, to depression), even if to a far lesser degree than being hungry or thirsty. People aren't in a neutral state when they fail to attain their goal of making it into Harvard. People aren't in a neutral state when after several years, their investments on the stock market fail to rise at all (assuming their goal is to make money).
This would depend on the person's perspective. Personally, I would be disappointed if I had invested my life savings into the stock market and it had not risen after many years. However, given the current situation with the stock market I would be glad if my stocks hadn't risen at all, as long as they didn't go down, I'd be glad. It depends on a person's perspective.
The specific time in the market doesn't matter, so let's blow that out to a full market cycle (7-10 years), wherein you'd expect your portfolio to do better.
Let's just assume, for sake of argument, that there isn't a 7-10 year long Great Depression.
Would seeing that your portfolio hasn't changed value in 7-10 years (i.e. made no progress) bring any kind of negative affect?
At some point, your perspective gets engulfed by reality, regardless of how positive you try to be.
I don't believe a stagnant portfolio in our economy is an accurate reflection of a neutral state. This is because the only reason a portfolio is negative is caused by inflation. If the economy had no inflation, then a stagnant portfolio wouldn't be a negative. The negative is caused when the value of your portfolio goes down because of inflation, so stagnation isn't a negative, depreciation is negative.
The positivity/negativity isn't in reference to the portfolio itself; rather, it's referring to the affect in a person's reaction to stagnation/depreciation (whatever you want to call it). I don't think there's a chance in hell anyone wouldn't be experiencing negative affect if they checked their stock portfolio after 10 years, only to find it hasn't budged.
This is a bit of a tangent; however, I will go into the details. The economy is increasing through inflation and therefore things lose value without moving up. If a person's finances or portfolio goes up at the exact same rate as the economy, they may have double the money in 10 years, but their value hasn't gone up at all. This is because their fraction of the economy has stayed the same size as it has increased at the same proportion as inflation. If their portfolio grows faster than the economy their value has increased well if their portfolio has increased slower than the economy's inflation, then it has actually decreased in value even if the amount of money in their portfolio has increased. Therefore, if a person's finances doubles in 20 years it may be less than the economy's inflation and therefore worth less than it had been originally, but the individuals still feel satisfied and positive because they see it has grown. Thus, the positivity of a person's situation is determined by how they perceive the situation and how they emotionally feel.
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@Kaitlyn
I believe that there are three states of being consisting of negative, neutral, and positive; It is quite similar to the laws of electrical engineering. A person moves from the negative to the neutral because they dislike the negative circumstance, they can also move from the neutral to the positive because they like the positive.
I think what you're saying about the moving from neutral to positive could be theoretically correct, it's just never correct in regards to goals. 
Relating to goals, if a person puts no work into their goal, I do not believe they should be disappointed they have not achieved it, but I also believe that they should not be glad they have not achieved it. This is because nothing has been put in, and nothing has been given, I consider this a neutral state. Would you agree?
No, because people don't make goals in order to not achieve them. People make goals in order to, in their eyes, improve their life. When people realize that they're not improving their lives, or when they experience real world repercussions for not achieving their goal, more negative affect is produced.
Being in a state with unfulfilled goals produces negative affect, however small it is.
I believe the negative experience from not improving one's life is mainly due to the expectation of the individual. For many individuals improving one's life has been indoctrinated since birth and therefore the negative experience is still due to the mental state or expectation of the individual.
I think it's safe to say that this "expectation" is a product of a human's desire. Thus, due to desire producing negative affect, and humans naturally desiring, it can be said that human life naturally produces negative affect.
Yes, negative effect is a naturally occurring emotion produced by human life. Although, I don't quite see a correlation between expectation and desire. I apologize if I did not receive the explanation you expressed (thoroughly) as you would have liked, as it still makes more sense to me that there is a neutral state of being. Therefore, I still view this desire as a neutral state of being that has the potential to go from neutral to either a negative or positive state of being.
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@Kaitlyn
Some individuals when they realize their potential, they become ecstatic about the possibilities in how their life could now unfold. I don't find any negativity in this, and being positivity is often or even occasional to follow, negativity can be but isn't always a predecessor of positivity.
Yes, there's a lot of positive affect that can result from self-actualization.
I could try a different angle: would you agree that the greater the difficulty in the self-actualizing activity, the greater the positive affect your body rewards you with?
I would agree in most cases, as it still depends on how the individual views themself and their progress.

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Hmmmm.

Feel and believe?

One would assume that one believes because one feels.

All internal electro-chemical data processing.

In my opinion.


Good and Bad?

Concepts relative to conditioning and experience.

And variable.

In my opinion.
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Hmmmm.
Feel and believe?
One would assume that one believes because one feels.
An example of the distinction between beliefs and feelings would be depression. One who no longer believes in something they feel is right causes major life realignment and changes in one's personality. Through this process many experience depression.
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Change of mood, change of ideas a change of data processing relative to physiological processes.

Might affect unit performance.

But I don't see how it affects the sequence of feeling and belief.

Not that I am a big fan of the concept of belief.

And I would also suggest that depression is an overused umbrella term these days.

I'm not sure that gloominess relative to poor performance and/or responsibility, should be regarded in the same light as acute clinical depression.

I think that jumping on the depression bandwagon, is often just a modern cop out and avoidance of both social responsibilities and ones own responsibility to oneself.


It's one of those situations, where if you put ten people in a line up, it would be obvious which one was going to present as a depressive.


But I suppose that it could also be said that weight evolutionary expectation does overburden the species.

And therefore some types will be affected more than others.


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@Critical-Tim
They do not dislike what they have, they are glad to have the basic necessities of life including lack of hunger, fresh water, a roof over their head, etc. It is not that they are discontented that they have a house or that they dislike they have fresh water, it is that they are drawn to have more because it is a positive. Therefore, I don't believe having water is considered a negative state but rather a neutral one.
Initially, I think we can both agree that there is no dislike of what they have. 

I think where we disagree is that I believe people eventually become accustomed to what they have, and the 'new, shiny toy' luster wears off. That's when either boredom/new desire take hold and produce new negative affect.

Do you agree that boredom and desire produce negative affect?
Yes, I believe boredom does produce a negative effect, and that desire is capable of producing a negative effect.
I suppose the next question is: how quickly does one enter boredom, once one attains their goal? Is there immediate, slight boredom? Or does it require time?

If there is immediate boredom (negative affect), then that negative affect could be considered to be guaranteed before any progress (positive affect) is produced.
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It's about whether it's morally correct to have children.
A society based on this would be extinct, which is why we have natural instincts that could be classified as "immoral instincts" to override rational thought.

This would also bolster the claim that a society built on rational thought is not evolutionarily fit to survive.
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@zedvictor4
Change of mood, change of ideas a change of data processing relative to physiological processes.
Might affect unit performance.
But I don't see how it affects the sequence of feeling and belief.
Not that I am a big fan of the concept of belief.
I respect people who have their supernatural beliefs because I understand that they are incapable of having an understanding through logical means, or have been too indoctrinated by their culture and not autonomous enough to come up with their own understanding of the world. I agree and do not generally like the concept of belief in a supernatural sense. However, unbeknownst to me I have evolved my understanding of the world to what makes the most logical and rational sense
and later on, discovered my belief is most accurately correlative with naturalistic pantheism. This view recognizes the universe itself as the highest form of Divinity and therefore a person would consider God would be the universe itself which is not a supernatural but rather a natural essence. it's not such an unreasonable claim as it cannot be broken or denied everything must fit within the universe and must be contained within it and therefore the greatest thing must be the universe as a whole. I also recognize the existence of an afterlife which is less of a cognitive sense or place in the sky as many would believe but rather as a reverberation of one's consciousness that resonates on the Earth after they cease to exist. Ultimately, I recognize atheism as a Childish resentment towards the idea of a supernatural deity  Which is typically a result of evolving ones mindset and realizing that they were tricked through their childhood into believing something that they can no longer without recognizing the possibility that the greatest thing in the universe is itself as a whole. Originally, I was a Christian but then I became an atheist only after a brief time later I recognize that if there was something divine it would be the universe itself and although I do not treat the universe as though it is cognitive or alive, but I recognize it as the highest form of existing divinity. So, while I would more closely associate myself as an atheist than a religious person, I believe in what I consider to be the most accurate and verifiable understanding of the world. Though, I don't recognize how this directly correlates with antinatalism.

And I would also suggest that depression is an overused umbrella term these days.
I'm not sure that gloominess relative to poor performance and/or responsibility, should be regarded in the same light as acute clinical depression.
I think that jumping on the depression bandwagon, is often just a modern cop out and avoidance of both social responsibilities and ones own responsibility to oneself.
I agree, it is hard to tell what clinical depression is and what it is not since you can never experience it the same as another person.
Who's to say who's acting and who's for real? Who's to say which is acting like an infant while the other with high restraint.

It's one of those situations, where if you put ten people in a line up, it would be obvious which one was going to present as a depressive.
But I suppose that it could also be said that weight evolutionary expectation does overburden the species.
And therefore some types will be affected more than others.
I would disagree that people can see who is clinically depressed and who is not because some people are better at controlling their emotions externally than others. They could have just as much anger, rage, or depression as the other person just not shown; while another is acting like a child throwing a tantrum and their emotional and mental trouble is much less than the one who is acting completely normal. I don't recognize how this relates to antenatalism either.
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@Kaitlyn
They do not dislike what they have, they are glad to have the basic necessities of life including lack of hunger, fresh water, a roof over their head, etc. It is not that they are discontented that they have a house or that they dislike they have fresh water, it is that they are drawn to have more because it is a positive. Therefore, I don't believe having water is considered a negative state but rather a neutral one.
Initially, I think we can both agree that there is no dislike of what they have. 

I think where we disagree is that I believe people eventually become accustomed to what they have, and the 'new, shiny toy' luster wears off. That's when either boredom/new desire take hold and produce new negative affect.

Do you agree that boredom and desire produce negative affect?
Yes, I believe boredom does produce a negative effect, and that desire is capable of producing a negative effect.
I suppose the next question is: how quickly does one enter boredom, once one attains their goal? Is there immediate, slight boredom? Or does it require time?
If there is immediate boredom (negative affect), then that negative affect could be considered to be guaranteed before any progress (positive affect) is produced.
As I said, I agree that there is a negative effect in boredom as boredom is the mental state of discomfort. However, the slight boredom and negativity that precedes the realization of one's idea of progress if the idea of progress is well defined and an infinitely long path that could never be obtained but through progress achievements and positivity could be obtained than one's positivity through life could be much greater than the negativity they experienced when they 1st conceived the idea.