I'm glad to have found this forum. I look forward to having constructive debates with members

Too many topicsLogical Celery wrote: ↑Wed Oct 02, 2019 12:40 pm Hi. What topics would you like to have a discussion on?
Thank you. TBH, I've decided to stop referring to myself as vegan...it just comes with too much baggage to actually aid me in achieving my goal which is to minimize non-human animal suffering.
Adopted antinatalism about four years back. Studied Ethics under Prof. Benatar in 2006. In 2015/2016 I approached him for recommended literature as I was focusing on the emotional aspect of veganism whilst neglecting the cognitive aspect. Realised that society is already a cacophony of victim shouting and that non-human animals need enlightened, reasoned, and effective advocacy and protection, not more shouting. I first became an antinatalist after reading to Better Never to have Been and then became an atheist after reading The Human Predicament - it was the final nail in the crucifix. Big proponent of the work as well as the man - most ethical, modest, and self-less SOB I've met.brimstoneSalad wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2019 1:01 am Welcome DaedalusZA, the "dangers" wording told us your position on the others, but what's your position on antinatalism? We have a few threads going on that here. You might like to jump in, or you can start your own.
Yapp! Same here. As most of us know, being vegan is only one (albeit crucial) element to being a good person.DaedalusZA wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2019 4:51 pmI've decided to stop referring to myself as vegan...it just comes with too much baggage
He may be a good person in his own life, but like Jebus mentioned above, advocacy of anti-natalism is deeply problematic in consequentialist terms.DaedalusZA wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2019 5:10 pm Adopted antinatalism about four years back. Studied Ethics under Prof. Benatar in 2006. In 2015/2016 I approached him for recommended literature as I was focusing on the emotional aspect of veganism whilst neglecting the cognitive aspect. Realised that society is already a cacophony of victim shouting and that non-human animals need enlightened, reasoned, and effective advocacy and protection, not more shouting. I first became an antinatalist after reading to Better Never to have Been and then became an atheist after reading The Human Predicament - it was the final nail in the crucifix. Big proponent of the work as well as the man - most ethical, modest, and self-less SOB I've met.
Thanks for reply. Will respond properly end of week. I'll send the wiki index link to Prof. and hopefully he has the time to reply himself.brimstoneSalad wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2019 3:50 pmHere's a brief discussion of the core problems with the Asymmetry argument: http://philosophicalvegan.com/wiki/inde ... tinatalismDaedalusZA wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2019 5:10 pm Adopted antinatalism about four years back. Studied Ethics under Prof. Benatar in 2006. In 2015/2016 I approached him for recommended literature as I was focusing on the emotional aspect of veganism whilst neglecting the cognitive aspect. Realised that society is already a cacophony of victim shouting and that non-human animals need enlightened, reasoned, and effective advocacy and protection, not more shouting. I first became an antinatalist after reading to Better Never to have Been and then became an atheist after reading The Human Predicament - it was the final nail in the crucifix. Big proponent of the work as well as the man - most ethical, modest, and self-less SOB I've met.
If you have any criticisms of that presentation, please share them. We strive to make the wiki as accurate as possible.
If you have any other arguments too, it'd be awesome if you can share them.