Better Never to Have Been

- 书名:Better Never to Have Been
- 作者: DavidBenatar 大卫·贝纳塔
- 格式:PDF
- 时间:2024-07-09
- 评分:
- ISBN:9780199549269
Most people believe that they were either benefited or at least not harmed by being brought into existence. Thus, if they ever do reflect on whether they should bring others into existence---rather than having children without even thinking about whether they should---they presume that they do them no harm. Better Never to Have Been challenges these assumptions. David Benatar argues that coming into existence is always a serious harm. Although the good things in one's life make one's life go better than it otherwise would have gone, one could not have been deprived by their absence if one had not existed. Those who never exist cannot be deprived. However, by coming into existence one does suffer quite serious harms that could not have befallen one had one not come into existence. Drawing on the relevant psychological literature, the author shows that there are a number of well-documented features of human psychology that explain why people systematically overestimate the quality of their lives and why they are thus resistant to the suggestion that they were seriously harmed by being brought into existence. The author then argues for the 'anti-natal' view---that it is always wrong to have children---and he shows that combining the anti-natal view with common pro-choice views about foetal moral status yield a 'pro-death' view about abortion (at the earlier stages of gestation). Anti-natalism also implies that it would be better if humanity became extinct. Although counter-intuitive for many, that implication is defended, not least by showing that it solves many conundrums of moral theory about population.
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momo2024-01-22Is the difference between Healthy H and Sick S really analogous to the difference between never-existence and existence?
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躁马2022-05-23没读过,也不会去读。
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堕落的爱德华2021-10-30读了第6章 喜欢喜欢 不过确实逃不开parfit的non-identity problem
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元非2014-07-17Children are brought into existence not in acts of great altruism, designed to bring the benefit of life to some pitiful non-being suspended in the metaphysical void and thereby denied the joys of life. In so far as children are ever brought into existence for anybody’s sake it is never for their own sake.... [T]he case of having a child in order to save a child is less problematic than ordinary cases of reproduction. In ordinary reproduction people produce children (a) to satisfy their procreative or parenting interests; (b) to provide siblings to existing children; (c) to propagate the species, nation, tribe, or family; or (d) for no reason at all. These are all clearly weaker reasons for producing a child than is the goal of saving the life of an existing person. It certainly seems stra...
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元非2014-07-17[S]ome in the deaf community prefer to be deaf in much the same way that a French speaker might prefer being a Francophone to being an Anglophone.
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鲁肃2013-10-12Never to have been is bestBut if we must see the light, the next bestIs quickly returning whence we came.When youth departs, with all its follies,Who does not stagger under evils? Who escapes them? Sophocles
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