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"Jonathan Ball" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Immortalist wrote: > > > "Jonathan Ball" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message > > news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > >>Immortalist wrote: > >> > >> > >>><[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message > >>>news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > >>> > >>> > >>>>On Sat, 29 Nov 2003 18:01:58 GMT, ipse dixit <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >>>> > >>>>If life is a benefit, then it's logically certain that > >>>>no life [ie never existing at all] is a loss. > >>> > >>> > >>>What is a benifit? > >> > >>Something that makes an EXISTING entity better off than > >>he was before receiving the something. > >> > > > > > > Then a sentence like, "it was a benifit to mankind that the genetic monster > > wasn't born" is not allowable in your language law? > > No, stupid: mankind exists. > But some genetic freaks are to far gone to be born or I mean they wouldn't survive after being born. > What the hell is wrong with you? > > > Or how about "before > > they bawld to make a baby he arranged his economic house in order to benifit > > the one not yet concieved?" > > Nope. > When a bird begins to nest and trys to attract breeding partners is the benifit of it's unconcieved in the equation? > > > > What is the opposite of benifit or something that makes worse? > > > > Better yet please use it in a couple of sentences that make it as clearly > > absurd as you are claiming. > > > > > >>That is why life _per se_ cannot be a benefit: there > >>was no existing entity prior to being alive. > >> > > > > > > >
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