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<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > On Tue, 2 Dec 2003 06:30:54 -0500, "Tim" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > ><[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message > >news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > >> On Sun, 30 Nov 2003 23:55:26 -0500, "Tim" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> > >> > > >> ><[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message > >> >news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > >> >> On Sun, 30 Nov 2003 10:14:26 -0500, "Tim" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 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. > >> >> > > >> >> >Life is not a benefit. Life is not an argument. Logical certainty and > >> >loss > >> >> >are meaningless, unthinkable, and impossible without the existence of > >> >some > >> >> >being capable of harboring them. To the best of our knowledge humans > >are > >> >> >the only beings capable of logical certainty. Other (some) critters > >are, > >> >I > >> >> >believe, capable of a sense of loss. Both cases require life; > >> >specifically > >> >> >animal life. > >> >> > >> >> Life is the benefit which makes all others possible. If it were > >not, > >> >then > >> >> things which are not alive would be able to benefit. > >> > > >> >Benefits and deficits are value judgements. One needs to be alive to make > >> >them. Yes it is a benefit to be alive if one wants to make value > >judgements. > >> >But wait - one needs to be alive to want!. Life is not a benefit. Please: > >> >how exacty do none living things benefit? > >> > >> That's the point. Life is the benefit which makes all others possible. > >> The matter which composes all life forms existed in other forms before > >> composing the present being. Did it benefit then? Does it benefit now? > >> Can matter benefit? Maybe not only is life the benefit which makes all > >> others possible, but it may be that whatever "life" is, is the only thing > >> capable of benefitting. > >> > >> >That doesn't mean > >> >> that the individual lives of all creatures are a benefit--some are and > >> >some > >> >> are not. But there is a big difference between life itself, and the > >> >individual > >> >> life an animal experiences. It's rather hard to believe, but it appears > >> >that > >> >> some people can't understand the difference between the two, probably > >> >> because the same word is being used to denote two different ideas. > >> > > >> >I fail to see were that double meaning pertains in the original post. Yes > >> >there is Life; yes there are individual lives. So what? > >> > >> It has been suggested (stupidly imo) that if life is a benefit, then > >alll > >> lives must be a benefit regardless of their quality. > > > >So you think that life is a benefit and that the suggestion that life is a > >benefit is stupid. That's an interesting point of view. > > Life itself and individual lives are entirely different things. You acted > like you understood that, and now you act as if you feel they're the > same thing. Just because life is a benefit, it doesn't mean that every > indivual life is a benefit. What is your point? Where in my post are you getting this from? Where exactly do I equate life in general with individual lives? So what if I do - again What is your point? The debate is this. Life (be it in general or be it in a specific instance) is not a benefit or it is. Webster's: ben*e*fit 1. anything that is advantageous or for the good of a person or thing. > > >> >> >If life never existed it could not possibly be a loss. We can > >> >> >contemplate the extinction of all life and make value judgments as to > >> >> >whether or not it is a loss (noting that the extinction is, in one > >sense, > >> >a > >> >> >definite loss. Extinction = all life - all life. - as subtraction is a > >> >> >lessing or loss), but never existing at all prohibits the possibility > >of > >> >> >loss - one needs something to loose. > >> >> > > >> >> > >> > > >> > > >
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