Arguments For and Against Antinatalism: A Guide
Is it ethical to bring new people into a world of inevitable suffering? This article explores the core arguments for and against the philosophy of antinatalism.
Antinatalism holds that bringing new sentient life into existence is morally problematic. These essays trace the position from Benatar's asymmetry to contemporary objections, examining the ethics of procreation without polemic.
Is it ethical to bring new people into a world of inevitable suffering? This article explores the core arguments for and against the philosophy of antinatalism.
Antinatalism vs childfree: one is a personal lifestyle choice, the other an ethical argument that procreation itself is wrong. Here is how they actually differ.
Can it ever be ethical to bring someone into existence without their consent? This article explores the profound philosophical and ethical challenges surrounding procreation.
No one asks to be born. This simple observation carries devastating implications for how we think about creation, harm, and the moral weight of bringing a new consciousness into being.
A careful reading of *Better Never to Have Been* and the asymmetry that reshaped contemporary moral philosophy.
Does coming into existence always constitute a harm? A careful examination of the asymmetry argument and its implications.
Is existentialism necessarily about the absurd? Reclaiming Sartre, de Beauvoir, and Camus as thinkers of freedom and commitment.