onesteptwostep
Junior Hegelian
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- Joined
- Dec 7, 2014
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I think we can generally agree that everyone, and I mean this literally, everyone should be given a free life where they can choose what they want to do in life and that this should go unimpeded. If this maxim is true, it should be also true that parents should focus on raising a child who is well adjusted to life and who will be able to sustain themselves economically but also be content with themselves without being contingent on others.
If these two propositions are carried out, a parent should not depend on their child to care for them once they are elderly, whether or not they believe that they have taken care of their children well and that the altruism should be given back to them. Secondly a child should not be born if the couple cannot provide a living for the child up to its 18th birthday. Unless they have the means and plans to carry out a comfortable livelihood for the child until they are of age, they should not have children. The case where couples have children for the sake of raising children, because it's somehow their biological imperative or because every human being as done so up to this point doesn't seem to hold that much water either.
If a child is had with any of these reasons, I think for the most part the couple is perpetuating a culture where human life itself is a part of a pyramid scheme. It's sort of a 'Darwinistic' master-slave morality rather than a Nietzschean master-slave morality, so to speak. It's simply a biological capitalism where the freedoms of a sentient being is not respected. Many, many problems in society and in life would be alleviated or outright eradicated if such a culture would be impemented.
But, given the realities of a parent-child relationship and the historical progression of such relations dating back thousands upon thousands of years, are we teleologically bound to this arrangement?
Or can humans rise beyond it and come to reach upon a more radically egalitarian way of life?
Or, perhaps, are developed countries already heading towards this direction, given that birthrates are declining?
Hmm...
If these two propositions are carried out, a parent should not depend on their child to care for them once they are elderly, whether or not they believe that they have taken care of their children well and that the altruism should be given back to them. Secondly a child should not be born if the couple cannot provide a living for the child up to its 18th birthday. Unless they have the means and plans to carry out a comfortable livelihood for the child until they are of age, they should not have children. The case where couples have children for the sake of raising children, because it's somehow their biological imperative or because every human being as done so up to this point doesn't seem to hold that much water either.
If a child is had with any of these reasons, I think for the most part the couple is perpetuating a culture where human life itself is a part of a pyramid scheme. It's sort of a 'Darwinistic' master-slave morality rather than a Nietzschean master-slave morality, so to speak. It's simply a biological capitalism where the freedoms of a sentient being is not respected. Many, many problems in society and in life would be alleviated or outright eradicated if such a culture would be impemented.
But, given the realities of a parent-child relationship and the historical progression of such relations dating back thousands upon thousands of years, are we teleologically bound to this arrangement?
Or can humans rise beyond it and come to reach upon a more radically egalitarian way of life?
Or, perhaps, are developed countries already heading towards this direction, given that birthrates are declining?
Hmm...