Should This Be the Last Generation?

I don’t like or agree with every view that Dr. Peter Singer has. I do love reading his short essays. First, he is a real philosopher who still knows how to talk to and write for the general public. Second, his opinions are usually based on a chain of reasoning. I know that should be a given for a philosopher, but the subjects I have read Singer’s views on are usually filled with people basing their opinions on strong emotions and pretending not to have noticed any surrounding facts. Instead of getting wind blown at me when asking about an opinion , I get reason from Dr. Singer. Dr. Singer also avoids getting personal, which I can’t say the same for some of his critics.

In this online essay for the New York Times Dr. Singer discusses deciding whether or not to have children from the point of view of the sake of the potential child and of the planet.

Interestingly, I recently learned of a group called “choice moms”. “Choice Moms” are single women who have made the decision to have a child, on their own, sans having a partner in their life or a father in their child’s life. My impression was that such decisions were driven by the desires of the mother and not by whether or not it was good for the child, good for the world.

Dr. Singer brings up that point, but in a unique way. He makes the point that people only consider the welfare of a potential child if that child will be born into a bad situation like a physical handicap. With just about 7 billion people on the planet with the threat of 11 billion by 2050 ( http://tinyurl.com/currentpopulation ) Dr. Singer asks if people should begin weighing the decision to give birth for children who would also be born into optimal circumstances.

Going beyond the mundane ( as well looming, threatening, and important ) issues of what life will be like in a more overpopulated world, Dr. Singer brings up a point by Arthur Schopenhauer, which sounds remarkably similar to some points in early Buddhism:

The 19th-century German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer held that even the best life possible for humans is one in which we strive for ends that, once achieved, bring only fleeting satisfaction. New desires then lead us on to further futile struggle and the cycle repeats itself.

IMHO, this is fairly evident, but life can be worthwhile simply for the pleasure of being alive, relating to people and growing.

Dr. Singer also thinks things are not as dire as Schopenhauer saw it. Dr. Singer then raises an interesting question. If everyone on the planet would agree to not reproduce, would that be a good decision?

Many issues which conscientious people worry about would be gone, as we would soon be gone. We could live it up, leave the Earth to heal itself and become a suitable home to the other species who still inhabit it.

My answer is no. It would not be a good decision.

There would be nobody around to appreciate that peaceful garden, so what would be the point?

Like Singer, I think the human race is headed for some rather unpleasant times, but if we don’t perish in those time I think, as a whole the human race will learn to live in a much better way. That world, is worth having and that world is worth having people in to appreciate it.

Anyway, enough of my blabber. Here is a hyperlink to his essay.

Should This Be The Last Generation?

Death

I have crossed paths with people recently who are dying or who have lost someone close to them.

I have come to the conclusion that when my time comes ( if it comes, I may be immortal ) I don’t want people to feel bad for me. Lets face it. It will not do me any good. I will be free from pain. You will not be.

I would much rather that people think of me remembering the good times and getting a smile on their face doing so.

If anyone I know is reading this blog entry in the post 2065 world, you have my permission not to punish yourself. In fact, I want you to honor me by going out and having a good time. Get laid, get a good workout in, help someone, help an animal, take a walk through the park and know that I want you to have that feeling and that I want you to be happy.

Goodbye Plenty Of Fish

picture of a school of fish

The free online dating site Plenty Of Fish implemented a new matching service that uses income as a criteria. Not enough existing account holders were providing that information so the owner of the site began turning features off for members who do not provide information about their income.

I tried editing my profile there today and could not. I could not save my edits unless I divulged my income.

It is a free site. His money. His call.

It is also my call not to use his site. Did I mention the unattractive interface and the way it makes everyone’s picture look poor?

Goodbye Plenty Of Fish