Non-existence is Hard to Do
A review of contemporary antinatalist writings
“Coming into existence is bad in part because it invariably leads to the harm of ceasing to exist.” David Benatar
“If they could get a corpse to sit up on an operating table, they would jubilantly exclaim, “It’s alive!” And so would we. Who cares that human beings evolved from slimy materials? We can live with that, or most of us can.” Thomas Ligotti
The persistence of pessimism
When I sent out an email message soliciting contributions on the topic of philosophical pessimism and antinatalism one person declined with the reasonable response that such positions are only taken seriously by a handful of obscure philosophers. Humans have evolved to procreate and seek happiness. What is the point?
The reason why I have not been inclined to so easily dismiss the recent renaissance of philosophical pessimism is because negative and tragic views about life are woven throughout human history and culture. Most dominant religions have little positive to say about the state of humanity (after the fall) and the prospects for a life devoid of suffering on earth. Despite its relative epistemological sophistication, even Buddhism presents a picture of the universe as a source of suffering. Much can be said about pessimism, but not that its influence is outside the mainstream.
Even the antinatalist position that it is better never to have been, and that we have a moral obligation not to procreate, is not completely obscure. Who has not had the experience of talking to someone who wonders why anyone would want to bring children into this world? In fact, modern culture persists in linking intellectualism to pessimism. This perhaps should not be surprising because, as a general rule, excessive thinking comes at the expense of sensual experience. Perhaps another reason why many intellectuals are biased towards pessimism is because it provides them the opportunity to rescue us with their ideas.
Philosophical aversion to pessimism can be found among the finest thinkers in the history of philosophy, though. There is David Hume, the great empiricist thinker, and an amiable and optimistic person. Then there is Friedrich Nietzsche, who, despite a life of disease and isolation, recognized that pessimism is not an objective feature of the universe but the expression of a weak and oversensitive mind. The twentieth century witnessed a strong renaissance of the empiricism of David Hume in the form of logical positivism. These philosophers rightly abstained from putting forward a “philosophy of life,” but optimism about science and humanity’s potential is clear in their foundational writings. It is also interesting to note that the most recent forceful responses to pessimism have not come from professional philosophers but from libertarian-leaning economists who present data to prove that by many measures life is getting better all the time.
In my opinion, the most obvious question that can be raised about philosophical pessimism is whether its supporting claims are factual descriptions of reality or just expressions of temperament. Another interesting question is whether philosophical pessimism necessarily obliges us to the antinatalist position. In seeking answers to these questions we turn to the literature of contemporary antinatalism.
Jim Crawford’s Confessions of an Antinatalist is a highly readable autobiographical exposition of antinatalism. Thomas Ligotti’s book The Conspiracy Against the Human Race is more ambitious in scope and contains a wealth of historical information on pessimism, discussions of modern science, and, not surprisingly, a review of the theme of pessimism in horror literature. David Benatar’s Better Never to Have Been: The Harm of Coming into Existence is the most rigorous exposition of antinatalism to date. This book covers a lot of ground and I will confine myself to some of its main topics only.
The harm of coming into existence
In its purest form antinatalism may not be compelling but the framework that informs this position rests on a couple of reasonable premises: (1) we do not impose a harm (or withhold a benefit) by not bringing someone into this world; (2) we do impose a harm by bringing someone into the world when this person’s life will be (very) bad. Jim Crawford believes that these premises are evident. The question is then about how to determine that a person’s life is (or will be) bad, and how much consideration the interests of parents should be given.
One of the most problematic aspects about the work of Crawford and other antinatalists is that they have little patience for the argument that life is better than they think it is. In some passages it is hard to distinguish the antinatalist from the paternalist. If people think that life is much better than Crawford makes it out to be, the standard rejoinder is that these people suffer from a form of false consciousness (pessimists frequently use words like “truly” and “really”). In some passages this (quasi-Marxist) attitude borders on intolerance. A prime example can be found in Crawford’s discussion of childhood. For many people growing up was a period of great happiness and discovery. Crawford’s agitated dismissal of such accounts introduces an element of illiberalism in what is otherwise a humanistic endeavor. It is in these passages that antinatalism turns into bitter ideology.
The way the term “bias” is employed is problematic. It is used as if there is an objective perspective that can reached were it not for misleading evolutionary biases coming between the person and the universe. At times the author appears to be saying that if evolution did not select in favor of those wanting to survive we would not want to survive. This is not particularly helpful. Some of these “biases” do not cover up anything but just make us happier.
Let us assume that there is an objective, material reality that can be known through the use of reason and empirical observation. This does not mean that there is one “correct” fit between an organism and the world. A person who is manically depressed perceives the world in a different matter than a person who is not. How we are “wired” and respond to our environment is not a matter of “correct” or “incorrect.” Thinking otherwise would be hard to reconcile with an evolutionary outlook in which life is just the outcome of random interactions of organic molecules.
One argument that remains available to the pessimist would be that the probability of creating a miserable life is too high to warrant procreation. But it is at this point that the “transhumanist” can enter the debate and claim that our expected quality of life is no longer just the outcome of a “random” evolutionary process but can be brought under rational control. We should endeavor to make happy children.
In my opinion, the short response to empirical pessimism can take the following form. Pleasure and pain are both part of existence. For some sentient beings pleasure outweighs pain, for other sentient beings pain outweighs pleasure. A moral agent cannot add up, subtract, or divide these elements for life as a whole to produce an objective quality-of-existence function. The antinatalist runs into the same problems as all the utilitarians and welfare economists who have tried to define a social utility function as a guide for public policy. As Thomas Ligotti notes in his book, “…the reason for the eternal stalemate between optimists and pessimists, is that no possible formula can be established to measure proportions and types of hurt and happiness in the world. If such a formula could be established, then either pessimists or optimists would have to give in to their adversaries.” I think that the best response available to the antinatalist would be to follow David Benatar’s example and present a strictly formal argument, or simply argue that in case of doubt, we should abstain from procreation.
Escape strategies
After spending the bulk of his book persuading the reader that life is suffering, Crawford discusses what he calls “Escape Strategies.” In his treatment of Buddhism as an escape strategy he could simply have made the obvious internal critique that desire may be sufficient, but not necessary for suffering. Crawford’s treatment of Christianity is scathing, which may indicate regret because the author himself was a Christian for awhile. Why have children if there is the prospect of eternal damnation? I think that a Christian can respond by saying that following Scripture is more important than applying human morality to God’s creation.
The last escape strategy that Crawford reviews is hope, which turns into a discussion of futurism and transhumanism. The argument that many of those pursuing life extension will not be around to benefit from it is too simplistic. Unless the brain is completely destroyed at death, the neuro-anatomical basis of identity can be preserved at cryogenic temperatures for a very long time. No delusional expectations about the future are required. People in cryostasis have time. But then the author delivers a critique that I think deserves serious treatment by transhumanists (discussions about “friendly AI” do not exhaust this topic by any means). In a nutshell, we should not expect that technological progress will necessarily produce moral progress. And even if it will, accidents happen. Technologies that can be designed to produce great joy can be used to create great suffering as well. If humanity can manufacture hell without God, the case for pessimism and antinatalism may be strengthened.
There is one area of agreement between antinatalism and transhumanism that has not been widely recognized to date and that is a shared suspicion of evolution. Whereas transhumanists tend to emphasize the imperfections and suboptimal outcomes of evolution, antinatalists are deeply disturbed by it because it selects for the one thing that they associate with suffering: life and procreation.
Interestingly enough, the anticipation of dark future technologies may present a (subconscious) obstacle for many people considering cryonics. Hundreds of millions of people believe in the craziest things like astrology and psychoanalysis, but only a handful of people (around 5000) have made biostasis arrangements. This lack of interest can hardly be attributed to ignorance, and perhaps the most persuasive answer may be hidden in Crawford’s book. Cryonics basically forces people to deal with the question whether they would like to be “born again” in a far and unknown future. As a general rule, the answer seems to be “no.” Antinatalists may find additional ammunition for their position in studying the reasons for the low sign-up rate for cryonics.
Mahayana antinatalism
Antinatalists should expect a lot of obvious questions such as “are most people not glad to be alive?” or “why not kill yourself?” I fear that Crawford’s answer to the question “why not kill yourself?” risks undermining the orthodox antinatalist project. If empathic sensibility can make an enlightened antinatalist want to stick around, it is arguable that antinatalists should make an effort to remain alive in an effort to reduce the amount of (future) suffering in the universe. Antinatalists then become life extensionists. To use conventional Buddhist terminology, perhaps at some point there will be a Theravada version of antinatalism (focused primarily on non-procreation) and a Mahayana version of antinatalism (concerned with the elimination of the suffering of all sentient beings).
David Benatar runs into a similar problem when he ponders the question whether bringing new people into the world could be justified to reduce the suffering of the last remaining people. It seems to me that how an antinatalist deals with such practical moral issues depends on how the ethics of antinatalism is conceived. Do we have a “right” not to come into existence or is the objective of antinatalism to juggle with small and great suffering towards the ultimate end of its complete abolition?
If antinatalism is conceived as a strictly individualistic endeavor, concerns about the suffering of all humans can be easily dismissed. But in that case antinatalism would just collapse into individualist pessimism. Who cares about suffering, as long as it is not me! This is not the kind of sentiment that is generally found in antinatalist writings. I do not think that the question whether there might be moral reasons to remain alive, and, yes, bring into being forms of life that are benevolent but ruthless towards suffering, can be easily dismissed.
At one point Crawford observes that secular and smart people are having fewer children. This does not look good for the inevitable triumph of antinatalism. Under such scenarios antinatalism produces dysgenics, and if one believes that stupidity and evil go hand in hand, increased suffering for more people.
It is not unlikely that, in practice, antinatalism leads to more suffering because it will only be adopted by sympathetic human beings such as Crawford. The antinatalist cannot argue that the amount of suffering in the universe cannot be increased nor decreased. The whole point of antinatalism after all is that suffering can and should be decreased. But how to go about this may be more complicated than it appears. A sober assessment of the practical implications of antinatalism may require revision of the antinatalist position itself.
Confessions of an Antinatalist is a fine and humane book, but in the end it is also a book of the converted written for the already converted. Thomas Sowell has noted that in economics there are no solutions but only trade-offs. I would not be surprised if antinatalists will come to a similar conclusion at some point.
Suffering without meaning
Thomas Ligotti is a contemporary horror writer whose fiction work is marked by cosmic nihilism, alienation, and the fragile nature of reality. As a great admirer of the works of Ligotti I have been reluctant to comment on his non-fiction. Fortunately, unlike many other artists, Ligotti has little interest in “critical theory” or political lecturing. His book The Conspiracy Against the Human Race concerns the bleak fate of humanity in a deterministic and indifferent universe.
The book starts off with an introduction by obscurantist philosopher Ray Brassier, whose work would certainly qualify for the description that Ligotti gives to Schopenhauer’s oeuvre (“too overwrought in the proving to be anything more than another intellectual labyrinth for specialists in perplexity”).
Reading Ligotti’s account of why humans reject truly bleak views about life it would be interesting to see how antinatalists respond to the existence of orthodox Calvinism. Accepting a universe without free will that is ruled by an omnipotent God who has decreed that the majority of people will suffer in hell for His self-glorification seems a lot more terrifying to me. Nonetheless, hundres of millions of people have accepted this theological perspective. The existence of Reformed theology lays to rest the view that humans have an intrinsic desire to avoid doctrines that are too terrible too contemplate.
When Ligotti discusses the work of antinatalist Peter Wessel Zapfe once more we find the view that there is an objective predicament of mankind that is hidden by false consciousness. It is remarkable to see the similarities between those who argue that we do not want look our “oppression” straight in the face and those who argue that we avoid coming to terms with the horror of existence. What is often lacking here is the recognition that there is also a wealth of literature about human suffering that supports the idea that we would be happier if we did look nature straight in the face. No nonsense about “moral responsibility,” “sin,” “duty,” “the greater good” etc. Marquis de Sade, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Max Stirner are representatives of this school of thought.
What is intriguing about Ligotti’s book is that it reads like a rather delicate balancing act. On one hand, we have the detached observer (my personal favorite) who is bemused at the show business of both the optimists and pessimists. On the other hand, it is unmistakable that Ligotti feels affinity with the philosophers of cosmic horror and pessimism. His fiction does not leave much room for any other conclusion. But The Conspiracy Against the Human Race contains more than a few (unintended) suggestions for a more ironic and quietist view of life.
Hard determinism and the illusion of the self
I have a hard time relating to Ligotti’s discussion about determinism and pessimism. Hard determinism (or “hard imcompatibilism”) is just a part of the “scientific worldview” and it is not obvious to me why it should be a source of despair. Ligotti then discusses the existence of the “self.” I am inclined to think there is an important difference between free will and the self. Modern science can make sense of the world and human action without assuming free will. I am not convinced that this is possible if the concept of the self is rejected. Unlike free will, the recognition of a “self” comes at a later stage in evolution. It has been argued that our ancestors could not clearly distinguish the self from its surroundings and thus were not able to discover the laws of physics and use it to their benefit. The philosopher Hans Reichenbach developed a pragmatic case for the existence of the external world and the self in his seminal work Experience And Prediction: An Analysis of the Foundations And the Structure of Knowledge.
Why would anything that neuroscientists discover about the self and how it is constructed be a source of dread? If you believe that life is the result of random meetings of organic molecules, it stands to reason that the physical basis of consciousness and the self reflects such a process. Why would accepting such ideas make one a “heroic pessimist?” Why the pessimism at all? Ligotti even agrees. “One would think that neuroscientists and geneticists would have as much reason to head for the cliffs because little by little they have been finding that much of our thought and behavior is attributable to neural wiring and heredity rather than to personal control over the individuals we are, or think we are. But they do not feel suicide to be mandatory just because their laboratory experiments are informing them that human nature may be nothing but puppet nature. Not the slightest tingle of uncanniness or horror runs up and down their spines, only the thrill of discovery. Most of them reproduce and do not believe there is anything questionable in doing so.”
Ligotti also discussed transhumanism, but not in much depth. As a transhumanism skeptic myself, I found little to object to but it seems that Ligotti’s real target is what is called Singularitarianism. This part in the book seems something of a missed opportunity because there is substantial overlap between Ligotti’s fiction and themes that are discussed by transhumanist writers.
When Ligotti reviews near-death experiences and ego-death, the common-sense neurological explanations that were invoked in discussions of free will and the self are largely absent (a notable exception is his discussion of the possibility that a brain tumor can cause an “enlightened” state). For many critical-care physicians and neuroscientists it is a given that many people suffer (regional) cerebral ischemia during the dying process. These periods of transient oxygen deprivation can produce long term damage and a “re-wiring” of the brain, which can explain the new perspectives these people adopt. From a physicalist perspective, death of the ego is (partial) death of the brain.
In Ligotti’s book the reason for pessimism is multi-factorial. It includes the lack of meaning in an indifferent universe, the reality of hard determinism, and the illusion of the self. The works of Benatar and Crawford are more restricted in scope and mostly focus on more mundane suffering. Ligotti’s philosophical horror is much richer, but I wonder how much of it will resonate with people who embrace a scientific view of the universe.
There is a lot in Ligotti’s fine book that I have not discussed such as the extensive treatment of pessimism in horror fiction, loads of interesting philosophical and scientific references, plus illuminating discussions of obscure authors such as Peter Wessel Zappfe and Philipp Mainlander. As such, it can also be considered as an indispensable reference for philosophical pessimism and cosmic horror.
Empiricism and non-existence
David Benatar is a rigorous philosopher. His work can be situated in the analytic tradition and he makes an honest attempt to anticipate objections to his own views. When he argues for positions using mainly logical arguments he is quite persuasive. A being that does not exist can neither be harmed nor benefited. I cannot see how this argument (or tautology?) can be successfully refuted. But when Benatar attempts to argue that the quality of life of most people is much worse than they think it is, multiple challenges arise. I do not think this is the result of Benatar’s poor reasoning but the fields that he relies on – evolution, social psychology, happiness research and the study of cognitive biases – are notorious for allowing cherry picking. Ultimately Benatar also cannot escape the charge that he pays excessive attention to theories that claim that we think we are happier than we really are.
And, like Crawford, Benatar cannot completely escape the charge of illiberalism. One possible response to the charge of illiberalism is to object that it is those who procreate who are illiberal by “forcing” their optimism on the unborn. But since it is nonsense to talk about a non-existing person objecting to something, the only meaningful empirical determination if someone is being harmed is to consult the person who has come into existence unless one can predict the future with great confidence.
Benatar is on more agreeable ground when he simply derives his antinatalism from uncertainty; “some know that their baby will be among the unfortunate. Nobody knows, however, that their baby will be one of the allegedly lucky few.” It may never be completely possible to predict the future with complete certainty but with the rise of technologies such as prenatal tests and genetic engineering it should be possible to make more evidence-based decisions about the quality of a future person’s life.
Benatar believes that even if his empirical argument about the poor quality of our lives fails, his formal argument from asymmetry is still left standing. He thinks that even if there is one single painful pinprick in an otherwise good life, we still harm that person by bringing him into existence. I think that Benatar is “proving” too much here. We can agree that anyone who conceives a child cannot escape the prospect that this person will experience some harm. But from this it does not follow that the person is harmed in a meaningful moral sense without considering the expected overall quality of that life. Perhaps Benatar would respond that I have not understood his argument, and I will admit that I have a difficult time understanding why the possibility that a person’s pleasures are expected to outweigh the pains do not alter his argument. I think that both bringing into existence a life that is invariably good and a life that is generally good can be morally defended on the grounds that there will not be any post-natal moral objections from the person involved.
Of course, we are not morally obliged to do so, because we will not deprive the unborn of such a good life if we don’t have children. But since most parents have a positive interest in having children, in practice this tips the scales in favor of some (but not all!) procreation. One problem I can see with my argument is that it might permit the creation of a life form that would experience great suffering but with an unalterable survival instinct and no cognitive possibility of moral blame or regret. Some antinatalists might even claim that this is a rather accurate description of the human race as it exists today!
As an empiricist, I generally give the benefit of doubt to empirical observations when they appear to conflict with logical reasoning. I think that this preference itself can be justified on historic and pragmatic grounds. The claim that coming into existence is always a harm is not consistent with the reports of all those who have come into existence. That seems to be a non-trivial epistemological roadblock for antinatalism.
When Benatar discusses the moral duty not to have children he runs into the obvious problem of how the interests of the parents should be weighed against the interests of the child. One does not need to be an ethical egoist to believe that the interests of the parents count for something. In this case the question returns to how bad the life of most people is and, as discussed, this is a rather vulnerable part of antinatalism. Benatar attempts to answer the obvious objection that most people who have been born do not regret this or blame their parents. But when I read his thoughts on “indoctrination” I only see further evidence of the anti-liberalism in antinatalist writings.
In fairness to Benatar (who seems to identify himself as a liberal of some sorts), he does defend the legal right to procreation because he admits that there can be reasonable disagreement about his views. I think this point is particularly important for antinatalism since reasonable objections often come from the very people whose lives Benatar characterizes as very bad. Ultimately, though, one could argue that saying that something constitutes a great harm but allowing people the “right” to do so is incoherent, or at least a strange perspective on things.
Benatar highlights the importance of making a distinction between the decision to bring someone into existence and the decision to continue life. Even if we commit to the idea that it is better never to have been we can still have reasons for wanting to continue life. As a matter of fact, Benatar entertains the argument that the prospect of death itself is one of the reasons why existence is bad. Those who follow Epicurus believe that death cannot be experienced and thus cannot be a bad thing for the person. This is an extremely difficult argument to refute, but Benatar’s discussion of this topic is quite illuminating because he points out that those who hold this position may also have to commit to the view that death can never be good for a person. One only needs to imagine a person whose life is one of continuous suffering to see that this is not a plausible argument.
Benatar is less hostile to religion than Crawford and Ligotti but I do not think he can successfully escape the objection that antinatalism requires an atheist perspective. It cannot permit arguments that the “harm” of coming into existence serves a greater good which cannot be evaluated by human standards of morality. One does not have to be a scripturalist to note that Benatar is only concerned with the fate of humans and not with the interests of God. Antinatalism may not just require atheism, its conceptual framework has explicit anti-religious implications because it considers one of the defining acts of a supernatural being - the creation of sentient lifeforms - as morally suspect.
Perhaps Benatar cannot see any positive value in human suffering because his information about Creation is incomplete. Theodicies that reconcile the existence of God and the existence of Evil are not difficult to generate. As Plotinus has observed, “We are like people ignorant of painting who complain that the colours are not beautiful everywhere in the picture: but the Artist has laid on the appropriate tint to every spot.”
Meta-ethics and evolution
I am not aware that there has been much discussion of the meta-ethics that underpins the antinatalist argument. It seems to be taken for granted that the objective of moral discourse is to minimize suffering from an impartial perspective (and even then it can be questioned whether this supports antinatalism). But such a perspective of morality can be questioned. A Hobbesian might argue that the objective of morality is to facilitate mutual advantageous interaction. In such a contractarian enterprise there is little room for the interests of the unborn because they are no part of the “state of nature” and no deal needs to be struck with them. A Humean approach to morals would emphasis the spontaneous generation of conventions without appealing to objective standards of “good” or “harm.”
Furthermore, there is no god-given definition of harm. If harm is defined too narrowly, a lot of suffering will be permitted. If harm is defined to broadly the term because vacuous. One of the problems in Benatar’s argument from asymmetry is that that it fails to do justice to the perspective of the person who is being “harmed.” This problem is not eliminated by substituting logic for empirical investigation. Actually, it would be legitimate to ask whether Benatar is a rationalist who settles an empirical matter with purely logical arguments.
Mathematician and immortalist philosopher Mike Perry has observed, “Benatar’s thinking is not conducive to reproductive fitness.” Antinatalists will just remove themselves from the gene-pool by declining to procreate.
A potential response available to the antinatalist is that this scenario itself does not mean that the moral recommendations of antinatalism are incorrect. But should antinatalist arguments not incorporate arguments about its feasibility? Ought implies can and if antinatalism is not compatible with the most rudimentary notions of evolution, can it qualify as a credible moral theory? Should, as transhumanist David Pearce has suggested, the desire to eliminate suffering not be channeled in more realistic and productive directions? One provocative response to this argument that, to my knowledge, no antinatalist has produced yet is not to forgo antinatalism but to advocate coercive antinatalism and murder for the long-term greater good.
If we look at all these elements together, there is a non-trivial challenge here. Antinatalists start from arbitrary (meta) ethical premises, push logical arguments to extremes, cherry pick the scientific literature. Antinatalism is selected against by evolution, may produce dysgenics in practice, and is actively hostile towards the dominant religions. A philosophy that is neither favored by evolution nor religion has little going for it in the struggle for ideas.
Is antinatalism even possible as a practical program? Unless all organic life is terminated, complex sentient lifeforms will just re-appear to the scene again and the whole show will start again. “Non-existence is hard to do.” In reality, I think this is the biggest show-topper. Like most special plans for the world, antinatalism requires a degree of control that we may not have, cannot maintain, or (paradoxically) lose when we succeed.
Antinatalists and life extensionists
One could think that cryonicists and life extensionists should be repulsed by antinatalism. I think such a view would be mistaken. All the antinatalist authors discussed here are motivated by empathy for the suffering of all sentient life. We should also welcome the analytical and physicalist perspectives that underpin their writings. Too much (Continental) philosophy is simply an insult to the intellect and a waste of time. If a case should be made for pessimism it needs be stated in a form that is amenable to reasoned debate and empirical investigation.
Of more specific interest to life extensionists is the plausible prospect that our abilities to decrease suffering will (necessarily?) be matched by our abilities to increase suffering too. This is a possibility that should be studied in great detail by advocates of molecular nanotechnology, strong AI, and substrate-independent minds.
It is no secret that cryonicists (or any kind of biostasis advocates) are underperforming in terms of reproduction. But as Howard V. Hendrix discusses in the article “Dual Immortality, No Kids: The Dink Link between Birthlessness and Deathlessness in Science Fiction,” this may not be a coincidence. If biological immortality becomes a credible option, having children as a substitute for personal survival will lose much of its appeal.
Most rewarding for cryonicists is the unique perspective that antinatalists can bring to the debate concerning why so few people have made cryonics arrangements. The hostility of many people towards cryonics cannot be explained if people categorically believe that meaningful resuscitation (revival) is impossible. It is the prospect that cryonics may actually work that induces severe anxiety. If the antinatalists are correct in their assessment that coming into existence is always a harm, the unpopularity of cryonics might be indirect evidence for their position.
Talking with antinatalists
Is antinatalism distinctly subversive? Most antinatalists waste little time reminding their readers how controversial their ideas are. They think that they have uncovered the greatest taboo of all time. As an empirical matter, this is doubtful. Antinatalist ideas can be freely discussed in modern (Western) countries, something that cannot be said about a number of other controversial ideas. Antinatalists are also quick to point out that their pessimism should not be dismissed as an expression of weakness and depression. But then the antinatalists commit a similar error by too easily viewing optimism as a defense mechanism or a form of bias. But is it completely unreasonable to look for the neurophysiologic and genetic basis of pessimism and optimism? The uncompromising naturalism in the work of the antinatalists supports such an inquiry.
Jim Crawford: Confessions of an Antinatalist (Nine Banded Books 2010)
Thomas Ligotti: The Conspiracy Against the Human Race: A Contrivance of Horror (Hippocampus Press 2010)
David Benatar: Better Never to Have Been: The Harm of Coming into Existence (Oxford University Press 2006)
This article is a revised and expanded version of an article originally published in Cryonics, 2nd Quarter, 2010.
Thanks to Dr. Michael Perry for discussing some of the topics in this review and proofreading an earlier version of this document.





I am sympathetic to anti-natalist ideas, kind of ironic as I do have children. However, most people alive today do not regret their existence. I believe most people think the joy they have in their life can offset their level of suffering.
Although I agree that ordinary pleasure can offset ordinary suffering. I suspect there is a threshold asymmetry: some forms of suffering are so extreme that no amount of compensating pleasure could morally justify exposure to even a small probability of them. Bringing a person into existence exposes them to that risk.
Part of my concern is not merely abstract moral reasoning, but based on our human architecture. We seem to have evolved to receive pain more than joy. The pain-pleasure axis was not symmetry built. Extreme suffering (especially prolonged psychological or physical trauma) appears to permanently alter a person in ways that pleasure does not “undo.” For example, if someone were subjected to a year of severe torture, there is nothing available in present human life that could fully erase or offset that level of psychological damage.
Perhaps future technologies could repair or erase traumatic memories. But as things stand today, there are forms of suffering that can permanently dominate someone’s narrative in a way that pleasure cannot offset. This shows that suffering and pleasure may not be commensurable beyond a certain threshold.
If future technologies dramatically expand the scale of possible suffering, then cryonics might be irrational, not because life is bad on average, but because the tail risks dominate. The same technological trajectory that enables revival could lead to more evil forms of torture that wouldn’t be possible with today’s technology. I accept that my S-risk is higher in the future. I consider myself a risk-taker or even a type of existential gambler.