
Six Antinatalist Criticisms Against Benatar
Analytic Philosophy, Argumentation, Asymmetries, Bad Life, Abortion, and Suicide
Author: Julio Cabrera
Philosopher Julio Cabrera presents a compelling critique of David Benatar’s antinatalist arguments in Better Never to Have Been, offering six deep and thought-provoking analyses that challenge the foundations of analytic antinatalism. While acknowledging the ethical concerns surrounding procreation, Cabrera scrutinizes the logical structures and argumentative strategies used to justify antinatalist positions, revealing their philosophical limitations.
🔹 Can existence truly be subjected to philosophical analysis?
🔹 Does analytic antinatalism rely on an underlying optimism?
🔹 Is the asymmetry between suffering and pleasure as strong as claimed?
🔹 Do the world’s horrors alone justify antinatalism?
🔹 What are the moral implications of abortion from an antinatalist perspective?
🔹 Should suicide be viewed differently within a pessimistic ethical framework?
Based on a series of lectures delivered for the Ibero-American Society for Pessimism Studies, this book engages both supporters and critics of antinatalism with a fresh perspective that questions conventional assumptions. Philosophy enthusiasts, ethics scholars, and readers intrigued by the moral dilemmas of existence will find this work essential reading.
ISBN | 9786501298139 |
Número de páginas | 112 |
Edición | 1 (2025) |
Formato | A5 (148x210) |
Acabado | Tapa blanda (con solapas) |
Tipo de papel | Offset 80g |
Idioma | Portugués |
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