The argument of purpose is the one I have most commonly heard natalists throw recklessly around, as if most humans were not eventually looking for an answer to their perplexity when faced with the irrational. What we call “life” is a reflection of fear and based on desire, and therefore unfulfillment. Life is irrational, and delusional are those looking for something rational in it. We thrive on duality and calamity. We have no control, life is ultimately uncertain, full of probabilities. No matter how many coping mechanisms one develops to reassure oneself, at this point there are only lies from people who want to rule over a society that believes it is free. So, it is quite intriguing to me to voluntarily put another being through the gamble for this purely selfish reason: to feel better about oneself, to feel like one contributes to another’s or a society’s happiness while all they do is use their children for their own delusion and to live in the dream of someone else.
The Argument of Purpose
Published by Kafkaphony
A (now) sometimes funny and hopefully thought-provoking misanthropic, anarcho-communist/libertarian socialist, anti-natalist, Marx/Chomsky/Lenin/Kropotkin and Camus loving blogger who talks about humor, mental illness, socialism, communism, and omnicide that sometimes leans toward the absurd. View all posts by Kafkaphony
Published