1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
If you don't wan't kids, you think that the future enjoyement by the world of the company of indivudals whose development has been led by your genes isn't worth the effort of transmitting them.
But then, for what reason should present world suffer your company, as you are probably as bad as your kid would have been?
I equate kid with existing after your current body is dead, but if existence isn't worth in the future, why would it be worth now?
It is also equivalent to say that all your ancestors were wrong in bringing you into existence, altough one could argue that life works by trial and error, and that error is a part of success.
I don't wan't you to have kids, they would take up ressources that my future kids could use, or maybe i want you to have kids, so that my kids would enjoy their company, altough probably very indirect. I just don't know you enough to know what would be in their best interest to know in which direction i should try to influence you. I just think that not wanting kid is not a logical position, and would enjoy the intellectual challenge that would arise from being proven wrong about it.
But then, for what reason should present world suffer your company, as you are probably as bad as your kid would have been?
I equate kid with existing after your current body is dead, but if existence isn't worth in the future, why would it be worth now?
It is also equivalent to say that all your ancestors were wrong in bringing you into existence, altough one could argue that life works by trial and error, and that error is a part of success.
I don't wan't you to have kids, they would take up ressources that my future kids could use, or maybe i want you to have kids, so that my kids would enjoy their company, altough probably very indirect. I just don't know you enough to know what would be in their best interest to know in which direction i should try to influence you. I just think that not wanting kid is not a logical position, and would enjoy the intellectual challenge that would arise from being proven wrong about it.
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
You might be missing a third option, which is that some people don't arrive at the decision to not have kids due to any kind of logical process at all (faulty or otherwise). They just don't *feel* like having kids, and then don't think about the issue wrt their own life choices much one way or the other. A small percentage of the population fails to be transmitted the MAKE BABIES imperative and so, sometimes, these people just don't.
Last edited by AxelHeyst on Tue Jul 23, 2024 10:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 321
- Joined: Thu Mar 03, 2022 9:59 am
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
Too many assumptions (like an arbitrarily separate self that is somehow bound by both biological imperatives and the absurd need to be a logical actor, or like worthiness being dependent on something else than pure existence but also attached to self replication, etc.) to arrive at a reductionist/binary line of reasoning that cannot see beside itself.
For a philosophical stance on suicide, see the myth of Sisyphus by Albert Camus.
For the rest, please question your assumptions to allow for something broader.
For a philosophical stance on suicide, see the myth of Sisyphus by Albert Camus.
For the rest, please question your assumptions to allow for something broader.
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
I personally think the question on having kids or not is way too big for humans to gasp. Humans don’t seem to be very good at asking—or at least answering—the big questions anyway. The question on having kids was never an option for most of our existence. The question was, do you have sex? That question is much easier answered. Kids was a side effects and as soon as that happened the hormones and instinct will take over to do the rest. But there is no doubt that in today's age it's a much tougher job. It's a mix of communities falling away and increasing cost to name just two. Challenges where an ERE philosophy can help.
The good thing is. You don't know what you don't know. You can be super happy without kids - even if you would have been happier with them.
I can recommend the piece of Paul Graham on him having kids. Quite famous in the tech community.
https://paulgraham.com/kids.html
The good thing is. You don't know what you don't know. You can be super happy without kids - even if you would have been happier with them.
I can recommend the piece of Paul Graham on him having kids. Quite famous in the tech community.
https://paulgraham.com/kids.html
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
Not that small anymore. For example, in Germany, rate of childlessness (*) is already at 20%. Given that it's measured in women born in 1970s, it may be way higher for current generations, once they reach infertility age and we can measure it.
(*) Measured by the rate of childless women amongst all women aged 45-49.
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
@Bos
I was about to make this exact same argument. Making babies was never a decision we evolved to make instinctively, beyond our choice of sexual partner, therefor, we cannot resort on our instinct to make this decision.
I was about to make this exact same argument. Making babies was never a decision we evolved to make instinctively, beyond our choice of sexual partner, therefor, we cannot resort on our instinct to make this decision.
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
The fact that humans keep producing non-reproducing humans is a hint that non-reproducing humans can add something to society. Reproduction is not the only useful thing a human can do.
Perhaps it pays off to have experimental humans and select them for reproduction only if they succeed. Perhaps certain functions are better performed by non-reproducing humans (like medieval monks.) Or perhaps society has outgrown its available resource base, and needs to shrink, requiring restrictions on reproduction. These humans can still do work, like helping to grow food for reproducing humans.
What do you think of this argument for not killing non-reproducing humans?
-
- Site Admin
- Posts: 16327
- Joined: Fri Jun 28, 2013 8:38 pm
- Location: USA, Zone 5b, Koppen Dfa, Elev. 620ft, Walkscore 77
- Contact:
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
It is true that DNA (or RNA) that doesn't replicate very effectively doesn't last long. Indeed, one of the core definitions of life is the ability to replicate. One might think of the first cell as a more effective "bag" of DNA replicating material. Likewise, multi-celled plants and animals, like humans, as even more effective replicators of the DNA they hold. A human bag of DNA has the ability to replicate the DNA in its body for a good 70+ years ... and also to have sex and create a new bag with half(*) its DNA to live on.
The evolution of [self-]consciousness in humans (and perhaps some other animals) have made them (us) more effective at replicating our DNA than most other species (types of DNA bags).
However, the evolution of consciousness has also made it possible to question AND choose whether our function is to serve our DNA or the other way around. This ability to deliberately choose to replicate our DNA is what sets us apart from most if not all other animals. From our DNA's perspective, the evolution of consciousness is a bit of a double-edged sword. It both makes us more effective at replicating our specific DNA, but it also allows us to choose not to. Those of us who chose not to have children essentially screwed over our particular DNA combination... after millions of years, it ends here with our eventual personal death. But not to worry, DNA that is 99.5%+ similar to our specific combination lives on in other humans. With 8 billion humans, our DNA has plenty of backup.
Humans do something that few other animals (apes and whales) have been shown to do. We also transmit and replicate ideas, culture, and ideology between each other much like we transmit DNA to our offspring. The ability to speak, write, and be heard and understood across the valley or even across the globe makes modern humans far more effective in transmitting ideas and spreading their ideology than they are by having a handful of children and just telling their ideas to them. It's possible for someone with a radio to reach more people in an hour than even the most proliferate human can have children in a lifetime.
In that regard, I note that the most ideologically dominant cultures in the world are all characterized by low fertility rates. There's practically an iron law in socioeconomics that greater wealth and education leads to lower fertility. ("The most effective kind of birth control is women's education."). In general, greater affluence like wealth and education also leads to greater influence. It is this combination that makes low fertility countries (and people or groupings of people) more likely to transmit their ideology to the next generation and thus ideologically dominant. As such ideology follows its own kind of evolution as ideas replicate in human minds.
People with many children will likely have descendants hundreds of years from now who have the same chin, eyebrows, or allergies, but mostly likely those descendants will be thinking thoughts that were propagated by those with wealth and/or education and statistically fewer or no children. It is now the extremely rare family (set of bags of DNA) who still follows the ideas of one of their long dead personal ancestors.
(*) The fact that humans procreate by having sex also means that your particular DNA contribution to your descendants very quickly gets watered down. Your children will only have 1/2 of your DNA coding. Your grandchildren will have 1/4 ... great-grandchildren 1/8, ... then 1/16 and then 1/32 and 1/64 and then 1/128 at which point the remaining fraction is equal to the random variation within the human species---IOW, after some seven generations, you can't even tell for sure if a particular person was your ancestor or vice versa (at least as far as I understand how it works).
The evolution of [self-]consciousness in humans (and perhaps some other animals) have made them (us) more effective at replicating our DNA than most other species (types of DNA bags).
However, the evolution of consciousness has also made it possible to question AND choose whether our function is to serve our DNA or the other way around. This ability to deliberately choose to replicate our DNA is what sets us apart from most if not all other animals. From our DNA's perspective, the evolution of consciousness is a bit of a double-edged sword. It both makes us more effective at replicating our specific DNA, but it also allows us to choose not to. Those of us who chose not to have children essentially screwed over our particular DNA combination... after millions of years, it ends here with our eventual personal death. But not to worry, DNA that is 99.5%+ similar to our specific combination lives on in other humans. With 8 billion humans, our DNA has plenty of backup.
Humans do something that few other animals (apes and whales) have been shown to do. We also transmit and replicate ideas, culture, and ideology between each other much like we transmit DNA to our offspring. The ability to speak, write, and be heard and understood across the valley or even across the globe makes modern humans far more effective in transmitting ideas and spreading their ideology than they are by having a handful of children and just telling their ideas to them. It's possible for someone with a radio to reach more people in an hour than even the most proliferate human can have children in a lifetime.
In that regard, I note that the most ideologically dominant cultures in the world are all characterized by low fertility rates. There's practically an iron law in socioeconomics that greater wealth and education leads to lower fertility. ("The most effective kind of birth control is women's education."). In general, greater affluence like wealth and education also leads to greater influence. It is this combination that makes low fertility countries (and people or groupings of people) more likely to transmit their ideology to the next generation and thus ideologically dominant. As such ideology follows its own kind of evolution as ideas replicate in human minds.
People with many children will likely have descendants hundreds of years from now who have the same chin, eyebrows, or allergies, but mostly likely those descendants will be thinking thoughts that were propagated by those with wealth and/or education and statistically fewer or no children. It is now the extremely rare family (set of bags of DNA) who still follows the ideas of one of their long dead personal ancestors.
(*) The fact that humans procreate by having sex also means that your particular DNA contribution to your descendants very quickly gets watered down. Your children will only have 1/2 of your DNA coding. Your grandchildren will have 1/4 ... great-grandchildren 1/8, ... then 1/16 and then 1/32 and 1/64 and then 1/128 at which point the remaining fraction is equal to the random variation within the human species---IOW, after some seven generations, you can't even tell for sure if a particular person was your ancestor or vice versa (at least as far as I understand how it works).
-
- Posts: 543
- Joined: Fri Jan 02, 2015 7:39 pm
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
I mean, the arguments about DNA and consciousness and human logic and reason with respect to reproduction aren't wrong...but the assumptions built into the @Jean's premise aren't even accurate for bacteria.
Why should it be taken as fact that maximizing offspring in the subsequent generation is the "best" or even "desirable" strategy? Or that it is the raison d'etre for anything? It's as though trade-offs don't exist...
Taken from an article I managed to find after an astounding 30 seconds of looking.It is often hypothesized that bacteria that are superior competitors when resources are abundant must be inferior competitors when resources are scarce, and vice versa. Most previous studies that sought to test this trade-off hypothesis compared kinetic parameters of extant strains of bacteria, with mixed results. We employed an experimental approach in which bacterial populations were propagated for many generations under two distinct regimes and their evolutionary responses were monitored. Thirty-six populations of bacteria were allowed to adapt evolutionarily to either abundant (batch culture) or scarce (chemostat culture) resource regimes. The competitive fitness of each derived line, relative to its ancestor, was then measured under both regimes. The trade-off hypothesis predicts that adaptation to either selective regime causes a concomitant loss of fitness under the alternative regime. Overall, our findings failed to support this hypothesis, and several cases contradict it. Only two derived lines showed clear trade-offs, having significantly adapted to the selective regime while becoming significantly less fit in the alternative regime. By contrast, five derived lines significantly improved in the alternative regime even as they adapted to their selective regime. Summing over all 36 derived lines (including those for which the observed fitness changes were nonsignificant under one or both regimes), 15 cases support the trade-off hypothesis, whereas 21 indicate the opposite result. These data therefore refute the necessity, or even general tendency, for evolutionary trade-offs in performance under conditions of resource abundance vs. scarcity. Instead, these data suggest that bacteria are able to adapt to a particular level of resource via multiple evolutionary pathways, which may produce either gains or losses in fitness at some different level of resource.
Why should it be taken as fact that maximizing offspring in the subsequent generation is the "best" or even "desirable" strategy? Or that it is the raison d'etre for anything? It's as though trade-offs don't exist...
-
- Posts: 1119
- Joined: Sat Oct 18, 2014 12:49 pm
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
I don’t think that at all. You seem to think “[behavior] means [intention]”, but it just isn’t so. Your thought is merely your thought. FWIW, I think I’m god’s gift to this world, and frankly the world doesn’t deserve me or my offspring. I don’t want kids because I’d rather be doing other things. What the world enjoys is literally of no concern to me at all.
Again, your thought is your thought. I can’t prove you wrong as you are entitled to your opinion. But opinions differ.I just think that not wanting kid is not a logical position, and would enjoy the intellectual challenge that would arise from being proven wrong about it.
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
It is an indisputable fact that humans will gladly kill others for more of the pie.
While a highly intelligent physicist can argue doom is coming and not have children, by definition the majority of the population is relatively stupid. Relatively. Even if they on some level grasp the argument, they will not behave that way.
Instead you will have more less intelligent people long-term.
Eventually this dynamic would reach the point of broad scale failure to maintain the advanced technology which enables the current excess population.
The problem will be “solved” by itself, but cause a great deal of suffering until then.
While a highly intelligent physicist can argue doom is coming and not have children, by definition the majority of the population is relatively stupid. Relatively. Even if they on some level grasp the argument, they will not behave that way.
Instead you will have more less intelligent people long-term.
Eventually this dynamic would reach the point of broad scale failure to maintain the advanced technology which enables the current excess population.
The problem will be “solved” by itself, but cause a great deal of suffering until then.
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
Can we steer this thread back to discussions on what the JAFI looks like in 2024? Perhaps?
Maybe make a new thread to discuss whether or not one should have children?
Maybe make a new thread to discuss whether or not one should have children?
-
- Posts: 1501
- Joined: Thu Feb 27, 2020 6:43 pm
- Location: Scotland
Re: 1 Jacob Adjusted For Inflation (JAFI)
Using the calculator from OP we have
YEAR JAFI
2007 $7,000
2008 $7,269
2009 $7,243
2010 $7,362
2011 $7,594
2012 $7,751
2013 $7,865
2014 $7,992
2015 $8,002
2016 $8,103
2017 $8,275
2018 $8,432
2019 $8,631
2020 $8,738
2021 $9,148 (I think the calculator has gotten updated between the last OPs update and now - this is the current figure)
2022 $9,880
2023 $10,287
2024 $10,628
YEAR JAFI
2007 $7,000
2008 $7,269
2009 $7,243
2010 $7,362
2011 $7,594
2012 $7,751
2013 $7,865
2014 $7,992
2015 $8,002
2016 $8,103
2017 $8,275
2018 $8,432
2019 $8,631
2020 $8,738
2021 $9,148 (I think the calculator has gotten updated between the last OPs update and now - this is the current figure)
2022 $9,880
2023 $10,287
2024 $10,628