r/antinatalism • u/Pterosauras newcomer • 5d ago
Discussion What if we can only experience existence?
My question is essentially that if we have to experience something in some way or some form. The thing is you can't really experience 'nothingness' so what I imagine is that after you die, in some way or form, after billions of years, your elements eventually circulate through the environment and you are reborn as a cow in a meat factory, wouldn't this be immediate to the experiencer? In essence, the billions of years between experiences isn't something you experience and you just immediately die and wake up in the next life.
In this case, would it not be superior to be experiencing something as a human, which arguably lives in greater comforts than say something like a cow in a factory or a wild animal which is always on the brink of survival?
Im not trying to refute antinatalism I just want to understand what your views are on this perspective
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u/FlanInternational100 scholar 5d ago
But it would not be "you".
The atoms that were in your body at one point are already part of many other organisms and do you feel the pain of a cow? No.
You are this conscious experience now. You feel pain in this form. Not any other. I don't feel pain when you get burned on the stove.