Lists of geniuses seem to be all male. Why is that? — Bitter Crank
What is better: 10 very smart, very creative, very productive people or 10 geniuses? — Bitter Crank
Because then there would be no more suffering. — The Great Whatever
They already had everything they wanted so they didn't invent or do much of anything. — The Great Whatever
I don't think there is much of a problem with universals if we accept a version of 'conceptualism': — invizzy
I am a little confused as to the difference between nominalism and conceptualism. — Marchesk
There already isn't any joy. That was all made up by poets who couldn't get laid. — The Great Whatever
Anyone here want to fess up to being fully self-actualized? — Bitter Crank
I find it interesting that if Maslow is partially right that humans have roughly the same kinds of generalized needs, that the needs being met are not evenly distributed. Even if governments or economies can provide for a modicum of the two foundational needs, the upper three tiers on the pyramid (simply following the basic diagram model) can never really be guaranteed. But that is where people can go many ways with it: — schopenhauer1
What authorizes this claim other than your own personal psychology? Whence the argument? Perhaps you want to argue that people ought to feel world-weary or whatever have you, but then the idea that feelings and affections can be motivated at a purely intellectual, rather than lived level is, well, naive to say least. 'You should feel like how I'm telling you, dammit!'. — StreetlightX
If the above is realized (and there are other important technologies of course), then it's easy to imagine that the world could become a very different place. But who knows to what extent that ends suffering. There are dystopian scenarios. One can only imagine what a 22nd century warfare would look like. — Marchesk
d) the human condition is too complex for anything this basic and unscientific — schopenhauer1
In relation to regulating research on this basis (if that is what you mean) the question that comes up for me is whether we can know (always if not ever) beforehand just what the ethical implications of any research would be. — John
For sure, any thought may feed into the practical, but to say that is not the same as to say that it has direct and obvious practical applications, the way chemistry, physics, geology or genetics, for example, do. — John
What do you get instead? 'Weltschmerz'. Weltschmerz is what you get. — StreetlightX
However, I disagree that these are fundamental values and intrinsic rights. Who are they to claim so? As far as I'm concerned, the only rights a man has by birth are the same rights a tiger has - which are not many. — Agustino
The left claims to be tolerant, but only for things which respect their fundamental values; towards anything else, absolutely intolerant. — Agustino
Everyone has their own laws on their lands, in their families, and true toleration means not interfering with these. — Agustino
No. The goal is merely to have pleasure now. That is my concern, not "future" pleasure which doesn't exist. It's a moment by moment mastery. — Agustino
Instead, what follows is that you must strive such that every single moment you feel pleasure. That is the goal. Not that you accumulate the maximum number of pleasurable moments, since the accumulation itself adds nothing to your pleasure and is not a pleasure in and of itself. — Agustino
This is factually wrong to begin with. Many people (such as myself) have always refused immunisation shots. Neither are the scientific findings strong enough to support them, in my humble opinion. — Agustino
