People want to be happy living a certain kind of life, they don't simply want to be happy. — Agustino
A simple analogy will show this: a dictator may want, above anything else, to be in power and authority. But is this goal realistic and how much is he going to suffer (alongside other people) in his quest for a goal? Is this dictator ignorant of his capabilities and the repercussions it will have for him and the rest of the world? — darthbarracuda
It is my sincere belief that this misguided desire to live a certain way is one of the fundamental reasons why the world is the way it is (that is, broken and unfortunate). — darthbarracuda
Even if it isn't, (s)he isn't interested in pursuing any other goal. So what options does (s)he have? (S)he may be perfectly conscious that (s)he is not capable to fulfil his/her goal, and yet still pursue it, because the pursuit of his/her desire is the only thing of value (s)he has. — Agustino
Then it is the case that the person should re-evaluate their picture on life and temper some of these desires. — darthbarracuda
Because a person who is content with what they have and does not desire certain things is far better off and happier than a person who is stuck in rat race of desire. — darthbarracuda
You wax lyrical about giving-up one's interest for the moral good, but are unwilling to commit to it when it actually comes to living. Provided the dictator can do what they want (i.e. no-one is presenting them), you proclaim how it's perfectly fine, despite everyone knowing the pursuit of this self-interest is morally terrible. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Your moral analysis is not the courageous victory of truth over human naivety. It the mindless worship of power. You only stand against self-interest when it threatens the power you hold ought to govern society. Any evil your preferred govern commits you a perfectly fine with. — TheWillowOfDarkness
However the dictator may agree that it were better that (s)he didn't exist. And yet, despite identifying that (s)he is immoral in pursuing that interest, (s)he may pursue it for the reasons I have given above. — Agustino
Someone being interested in doing so is not a reason for them to happen. — TheWillowOfDarkness
To my mind, this example merely proves my point. A dictator would rather die than cease to be a dictator; which means that (s)he isn't willing to be happy unless they can be happy in the kind of life they want to live (which in this case is ruling over other people). — Agustino
A dictator would rather die than cease to be a dictator; which means that (s)he isn't willing to be happy unless they can be happy in the kind of life they want to live (which in this case is ruling over other people). — Agustino
The Dalai Lama. Beware of jokers, con men, and bastards. — The Great Whatever
You're not going to be happy. But there's no 'more important' thing either. Stop being a child. — The Great Whatever
And why should we believe this claim about the Dalai Lama? — darthbarracuda
LOL you might not be happy. — darthbarracuda
A better question would be why, evolutionary speaking, happiness is even a thing at all. — darthbarracuda
Because the Dalai Lama is an astrologist / snake oil selling theocrat. — The Great Whatever
A better question would be why, evolutionary speaking, happiness is even a thing at all.
— darthbarracuda
It's not, it was made up by toothpaste commercials — The Great Whatever
Darth, I thought you were going to give it a rest for your mental health. No? (For my sake, I'm relieved you haven't taken your mental health break yet.) — Bitter Crank
You're both nuts. — Bitter Crank
No one is happy. Obviously you're not, unless you're just not paying attention to yourself. — The Great Whatever
Everyone is suffering from a psychological problem: it's called being alive. You are literally moving toward excruciating pain / starvation at every second, and must take steps to avoid this. How is that not a psychological problem? It's far worse than any mundane 'addiction.' — The Great Whatever
How is that not a psychological problem? It's far worse than any mundane 'addiction.' — The Great Whatever
Everyone is suffering from a psychological problem: it's called being alive. — The Great Whatever
What is the excruciating pain that you speak of? And given that you have internet access, I would assume you have the means to obtain sufficient nutrients. — darthbarracuda
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