Life sucks and then you die. Do you like this summary of one's existence? — Caldwell
Sure, it can be a summary, but then this has to be explained. — schopenhauer1
Once you're given life, it's hard to get rid of it so you might as well enjoy it as much as you can, while you can. — darthbarracuda
You missed the point of my exposition by a full mile and a half. I'm tired of not being taken seriously, having my entire argumentative essay reduced to a single paragraph and then straw-manned, and then mocked for putting forward my honest thoughts on the matter. It's clear to me that you especially do not take this seriously and would rather screw around than provide any formal response. — darthbarracuda
...and then it becomes worth living. So, why insist that an overall enjoyable life is not worth living (or do you really see that as impossible?) Why cling to the mantra. Problematize the negatives, sure, but drop the evaluation. — Baden
That you find life "good" does not mean your children will find life "good", and it's not valid to generalize outward with regard to your personal attitude to these structural elements in life and assume your perspective is more valid than theirs. — darthbarracuda
What doesn't make sense to the pessimist is why someone would have a positive attitude to the world and life in general. It doesn't make sense for life to be filled with suffering, boredom, decay, etc etc and yet think life is good. Separating the two just seems to me to be an ad hoc violation of common sense. — darthbarracuda
I'm tired of not being taken seriously, having my entire argumentative essay reduced to a single paragraph and then straw-manned, and then mocked for putting forward my honest thoughts on the matter. — darthbarracuda
So yes, it may be the case that modern life is structurally shit. Folk are reared on romantic notions of their existence. Society has become a giant economic machine, out of control of a community level living. We are too self-aware in a particular way - our heads filled with the idea of being the heroes of our own unique sagas. And society has become a consumerist, planet-destroying, rat race. — apokrisis
So unless you actually believe in some transcendent/romantic ontology - humans as the chosen beings - then you have to view all this through the lens of naturalism. And nature has its natural structure - one based on a dynamical balancing act. — apokrisis
Why the anti-natalist focus on not having children? Any of us who are parents will agree that it is a choice that should be carefully considered. But it also has the potential to be hugely rewarding and affirming. — apokrisis
Life is a mixed bag because that is how nature works. That is my argument. But go on ignoring it by claiming I'm simply the mirror opposite of you - an optimist, a pollyanna, or whatever other glib counter helps to keep your own game going a little longer. — apokrisis
One argument I have presented before and here now is that humans are out of balance with nature by their very nature. We're too intelligent, too creative, too self-aware. — darthbarracuda
Living "in tune" with nature just isn't good enough for us. Metaphorically speaking, nature kicked us out and we're on our own. — darthbarracuda
Yet the antinatalist argument is that, despite this relationship, procreation is still an act of supreme manipulation. Someone is brought into existence without permission. — darthbarracuda
As I told Baden, with respect to anything else, a "mixed bag" would not be acceptable. You would want something better. You'd tell the manager of the restaurant to please send out a better meal thank-you-very-muchly, this one's over-cooked. It's edible, sure, but it tastes like crap. The manager comes back with a bottle of meat sauce instead. Is that acceptable? Would you return to this restaurant? — darthbarracuda
The crucial part of my argument that I do not think you responded to was the necessity of negative value and the contingency of positive value. — darthbarracuda
Life is terminal struggle, that's what it is. You're given a burden (mortality) and must find a way to carve out a small part of the world just for yourself so you can postpone death for as long as possible. Life may be comfortable now, but a single toothache, migraine, or kidney stone throws it into a wreck. — darthbarracuda
What you imagine: a Rousseau-esque return back to nature's harmony, is a pipe dream. — darthbarracuda
But if that is so, that is a sociocultural fact. We aren't born that way. We have to learn these things as skills. And so we have the possibility of making some collective choices. — apokrisis
But then once we are talking therapeutics, that is why positive psychology gets it right and pessimism so wrong. If you find yourself out of balance personally, positive psychology offers a prescription to match the problem while pessimism is just an excuse to wallow in a state of learnt helplessness. — apokrisis
In crisis, turning towards the civilising, and away from the romantic, is the sensible way to go, just for self-preserving reasons. — apokrisis
But nihilism/existentialism/pessimism/anti-natalism is just a tradition of romanticist lament. It is trying to tell the whole story based on just its one angle. — apokrisis
So sure, use the familiar legalistic jargon. Try to persuade by rhetorical device what can't be sustained by logical argument. — apokrisis
A naturalistic morality does say society has super-organismic reality. So there is a level of being that transcends each of us as individuals. But also that this is a balancing act - a fair trade. We need that society for there to be the "us" - the self-aware us - that could even care about permissions and manipulations.
So we collectively get to write that script - within ecological limits. Or if we can in fact transcend those limits - in techno-optimism fashion - then we even get to rewrite that ecological script.
It is all to play for really. You just have to understand the game. And pessimism really doesn't. As philosophy, it is quite useless as a tool of human forward-planning. — apokrisis
I can see that you need to make the negative a foundational truth and the positive a passing delusion. That is what your story hinges on. And I've responded to that how many hundreds of times now? — apokrisis
Thus begins the descent into point-for-point responding. — darthbarracuda
The fear of death is given, just as the instinct to survive and procreate is innate. — darthbarracuda
How do you not fear death? I'm going off of my experiences. From my experiences, death is scary and most people, myself included, run away from it. This makes me and all these other people weak? — darthbarracuda
You lack imagination. Everyone doesn't feel the same way you do. Not just about death, but about all the other difficulties you go on about. Whether or not they are happy, most people get it. Get life. The point. You don't. That says something about you, not about life. — T Clark
So, while I'm somewhat sympathetic to mitigating pollyannaish notions among prospective parents, the sweeping judgment of life not being worth living seems to sweep too much under its own philosophical carpet to stand stably on. — Baden
I do not see the rightness of giving this challenge to a human, even with a possibly more inherent good attitude towards negative situations. There is no X reason why anyone needs to go through the dealing with or game of life. — schopenhauer1
The suffering/pain part of the equation seems to be something of a variable, as I understand it. There is always some suffering, at the very least the realization of one’s mortality and the mortality and impermanence of absolutely everything and everyone around us. — 0 thru 9
The three poisons were represented by animals. A chicken or bird for greed. A snake for hatred. And a pig for ignorance. — 0 thru 9
Ignorance of the fact that we lack an objective measure of the utility of differing coping mechanisms is what I find distressing. What coping skills does philosophical pessimism have to teach us? — Posty McPostface
The First Noble Truth of Buddhism is that all life is suffering. The Second Noble Truth is that suffering is caused by desire. That's not suffering the way we usually think of it. It's not events - sickness, death, loss - that make us suffer. It's our illusions. — T Clark
Hey, Posty McPostface, see this:
The three poisons were represented by animals. A chicken or bird for greed. A snake for hatred. And a pig for ignorance. — T Clark
As the saying goes- all the same are pleasure and pain; fame and shame; honors and blame. — 0 thru 9
The ideas presented in this thread reminded me of Joseph Campbell, specifically these videos. Responding the quotes that “history is a dream from which we are trying to awaken” and “life is something that should not have been”, he may sound a little glib to some. But still, it is a television show despite the deep subject matter. Agree or disagree, good stuff nonetheless. — 0 thru 9
Practical in what sense? — Posty McPostface
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.